A visit U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick made to a local Democratic club last week devolved into nastiness when a Primary opponent she’s suing drew her into a heated argument captured on video.
Near the end of the 4-minute exchange, the 46-year-old lawmaker appeared to let loose a classic insult salvo at Elijah Manley, her 26-year-old challenger: “Your mama.”
The squabble, which occurred at the Broward Young Democrats’ Oct. 6 meeting with Cherfilus-McCormick as a special guest, centered somewhat on a $1 million defamation lawsuit she filed against Manely last month over what she called “blatant lies” he spread about her.
The case remains active, with the most recent court action being a summons submitted to Manley four days before he confronted her in person.
The suit claims Manley engaged in “a pattern” of false statements in campaign videos and published commentaries. In them, he accused Cherfilus-McCormick of corruption, ethical violations and misusing taxpayer funds.
It lists as defamatory, among other things, Manley’s assertion in July that Cherfilus-McCormick “took $5.7 million from taxpayers” — a reference to an overpayment from the state to her former health care company that was settled this year — and an ongoing House Ethics Committee investigation into whether she broke campaign finance laws.
Manley raised those issues and an older matter involving Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans her former company received during the pandemic, in a face-to-face meeting with her last week.
That’s where the video starts, with Manley accusing the thrice-elected lawmaker of repurposing the PPP loans to fund her 2021 campaign, an unproven assertion Cherfilus-McCormick maintains is untrue.
Manley, a substitute history teacher with experience organizing progressive groups, said he was there not to cause a scene, but to “hold you accountable.”
“Someone under investigation cannot serve their constituents,” he said.
“I’m here in my official capacity, and you’re making up a whole bunch of stuff that you’re actually being sued on,” Cherfilus-McCormick replied.
“You sued all these other people in the past, and it got thrown out,” Manley retorted.
“They did not get thrown out,” she said.
And she’s right. In July 2022, Cherfilus-McCormick sued another one of her Primary foes, 68-year-old Dale Holness, for $1 million over campaign texts that told voters she’d embezzled $6 million from taxpayers to “buy a seat in Congress.” That suit has been listed as “inactive” since May 2023, but wasn’t thrown out.
As their argument escalated in front of a small audience, Manley called Cherfilius-McCormick a “pathological liar.” She threw the label back at him.
“I’m not going to play these games with you,” she said. “If you’re going to come up here lying, you’d best be ready for war.”
“You’re at war with your constituents,” he said. “You refuse to hold yourself accountable to your constituents, and you continue to tell lies.”
Broward Young Democrats President Kelly Scurry then interjected, trying to reestablish control of a spiraling situation as the quarrel’s participants derided each other as “disrespectful.”
“If you want to come up here and be disrespectful, let’s rock ‘n’ roll,” Cherfilus-McCormick said. “I’ve got time today.”
“We can rock ‘n’ roll when you’re out of the seat you’re holding,” Manley answered.
“Your mama,” Cherfilus-McCormick appeared to fire back before Scurry successfully got the pair to disengage.
Reached by phone Thursday, Manley told Florida Politics Cherfilus-McCormick did indeed say, “Your mama,” to him multiple times on- and off-camera.
“Everyone in that room heard it, which I find very weird,” he said. “I don’t think I’ve ever heard an elected official say stuff like that unless it’s Donald Trump or something.”
He said that Cherfilus-McCormick’s interruption of him and others attending the meeting to ask her questions betrayed “a lack of temperament” unbecoming of a public official.
“I understand I’m her opponent, but I’m also a constituent. I have the right to go to a town hall and ask her a question, but she tried to pretty much shut me down from the get-go and intimidate me, which isn’t going to work,” he said. “It’s the same thing with the lawsuit, trying to silence her critics. She did that to a couple of people there who asked legitimate questions. I just don’t understand why she was lashing out like this. It doesn’t look good.”
Florida Politics contacted a spokesperson for Cherfilus-McCormick for comment, but did not receive a response by press time. We will update this report upon receipt of one.
Federal records show that while the Congresswoman had more funds remaining in her campaign coffers at the end of the last fundraising quarter, Manley has outraised her more than twofold so far and outspent her more than fivefold.
Through Sept. 30, he amassed $599,000 compared to $227,000 that Cherfilus-McCormick collected. He also spent all but $20,000 of that sum, while the incumbent disbursed about $111,000.
Holness, meanwhile, has collected roughly $45,000 this cycle, adding to about $19,000 in carry-over funds.
Two Republicans, Joseph Rodenay and Sendra Dorce, have raised $35,000 and $2,000, respectively.
Cherfilus-McCormick, the first Haitian American woman from Florida elected to Congress, has represented Florida’s 20th Congressional District since January 2022. She won her seat in a Special Election following the death of Alcee Hastings. Last year, she was re-elected unopposed.
CD 20 spans a majority-Black area in and around western and central Broward County, with a small portion of southeast Palm Beach County. It includes all or part of Fort Lauderdale, Lake Park, Lauderdale Lakes, Lauderhill, North Lauderdale, Plantation, Pompano Beach, Riviera Beach, Sunrise and Tamarac.
It’s Florida’s most Democratic-leaning congressional district, with a Cook Partisan Voting Index rating of D+22.
The 2026 Primary Election is Aug. 18, followed by the General Election on Nov. 3.
U.S. Rep. Jimmy Patronis is on board with a movement to reduce the impacts of the Clean Water Act and ease some restrictions on development.
Patronis, a Republican in Florida’s 1st Congressional District in the Panhandle, voted with many of his colleagues in favor of the Promoting Efficient Review for Modern Infrastructure Today (PERMIT Act HR 3893). Many Republicans say the proposed measure is designed to “reduce red tape.”
The proposal “eliminated duplicative and costly Clean Water Act permit requirements that do not improve environmental safety,” according to a House GOP statement.
The PERMIT Act, drafted by U.S. Rep. Mike Collins, a Georgia Republican, would also provide amendments to the Federal Water Pollution Control Act.
Patronis voted in favor of the measure, saying it’s long overdue.
“I am honored to support the passage of the PERMIT Act that will streamline … permitting, while ensuring the environment is protected,” Patronis said. “We must keep the government out of our backyards and restore power to the states.”
The measure has yet to go to the full floor of the U.S. Senate for consideration.
But the bill, according to supporters, reduces costly project delays and unnecessary litigation. It provides certainty to infrastructure builders, farmers, water utilities and small businesses, according to wording in the measure.
The bill would limit the scope of the Clean Water Act, which was originally approved by Congress in 1972. When it comes to permitting under the Clean Water Act, the new measure Patronis supports would exclude waste treatment systems, prior converted cropland, groundwater, or features that are determined to be excluded by the U.S. Army Corps Engineers.
While conservatives in Congress support the PERMIT Act, the measure has drawn criticism from environmental activist organizations.
The Hydropower Reform Coalition assailed the proposal for what it says undercuts long-standing environmental protections for many of America’s waterways.
“This prevents states from considering upstream, downstream, or cumulative impacts of projects like dams, pipelines, or large-scale developments,” a Coalition analysis said. “Enforcement authority would rest only with federal permitting agencies, leaving states unable to enforce the very conditions they might place on a project.”
Former prosecutor Robin Peguero just landed an endorsement from Miami-Dade County School Board member Joe Geller as Peguero seeks to supplant Republican U.S. Rep. María Elvira Salazar.
Geller, who previously served in the Florida House, as Mayor of North Bay and as Chair of the Miami-Dade Democratic Party, said in a statement that Peguero “will fight for you and me in Congress.”
“Robin will fight for lower costs and affordable healthcare and housing. He’ll fight to defend the rule of law and our democracy. He’ll fight to give all our families a fair shot at the American Dream,” Geller said.
“Robin will take back this seat in Congress — and I’m proud to endorse him.”
The nod from Geller joins others from Key Biscayne Council member Franklin Caplan, Coral Gables Commissioner Melissa Castro, Cutler Bay Council member B.J. Duncan, former U.S. Rep. Donna Shalala, former state Reps. Annie Betancourt and J.C. Planas, and ex-Key Biscayne Mayor Mike Davey, who withdrew from the race for Florida’s 27th Congressional District and immediately endorsed Peguero in August.
Peguero also carries support from CHC Bold PAC, the campaign apparatus of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, which prioritizes increasing Latino representation in Congress.
A former federal homicide prosecutor born to immigrant parents from the Dominican Republic and Ecuador, Peguero’s government bona fides include a stint as an investigator for the congressional Jan. 6 Committee and work as Chief of Staff to U.S. Rep. Glenn Ivey, a Maryland Democrat.
Today, he works as a novelist and professor at St. Thomas University College of Law.
Peguero will face at least two CD 27 Primary opponents: accountant Alexander Fornino and entrepreneur Richard Lamondin.
Through the last reporting period that ended Sept. 30, Peguero raised $330,000, while Lamondin amassed $453,000 and Fornino collected $25,000.
CD 27 — one of three Florida districts that the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has highlighted as “in play” — covers Miami, Coral Gables, Cutler Bay, Key Biscayne, Pinecrest, North Bay Village, South Miami, West Miami and several unincorporated areas.
Her doggedness over the DOGE data earned Pearson-Adams another nod from DeSantis.
Gov. Ron DeSantis has reappointed Marilyn Pearson-Adams and Gino Collura to the Pasco-Hernando State College District Board of Trustees, while also appointing Toni Zetzsche to fill another seat.
The appointments come at a time of turnover. Former Board President Jesse Pisors resigned earlier this year after the college experienced negative growth, ranking second to last in the state for student retention. Eric Hall succeeded Pisors.
Trustees establish Board rules and policies for the college and oversee its governance in accordance with state statutes and State Board of Education rules. But Pisors withheld the data from them for around a year, according to an article by WUSF. The data was gathered by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) established by DeSantis.
Pearson-Adams is a longtime Trustee and a former Chair and Vice Chair. She chaired the Board during the data controversy, but was succeeded by Nicole Newlon for the 2025-26 school year in July. Pearson-Adams’s doggedness over the DOGE data earned her another nod from DeSantis.
Pearson-Adams is the owner and broker of Century 21 Alliance Realty in Spring Hill, is a member of the National Association of Realtors, Florida Realtors and the Hernando County Association of Realtors, and was inducted into the National Association of Realtors Hall of Fame in 2020. She attended El Camino Junior College.
Collura is the founder of Big Guava Management, serves on the board of Prison Rehabilitative Industries and Diversified Enterprises Inc., and is an advisory board member for the University of South Florida College of Education, the Saint Leo University College of Arts and Sciences and Heroes Adapt Inc. He earned his bachelor’s degree, master’s degree in international relations and doctorate in neuroanthropology from the University of South Florida.
Zetzsche is the chief communications and community engagement officer for Pasco County Schools. She is a member of the Greater Tampa Bay Chamber of Commerce, the Council for Exceptional Children and the Pasco County Commission on the Status of Women. She earned a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice from the University of South Florida, a master’s degree in elementary education from Roosevelt University and a doctorate in educational leadership from Capella University.
The appointments are subject to confirmation by the Florida Senate.