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Last Call for 12.29.25 – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida

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Last Call – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida politics.

First Shot

There’s always a Florida angle. In 2025, it was a close-up with the klieg lights shining brightly.

As 2025 comes to a close, Florida Politics is rolling out our Top 10 lists that bottle the year’s biggest storylines, from federal shocks that ricocheted through the Sunshine State to the local sagas that kept county commissions, city halls and courthouse steps busy.

Whether the phrase “Make America Florida” makes you smile or cringe, the best place to start is our rundown of the Top 10 federal stories impacting Florida, a D.C. feed that reads like Florida politics got a national syndication deal.

Expect everything from high-octane foreign policy drama with a Caribbean undertow, to the slow-burn (then sudden) explosion of the Epstein files, to the reshuffling that put Ashley Moody in the U.S. Senate mix — yes, that happened this year!

Then go regional, where the plotlines get weirder, sharper, and more personal.

South Florida’s list runs the gamut from a censorship blowback in Miami Beach to the Trump library land fight, with a surprise federal indictment and a historic mayoral election for good measure.

In Tampa Bay, there’s civic soap opera energy — leadership turnovers, culture-war collateral damage, a downtown naming fight that went sideways. So, the usual fare, but no less entertaining.

Southwest Florida’s set tracks the tug-of-war between local control and Tallahassee gravity — airports, higher ed, School Boards, immigration flashpoints, and even a rare recall.

Meanwhile, Jacksonville’s list offers a snapshot of strong-Mayor friction, long shadows from old power centers, and the early chess moves toward 2027. 

We won’t spoil the endings, but we strongly advise you to complete your recap before the next season of “only in Florida” premieres, when lawmakers kick off the 2026 Session on Jan. 13.

Evening Reads

—”11 voters on Donald Trump’s first year” via The New York Times

—”Trump’s year of media capture” via John Avlon of Rolling Stone

—”The most volatile group of voters is turning on Trump” via Christian Paz of Vox

—”The Santa Presidency” via Toluse Olorunnipa of The Atlantic

—”Duty? Insanity? These former members of Congress want to come back.” via Anna Liss-Roy of The Washington Post

—“GOP redistricting could backfire as urban, immigrant areas turn back to Democrats” via Tim Henderson of Stateline

—“The biggest mistake I made in 2025” via Chris Cillizza of So What?

—”The new surveillance state is you” via Andrew Couts of WIRED

—”Michael Owen proposal draws lines between treatment providers and recovery housing” via Jesse Mendoza of Florida Politics

—”Florida’s bear hunt ended Sunday. State won’t say how many were killed” via Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel

Quote of the Day

“This is a massive effort to change the unfortunate reality that has occurred to rural health care in America, which is that your ZIP Code has started to predict your life expectancy.”

— CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz, presumably having finally flipped through Kitagawa & Hauser’s 1970s differential mortality research.

Put it on the Tab

Look to your left, then look to your right. If you see one of these people at your happy hour haunt, flag down the bartender and put one of these on your tab. Recipes included, just in case the Cocktail Codex fell into the well.

Shoot the bartender this link so they can keep the Top 10s flowing while you flip through Florida Politics’ year-end recaps.

Send a Coin Toss to former acting Attorney General John Guard, who says he’s willing to withdraw from consideration as a federal Judge to serve on the Florida Supreme Court

With their Space Florida Board appointments on lock, Matthew Bocchino, Belinda Keiser, Alex King and Tim Thomas are ready for a dose of Rocket Fuel.

Breakthrough Insights

Tune In

Gators close out 2025 

The Florida Gators play one final non-conference game to close out 2025 as they host Dartmouth tonight (6 p.m. ET, SEC Network).

Florida, ranked 22nd in the Associated Press Top 25 poll, has won three consecutive games after losses to Duke and Connecticut. 

The Gators (8-4) lead the nation in rebounding and offensive rebounding. Center Ruben Chinyelu leads the team with 10.8 rebounds per game, while forward Thomas Haugh leads the team in scoring, averaging 17.3 points per game. 

Haugh is considered one of the top prospects for the NBA draft. 

Dartmouth (5-6) has not played a team from one of the Power 4 conferences this season, so the Gators figure to be the toughest test of the season for the Big Green. Dartmouth’s best chance to pull the upset is to get hot from the three-point line. The average 11 made three-pointers per game this season, ranking 19th nationally. 

Guard Kareem Thomas leads Dartmouth in scoring at 19.2 points per game. He has scored in double figures in each game this season and has topped the 20-point mark six times. 

After tonight’s game, Florida will next be in action on Jan. 3 when it opens conference play at Missouri. 

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Last Call is published by Peter Schorsch, assembled and edited by Phil Ammann and Drew Wilson, with contributions from the staff of Florida Politics.



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Christina Pushaw befriends, advises James Fishback … then regrets it

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A key advisor to Gov. Ron DeSantis spent months getting close to a candidate to replace him, but now regrets and repudiates the move, which reports were that she initiated months ago because she liked his spicy approach to conservative politics.

“In October 2025, I met James Fishback after he sent me a direct message on X. I appreciated his commentary on conservative politics and Florida. For two months, we spoke frequently, and I offered him advice on his gubernatorial campaign. I was never working for him, I never received any form of compensation, and I never informed the governor of my communications with him,” said Christina Pushaw on Sunday night.

Pushaw, who makes a reported $155,000 a year as a senior advisor to DeSantis, claims to have disagreed with Fishback’s rhetoric as it got “more extreme over time,” but the specifics of her agreement and disagreement are left open in her posts.

Yet the extremism of Fishback’s views, which include repeatedly describing Rep. Byron Donalds using various racist tropes, wasn’t the deal-breaker.

Rather, it was Fishback allegedly trashing Pushaw behind her back.

“I had to cut ties with James Fishback because I learned that he had deceived me, violated my trust, and lied about me to numerous people in media and politics,” Pushaw says.

She says she never had a “romantic or sexual relationship” with Fishback, and that the candidate’s alleged stories about her are intended to distract from an investigation by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement into him.

“Fishback has been spreading deeply personal, hurtful, and false rumors about me. He has claimed that we were romantically involved. He has even threatened to falsely accuse me of sexual harassment,” she says, calling Fishback “dangerous” and intent upon smearing her.

Pushaw says she apologizes to Donalds and to Lt. Gov. Jay Collins and his wife for having “coarsened the primary campaign and made it more toxic than it needed to be,” though it’s unclear what an appropriate level of toxicity would be.

She also apologizes to Gov. Ron DeSantis and First Lady Casey DeSantis for “for any embarrassment that my communication with James Fishback might ever bring on this office.”

“They had absolutely no idea and would never have condoned my communications with him,” Pushaw says.

Pushaw seems resigned to any consequences.

“I am fine with whatever fate awaits me. If this catastrophic error of judgement makes me unemployable, so be it. I made a mistake. I admitted to it. I want to make it right, and if that means never working in politics again, it’s a consequence I am ready to accept.”

Fishback’s meetings with people in DeSantis’ orbit have been a matter of intrigue, including a coffee with LG Collins last year while the Tampa Republican mulled running for Governor, and reported conversations with Taryn Fenske, another top aide.

Since coming to Tallahassee, Pushaw has been known for her combative tone with media and with politicians with whom the Governor had disagreements. She has weathered myriad storms, including retroactive disclosure of being a foreign agent before working for DeSantis.

Now we have a retroactive disclosure of electioneering from a taxpayer-funded post, and it remains to be seen what will happen next.



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Duval Delegation members receive bomb threat with ransom demand

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A chilling warning was sent to lawmakers on a holiday weekend.

Multiple members of the Duval County Legislative Delegation tell Florida Politics they or their staff got an email Sunday morning threatening to bomb their offices and shoot people there unless they make a ransom payment.

Because this is an ongoing investigation by the House Sergeant of Arms, we will not reveal the names of those who say they received it, but members of both parties say they got the communication, which purports to be from someone with a name and an email address included.

“I am writing this email to inform you all that there’s multiple bombs inside of your building …. I’m ready to die there on Monday. I have an AR-15 that I will be using to shoot everyone after the bombs explode,” the email reads, “at 10 a.m. Monday.”

The correspondent uses what could be false information to tell the lawmakers who got the communication to contact her if they want to negotiate a settlement.

Legislators did not recognize the name purportedly used to send the email.

At least one recipient says the email was sent to a previous office location. Law enforcement was informed, swept the location in question, and found it was all clear.

We have reached out to the House Sergeant at Arms office to get more information about the ongoing probe.



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Sending soldiers to Minneapolis for immigration crackdown would be unconstitutional, mayor says

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The mayor of Minneapolis said Sunday that sending active duty soldiers into Minnesota to help with an immigration crackdown is a ridiculous and unconstitutional idea as he urged protesters to remain peaceful so the president won’t see a need to send in the U.S. military.

Daily protests have been ongoing throughout January since the Department of Homeland Security ramped up immigration enforcement in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul by bringing in more than 2,000 federal officers.

In a diverse neighborhood where Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have been frequently seen, U.S. postal workers marched through on Sunday, chanting: “Protect our routes. Get ICE out.”

The Pentagon has ordered about 1,500 active-duty soldiers based in Alaska who specialize in operating in arctic conditions to be ready in case of a possible deployment to Minnesota, two defense officials said Sunday.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military plans, said two infantry battalions of the Army’s 11th Airborne Division have been given prepare-to-deploy orders.

One defense official said the troops are standing by to deploy to Minnesota should President Donald Trump invoke the Insurrection Act.

The rarely-used 19th century law would allow him to send military troops into Minnesota, where protesters have been confronting federal immigration agents for weeks. He has since backed off the threat, at least for now.

“It’s ridiculous, but we will not be intimidated by the actions of this federal government,” Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey told CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday. “It is not fair, it’s not just, and it’s completely unconstitutional.”

Thousands of Minneapolis citizens are exercising their First Amendment rights and the protests have been peaceful, Frey said.

“We are not going to take the bait. We will not counter Donald Trump’s chaos with our own brand of chaos here,” Frey said.

Gov. Tim Walz has mobilized the Minnesota National Guard, although no units have been deployed to the streets.

Peter Noble joined dozens of other U.S. Post Office workers Sunday on their only day off from their mail routes to march against the immigration crackdown. They passed by the place where an immigration officer shot and killed Renee Good, a U.S. citizen and mother of three, during a Jan. 7 confrontation.

“I’ve seen them driving recklessly around the streets while I am on my route, putting lives in danger,” Noble said.

Letter carrier Susan Becker said she came out to march on the coldest day since the crackdown started because it’s important to keep telling the federal government she thinks what it is doing is wrong. She said people on her route have reported ICE breaking into apartment buildings and tackling people in the parking lot of shopping centers.

“These people are by and large citizens and immigrants. But they’re citizens, and they deserve to be here; they’ve earned their place and they are good people,” Becker said.

A Republican U.S. House member called for Walz to tone down his comments about fighting the federal government and instead start to help law enforcement.

Many of the officers in Minnesota are neighbors just doing the jobs they were sent to do, House Majority Whip Tom Emmer told WCCO-AM in Minneapolis.

“These are not mean spirited people. But right now, they feel like they’re under attack. They don’t know where the next attack is going to come from and who it is. So people need to keep in mind this starts at the top,” Emmer said.

Across social media, videos have been posted of federal officers spraying protesters with pepper spray, knocking down doors and forcibly taking people into custody. On Friday, a federal judge ruled that immigration officers can’t detain or tear gas peaceful protesters who aren’t obstructing authorities, including when they’re observing the officers during the Minnesota crackdown.

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Republished with permission of The Associated Press.



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