Politics
Winner and Loser of the Week in Florida politics — Week of 10.12.25
Published
2 months agoon
By
May Greene
Many eyes are already turning to the 2026 Midterms, weighing how an ongoing shutdown and the first several months of the Donald Trump administration might impact the makeup of Congress.
But Florida has some major municipal elections right around the corner on Nov. 4 of this year.
Miami is entering one of the most unpredictable mayoral cycles in years. With Francis Suarez term-limited, the field is wide open.
Eileen Higgins, currently a Miami-Dade County Commissioner, is among the early front-runners. An MDW poll from August gave her 36% support (well ahead of Emilio González at 15%) in the nonpartisan General Election, but not enough to avoid a December runoff. She commands strong name recognition and favorable ratings, and her campaign has leaned into continuity on transit, affordable housing, and neighborhood services.
González, a former City Manager who sued to block a controversial postponement of Miami’s election, has secured the endorsement of Gov. Ron DeSantis and other major Republicans. Meanwhile, Xavier Suarez — a former Mayor and father of the outgoing executive — is running, as is Joe Carollo.
The backdrop to all this is a high-stakes procedural tug-of-war: in June, Miami’s Commission voted 3-2 to postpone the elections to 2026 (aligning them with even-year contests). That move was struck down by a court as unconstitutional, forcing the November 2025 vote to proceed.
Orlando also offers a politically consequential set of contests. The city’s 2025 General Election will fill three City Council seats in Districts 1, 3, and 5.
In District 1, City Commissioner Jim Gray leads a crowded field that includes Tom Keen, Sunshine Linda-Marie Grund, and Manny Acosta. But much of the spotlight is on Gray, the incumbent, and Keen, a former state lawmaker.
District 3 is drawing attention as well. Incumbent Robert Stuart is retiring after two decades. That means a true open-seat scramble featuring five candidates, though Mears Transportation executive Roger Chapin is setting the fundraising pace in that contest.
In District 5, Shan Rose is the incumbent and has already pulled ahead in fundraising over challenger Regina Hill — though a third candidate, Lawanna Gelzer, injected fresh energy by self-funding a $25,000 launch. Hill, of course, was removed from this seat after being accused of taking advantage of an elderly constituent, putting fireworks behind this showdown.
Keep your eyes out for comprehensive coverage from our team as Election Day closes in.
Now, it’s onto our weekly game of winners and losers.
Winners
Honorable mention: Former Congressmen from St. Pete. Two names very familiar to St. Pete residents made headlines this week as they reasserted themselves. And though they’re former adversaries, both could be looking to deliver wins for Democrats next year.
Former Republican U.S. Rep. David Jolly, now a Democrat running for Governor, reported more than $2 million raised for his 2026 gubernatorial campaign, continuing to strengthen his candidacy in the Democratic Primary. For a party that hasn’t won a Governor’s race in more than 30 years, Jolly’s haul is the first sign that at least one candidate is taking the infrastructure challenge seriously.
Even assuming he locks up the nomination, Jolly is still the underdog in a state that has grown increasingly red. But Jolly is betting on his more moderate past appealing to voters, and so far, donors have responded.
Former U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist, meanwhile, is floating a political comeback of his own — this time back home in St. Petersburg, where he’s considering a run for Mayor.
The move would pit him against incumbent Ken Welch, another well-known Democrat, in what could become one of the most high-profile local races in the state. St. Pete City Council member Brandi Gabbard, also a Democrat, is in the race as well.
Crist still has strong name recognition and deep ties in the city, but after losing to DeSantis in 2022, his viability in another campaign will hinge on whether voters see his return as a homecoming or a retread. But he’ll be running in much more Democrat-friendly territory, in St. Pete, than will Jolly.
Funnily enough, it was Crist who bounced Jolly from Congress in 2016, after Crist had made the conversion from Republican to Democrat that Jolly underwent years later. Will they be able to convert a voter base becoming ever more GOP-friendly to their respective causes?
Almost (but not quite) the biggest winner: Florida House. This week, the Florida House broke through the haze of property tax talk and introduced a fully fleshed-out property tax package that would put choice directly to the voters.
The proposals are structured as constitutional amendments (by way of joint resolutions) rather than legislative changes. That means if the Legislature approves them, they would go straight to the 2026 ballot for voter approval.
How to reshape property taxes across the state is a thorny issue. DeSantis has been vocal about wanting a full repeal. But local officials warn that would cripple their revenue base and threaten vital services.
The House appears to have threaded the needle politically. Every proposal explicitly protects law enforcement funding and exempts school property taxes from any cuts. That avoids immediate attacks that would frame the proposals as jeopardizing cops or education.
There is, however, a caveat: none of the bills include implementing language. That means if voters approve the amendments, legislators would still have to wrestle with the details during a future Session. That’s risky, because implementation is where the real fights happen. But in terms of seeing a quick change in the state, it’s a way to avoid the plans getting caught up in the muck and stalling out.
The House is offering clear choices to Florida’s voters: pick one, several, or none of these proposed cuts. Whether voters should be trusted with such a monumental reform to government revenues is another matter. But voters have pushed for direct choices on myriad hot-button issues in years past. Now, they’ll be able to weigh in on how their property tax bills will be tallied up, if at all.
The biggest winner: Jim Boyd. The Senate Republican Caucus unanimously chose Boyd, a veteran lawmaker from Bradenton and current Senate Majority Leader, to succeed Ben Albritton.
Boyd’s message at the designation ceremony leaned into disciplined governance: fiscal restraint, accountability, pro-growth economics, protecting parental rights and defending law enforcement.
The Legislature recently has been navigating tensions with the executive branch, looming budget pressures, and hot-button cultural fights. Boyd steps into a leadership transition at a moment when the Senate will have to manage those pressures and build alliances to push things through.
Boyd’s ascent is the culmination of decades in public service and methodical relationship-building. A former insurance executive and House member before joining the Senate in 2020, he has carved out a reputation as a calm, policy-minded operator who rarely seeks headlines but consistently delivers on priorities.
For now, Boyd’s quiet rise makes him one of the most powerful figures in Florida politics heading into the next election cycle.
Losers
Dishonorable mention: Jay Collins. A new St. Pete Polls survey released this week shows Collins polling at just 4% in the GOP Primary — well behind Byron Donalds’ commanding lead of 39%. Meanwhile, his fellow contender Paul Renner sits at just 3%.
In short: We’re about 10 months from GOP Primary ballots being counted, and Collins still registers as a political nonfactor as he continues holding off on formally entering the race.
If that weren’t enough, Collins is being undercut from his own former colleagues in the Legislature. This week, 63 Republican House members — more than half of sitting Republican House members — lined up behind Donalds rather than Collins.
It’s yet another example of Team DeSantis waffling until the party apparatus has already made clear they prefer an alternative. We saw the same thing in the 2024 Presidential Primary, where DeSantis thought getting state-level support somehow would overcome members of Congress and the public at large moving back to Trump while DeSantis sat on the sidelines. Apparently, they haven’t learned their lesson.
Then there’s the “Florida Governor’s Dinner” where DeSantis had an opportunity to speak alongside Collins and CFO Blaise Ingoglia in Fort Walton Beach as Republican executive committee members from four North Florida counties are set to gather to raise money. Instead, DeSantis is flying out west to attend the Florida State football game against Stanford.
That’s quite a ringing endorsement of his potential hand-picked successor.
The 2026 gubernatorial Primary has long taken shape, and Collins appears stuck on the outside looking in.
Almost (but not quite) the biggest loser: South Florida Dems. Members of South Florida’s Democratic delegation may soon find themselves on the chopping block — not because of scandal or sluggish fundraising, but because of what’s coming out of Tallahassee and Washington.
Florida Democrats are bracing for a potential mid-decade redistricting push that DeSantis has been pushing for as a way to grow the Republican majority in the delegation.
On top of that, this week’s U.S. Supreme Court hearing in Louisiana v. Callais could lead to several minority opportunity districts being dismantled. The case could weaken key provisions of the Voting Rights Act, the same ones that have long protected districts drawn to give minority voters a chance to elect their preferred candidates.
DeSantis has already singled out Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick’s district as a likely target, calling it “almost certain” to be redrawn if the court sides with his view. That puts Cherfilus-McCormick, and possibly Frederica Wilson, directly in the crosshairs of a potential GOP power grab.
Republicans see opportunity. Club for Growth has reportedly set aside funding for a Florida ad campaign supporting new maps that could add “three additional Republican seats.” And with a newly formed House select committee on redistricting already in place, the machinery for a mid-decade remap is ready to roll the moment the Supreme Court gives the green light.
Democrats are lawyering up. Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried has hired new counsel focused solely on redistricting and is warning that DeSantis could use the federal ruling to challenge the state’s Fair Districts Amendment, the voter-approved ban on partisan gerrymandering. But their options are limited if the Florida Supreme Court, which already sided with DeSantis on prior map disputes, continues to defer to him.
Between the looming court decision, a Governor eager to reshape the map, and national conservative groups ready to bankroll it, South Florida Democrats could soon find themselves fighting for political survival.
And it’s not clear the party will have the resources to fight back.
The biggest loser: Cory Mills. A Judge this week issued a restraining order against Mills — a reputational blow that adds to an ever expanding list of controversies surrounding the Congressman.
Circuit Judge Fred Koberlein issued the restraining order at the request of Mills’ ex-girlfriend, Republican state committee member Lindsey Langston — also Miss United States 2024. The move came after she accused Mills of threatening to release sexually explicit images of her and harm her future partners after they broke up.
The court’s decision came after hearing testimony where the Judge found that Langston had suffered “substantial emotional distress” and that Mills offered “no credible rebuttal” to her accusations. The injunction, which runs until January 2026, bars Mills from contacting or approaching Langston (including via social media) and prohibits him from going within 500 feet of her home or workplace.
The order heightens long-standing questions about Mills’ personal conduct and judgment. He has already been pressured over a withdrawn assault allegation from another girlfriend — an incident that Langston says led to their own breakup — and an ongoing ethics review regarding possible conflicts involving federal contracts.
Energized opponents now have more ammo to work with to challenge Mills, and ethical and character attacks will follow him on the campaign trail — with good reason. Is this really the standard that constituents of Florida’s 7th Congressional District deserve?
You may like
Politics
Miami Beach Commission poised to rebuke Fabián Basabe over ‘false, misleading’ claims about city
Published
11 minutes agoon
December 11, 2025By
May Greene
Days after lawmakers greenlit Republican Rep. Fabián Basabe’s request for a sweeping audit of Miami Beach’s governance, local officials are preparing to denounce what they describe as “false, misleading, and unsubstantiated public claims” he’s made about the city and its leaders.
In a new resolution filed for the panel’s Dec. 17 meeting, Mayor Steven Meiner and Commissioners Tanya Bhatt, Laura Dominguez and Alex Fernadnez assert that the city operates with “transparency, ethical governance, responsible public communication, and evidence-based oversight.”
But for years, the resolution says, Basabe has repeatedly undermined public trust by publicly accusing the city of corruption, mismanagement, favoritism, improper contracting and unethical behavior — none of which, the item says, has been backed by evidence.
The resolution highlights Basabe’s initial request in October for an audit of Miami Beach, which, among other things, raised concerns of “financial mismanagement, procurement irregularities,” “inflated contracts, diversion of funds, and questionable budget allocations.”
Basabe has yet to provide substantiation for any of those claims, according to the resolution, which also cites Basabe’s amplification of social media claims alleging that Commissioners are controlled by insiders or engaged in improper dealings, calling those assertions “completely without evidence.”
Similarly, the item says Basabe’s criticism of Miami Beach’s homelessness ordinance has been “factually and legally baseless,” contradicting census data from the Miami-Dade Homeless Trust showing homelessness at “historic lows.” His claims regarding misuse of voter-approved general obligation bond funds are also “categorically false,” according to the resolution.
The Miami Beach Commission is a seven-member body, meaning that if Meiner, Bhatt, Dominguez and Fernandez all vote for the measure they sponsored, it will pass. Commissioner Joseph Magazine, who was traveling when contacted Thursday, said he’d heard the gist of the resolution but won’t decide whether he’ll be supportive until he reads it.
Commissioner David Suarez, who this year lodged accusations against Dominguez similar to those Basabe intimated, responded to a query from Florida Politics about the issue, but did not say whether he’d support or oppose the resolution.
Commissioner-elect Monica Matteo-Salinas, a former Fernandez staffer who is to be sworn in Dec. 15, did not immediately respond.
Meiner, Magazine and Suarez have no party affiliation. Bhatt, Dominguez, Fernandez and Matteo-Salinas are Democrats.
Senators and Representatives in the Joint Legislative Auditing Committee voted unanimously on Monday to direct Florida Auditor General Sherill Norman to examine Miami Beach’s operations.
Norman will now set the scope of the review, and auditors will coordinate with the city in the coming weeks to begin document requests and on-site work. A final report is expected roughly one year after the audit formally begins.
In a lengthy statement, Basabe accused the resolution’s sponsors of “trying to turn a basic oversight measure into a political fight,” noting that the measure was placed on the Commission’s consent agenda, “where it can be passed in a batch without discussion unless a Commissioner pulls it.”
“This alone tells you how uncomfortable they are with transparency. Challenging an independent audit is never in the best interest of residents, and trying to bury a political attack inside a procedural shortcut should concern anyone who cares about honest government,” he said.
“It is defensive and calculated to serve as a shield to their calculated ecosystem of donors, lobbyists and contract-holders who rely on secrecy and confusion to operate. Residents deserve clarity, clean bookkeeping and honest government. They also deserve leaders willing to collaborate in good faith.”
This isn’t the first time Basabe has sought potentially punitive action against local officials in cities he represents. In August, he successfully pushed for Bay Harbor to fire its Town Attorney, Democratic Miami-Dade School Board member Joe Geller. The action, effectuated by a 6-1 Town Council vote, prompted one of Geller’s law firm partners to opine that the number of municipalities Basabe has scrutinized “probably correlates to the number of political enemies he has.”
Fernandez said in a brief phone interview that he welcomes the audit, noting that the city operates at a surplus, has reduced its millage rate in recent years, and enjoys strong bond ratings. Miami Beach also has an independent Inspector General who regularly checks the city’s books for waste and abuse, Fernandez said before accusing Basabe of both.
“We have a public official that is lying to his colleagues about one of his cities, and now we have public resources being dedicated to looking into falsehoods,” he said. “Everything that he has alleged is false and misleading, and now it’s leading to an audit that wastes taxpayers’ money.”
Fernandez added that Basabe may have also engaged in a “criminal misuse of public office” by including his official Florida House letterhead in communications accusing him and Dominguez of wrongdoing and calling for candidates to challenge them.
In one letter addressed to “the Residents of Miami Beach,” he asked, “WILL ANYONE RUN AGAINST FERNANDEZ OR DOMINGUEZ? Step up to and help to save our city!” In another that did not include their names, the lawmaker wrote, “If you vote for any of these incumbents, you’re endorsing deceit and rewarding incompetence.”
Florida Statute 104.31 provides that a public official may not use their authority or influence “for the purpose of interfering with an election or nomination of office or coercing or influencing another person’s vote or affecting the result thereof.”
Miami Beach resident Jo Manning cited that statute and others in September ethics complaints she filed against Suarez, who used the city’s seal and letterhead in communications aimed at defeating Dominguez in the city’s November election.
Fernandez won re-election last month with a record-breaking 84% of the vote, while Dominguez took 61% of the vote to defeat a Republican challenger that Suarez backed.
Politics
Last Call for 12.11.25 – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida
Published
42 minutes agoon
December 11, 2025By
May Greene
Last Call – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida politics.
Ed. Note — After a hectic Election Night on Tuesday, we have decided to give Sunburn the night off. Don’t worry, the morning read of what’s HOT in Florida Politics will return to your inboxes bright and early Monday morning! Thanks for your support, and have a wonderful weekend.
___
A huge top-of-Last-Call birthday shoutout to our friend, Florida TaxWatch President & CEO Dominic Calabro.
___
Happening tomorrow — The Florida Department of Health is holding a rulemaking workshop in Panama City Beach on proposed changes to Rule 64D-3.046, which governs immunization requirements for children in public and private schools and child care. Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo has signaled interest in dropping several routine childhood vaccines from the school/child care list, revisiting the Florida SHOTS registry, and broadening the process for obtaining religious exemptions. Pediatric, legal and patient advocates from American Families for Vaccines, Florida Families for Vaccines, the Florida Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Southern Legal Counsel, the Pro-Vaccine Legal Alliance, and The J.A.I.M.E. Group are on-site, urging DOH to keep long-standing protections in place and avoid moves they say could put Florida families at greater risk for preventable disease: 9 a.m. CT, Hyatt Place Panama City Beach, 15727 Front Beach Rd., Dunes Conference Room, Panama City Beach.
First Shot
Gov. Ron DeSantis is supporting a plan that boots the University of South Florida from its Sarasota-Manatee campus and shifts every building, dorm and facility to New College of Florida, which would mark a dramatic reshaping of Sarasota’s higher education landscape.
The measure, pitched as part of the Governor’s 2026-27 budget proposal, would create a new section of Florida law directing the two institutions to shift all real property, buildings, leaseholds and related liabilities associated with the Sarasota-Manatee campus from USF to New College.
“This is a policy matter that is going to be discussed, debated and worked through over the coming months of the Legislative Session,” USF Board of Trustees Chair Will Weatherford said during a meeting on Thursday. “We don’t control the outcome of that discussion.”
The conforming bill specifies that no students, employees, fund balances, research contracts or grants would be part of the transfer, which applies only to real estate, fixed capital facilities, particular furnishings and any outstanding debts tied to those facilities. It would also ensure that current USF Sarasota-Manatee students can complete their degrees for up to four more years.
“Our priority, and what we do control as a university, is how we treat and protect our students, our faculty and our staff,” Weatherford said.
If approved, New College would be required to assume full legal and financial liability for the campus’s outstanding facility debt no later than Oct. 30, 2026. Until that assumption is complete, New College would make monthly payments of $166,617 to USF to cover the debt service. Failure by New College to make those payments would void the transfer and return the facilities to USF.
The real property transfer must be completed by July 1, 2026, with specific assets and liabilities identified in a joint agreement approved by both schools’ Boards of Trustees and submitted to the Board of Governors.
Read more on Florida Politics.
Evening Reads
—”Always on my mind: Donald Trump’s enduring focus on Joe Biden” via Shawn McCreesh of The New York Times
—”Disguised and in danger: How a Nobel Peace Prize winner escaped Venezuela” via José de Córdoba, Vera Bergengruen and Alex Leary of The Wall Street Journal
—”The Republicans fighting Trump’s latest redistricting plan” via Kelli Wessinger and Anstead Herndon of Vox
—”When did the job market get so rude?” via Franklin Schneider of The Atlantic
—”Doxxers posing as cops are tricking Big Tech firms into sharing people’s private data” via David Gilbert of WIRED
—“The VA was a safe space for veterans. That era is over” via Michael Embrich of Rolling Stone
—”Florida leads nation in cuts to environmental protection jobs, report says” via Jeffrey Schweers of the Orlando Sentinel
—“Eileen Higgins says backlash to Trump’s ‘trickle-down hatred’ helped her Miami Mayor win” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
—“House Committee advances bill expanding E-Verify to all Florida businesses” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics
—”University of West Florida approves American Civic Republicanism Center” via Jay Waagmeester of the Florida Phoenix
Quote of the Day
“Every time a state does something like this, we get that much further away from all of our goals, which is to fix immigration in this country.”
— AFL-CIO lobbyist Rich Templin, on a bill expanding E-Verify to all businesses.
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.
It needs a real-world recipe, but once that’s hammered out, Attorney General James Uthmeier gets The Bite of ’87 for going after Roblox creeps in court.
With Florida farmers getting a chunk of a $1 billion federal specialty crop bailout, it’s time for a Tomatini — c’mon, a citrus-based cocktail would’ve been low-hanging fruit.
Rep. Dean Black’s HB 4017 would serve the Nassau County Recreation & Water Conservation & Control Districts a Trashcan, whether they like it or not.
Breakthrough Insights
Army-Navy takes college football spotlight this weekend
With conference championship games played and the College Football Playoff not kicking off until Dec. 19, this weekend is highlighted by a singular spectacle of college football: the 126th playing of the Army-Navy game, this year in Baltimore (3 p.m. ET Saturday, CBS).
Both teams will play in a bowl game. Army is scheduled to face UConn in the Fenway Bowl on Dec. 27, while Navy is booked for the Liberty Bowl against Cincinnati on Jan. 2. But this is the game that will live the longest in the minds of the players.
Army (6-5) is coming off a three-point win over Texas-San Antonio. The Black Knights’ last four games have been decided by three points or less. In that stretch, Army has won three games, with the only loss coming in a 26-25 defeat by Tulsa. As usual, Army’s offense is based around the ground game. Quarterback Cale Hellums has rushed for 1,078 yards while throwing for just 504 yards this season.
Navy (9-2) won the last two games after suffering its only losses of the season in back-to-back weeks. After falling to North Texas and then No. 10 Notre Dame, the Midshipmen responded with wins over 24th-ranked South Florida and at Memphis.
Like Army, Navy’s top rusher is a quarterback. Blake Horvath has thrown for 1,390 yards and rushed for 1,040 yards this season. Navy is the top rushing team in the nation, averaging 298.4 yards per game, while Army ranks fifth at 256.9 yards per game.
___
Last Call is published by Peter Schorsch, assembled and edited by Phil Ammann and Drew Wilson, with contributions from the staff of Florida Politics.
Politics
Ashley Moody, Rick Scott vote to kill extension of health care subsidies
Published
1 hour agoon
December 11, 2025By
May Greene
The U.S. Senate has shot down a proposal to extend health care subsidies for three years. Both U.S. Sens. Rick Scott and Ashley Moody voted against the proposal.
The rejection from Florida’s Senate delegation came even though Florida has 4.7 million consumers, more than any other state, relying on tax credits obtained in the Affordable Care Act (ACA) Marketplace.
As of now, those consumers are set to see premiums increase without subsidies that were expanded in 2020 in response to the COVID pandemic. A shorter extension of the subsidies is still possible, but no plan has been agreed upon despite price hikes nearing.
The Florida Senators drew pushback from Florida Democrats immediately.
“It is exactly two weeks before Christmas and 4.7 million Floridians are terrified they are going to lose access to their healthcare,” said Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried.
“Instead of fighting for their health and safety our Senators, Rick Scott and Ashley Moody have decided to leave them out in the cold by voting against ensuring their health and safety. Floridians are scrambling to keep food on the table and the lights on during this affordability crisis. The least our elected officials can do is ensure that their healthcare costs don’t balloon by thousands of dollars, pushing more Florida families to the brink.”
But it’s little surprise that either Scott or Moody voted against the bill.
Scott, a Naples Republican, made clear throughout a Rescuing the American Dream summit he led in Washington last week that he considers the ACA subsidies bad policy. He instead has pushed his alternative More Affordable Care Act, which seeks out free market solutions to reduce the costs paid by consumers.
Ahead of the vote, he said Congress should not continue down the road of further subsidizing insurance.
“American families see clearly that Obamacare has failed to deliver on its promises — instead, it created a broken system that screwed over the American people with higher costs and fewer options,” Scott said.
“Families are left paying higher premiums and higher deductibles for health care plans that don’t even fit their needs. We can fix that: we just have to let Americans be the consumer so they can get care that truly fits their needs and drive competition to lower costs.”
Shortly after the vote against extending subsidies, Scott’s Office issued a roundup of conservative groups endorsing his bill, though the Republican majority in the Senate has failed to coalesce around Scott’s plan, or any other specific health care proposal.
Moody hasn’t been vocal on health care, but was among the 48 Republicans who voted against taking up a Democratic bill to extend subsidies. While 51 Senators supported taking up the bill, Senate rules require 60 votes to advance legislation.
Notably, Moody, who was appointed to the Senate in January, stands for election in 2026. A Republican polling firm in October released survey results earlier this year showing the Plant City Republican may be more vulnerable to a challenge if she does not support extending tax credits, a program supported by 73% of Florida voters.
Democrats suggested they intend to highlight the vote against subsidies in the Midterms. Due to the vote, all Floridians receiving subsidies will likely see them expire at the close of 2025.
“If these subsidies expire, costs will skyrocket forcing families to make impossible choices — including forgoing healthcare. That means higher costs, strained services, and longer wait times for everyone,” Fried said.
“Floridians deserve better. Healthcare should not be a partisan issue and it’s a shame that millions of Americans have to endure this during the holidays.”
The debate around the subsidies for insurance were at the heart of a government shutdown this year.
Cavs Great Daniel ‘Booby’ Gibson Tries Using Community Hero Card During Arrest
Miami Beach Commission poised to rebuke Fabián Basabe over ‘false, misleading’ claims about city
The race to an AI workforce faces one important trust gap: What happens when an agent goes rogue?
Trending
-
Politics8 years agoCongress rolls out ‘Better Deal,’ new economic agenda
-
Entertainment8 years agoNew Season 8 Walking Dead trailer flashes forward in time
-
Politics8 years agoPoll: Virginia governor’s race in dead heat
-
Entertainment8 years agoThe final 6 ‘Game of Thrones’ episodes might feel like a full season
-
Entertainment8 years agoMeet Superman’s grandfather in new trailer for Krypton
-
Politics8 years agoIllinois’ financial crisis could bring the state to a halt
-
Business8 years ago6 Stunning new co-working spaces around the globe
-
Tech8 years agoHulu hires Google marketing veteran Kelly Campbell as CMO



