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Tag: Corina Cappabianca

  • Members of Congress react to special session on redistricting

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    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Florida’s members of Congress are reacting to Gov. Ron DeSantis’ announcement Wednesday that the state will hold a special legislative session on congressional redistricting this spring.


    What You Need To Know

    • Gov. Ron DeSantis announced a special legislative session in April on congressional redistricting.
    • In the U.S. House, Florida Republicans currently hold 20 seats. Florida Democrats hold eight seats. 
    • States like Texas and California have recently redrawn their congressional district lines. 


    President Donald Trump has encouraged Republican-led states to pursue mid-decade redistricting. It comes as the battle for power in the U.S. House between Republicans and Democrats in this year’s upcoming midterm elections inches closer. In response, Democrat-led states are also acting, like California whose voters have recently approved new maps. 

    In the U.S. House, Florida Republicans hold 20 seats, while Florida Democrats hold eight seats. Florida’s Democrats are blasting DeSantis’ plans, arguing the state’s constitution prohibits partisan gerrymandering. 

    “Cheaters got to cheat. We know we have the Fair Districts Amendments that ban partisan gerrymandering, and that’s exactly what the governor is trying to do,” said Rep. Darren Soto.

    “It has nothing to do with making sure that there’s good representation up in Washington, D.C. This is purely a political move to protect the president of the United States and his agenda. And, so what Ron DeSantis is doing is illegal,” said Florida Democratic Party Chairwoman Nikki Fried.

    No potential map drafts have been released yet. Here’s what some Florida Republicans had to say when asked about the plans for a special session: 

    “I know what I can control and what I can’t control. Whatever they choose to do in Tallahassee, I’ll be OK with. I feel very comfortable running for reelection. I’m excited to run for reelection,” said Rep. Mike Haridopolos.

    “I intend to run for reelection. We’ll see what happens. We obviously have legal maps in Florida right now. If the Florida House and the Florida Senate and the governor want to change those maps in line with the Florida Constitution, we’ll deal with whatever happens,” said Rep. Randy Fine. 

    Currently, Florida has roughly 1.4 million more registered Republicans than Democrats. 

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    Corina Cappabianca, Carl Brewer

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  • Advocates highlight Lung Cancer Awareness Month in D.C. 

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    WASHINGTON, D.C. — November is Lung Cancer Awareness Month, and advocates warn that the federal government shutdown is disrupting potentially lifesaving research.


    What You Need To Know

    • November marks Lung Cancer Awareness Month
    • The LUNGevity Foundation held a press conference in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday
    • The organization planted 60,000 flags on the National Mall to represent the 120,000 Americans killed by the disease annually


    “A lot of the research that was ongoing or is about to start, or hopefully will start, is brought to a halt. And unfortunately, science isn’t something you can just turn on and off, so it really needs that sustainability and the continuity that federal funding provides to them,” said Andrea Ferris, president and chief executive officer of LUNGevity Foundation.

    On Wednesday, the LUNGevity Foundation held a news conference on the National Mall to advocate for research funding. Terri Ann DiJulio, a member of the LUNGevity Foundation’s board of directors, was first diagnosed with lung cancer when she was just 42 years old. She said early detection is key. 

    “We need research funding, not only to develop better treatment options, but to create better, more accessible detection tools to find lung cancer earlier, when it’s most treatable and when people have the most, greatest chance for a cure,” DiJulio said. 

    The Trump Administration has cut thousands of employees at the Department of Health and Human Services, which houses the National Institutes of Health. Meanwhile, Democrats are seeking an extension of enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies as part of any government funding deal. 

    “Right now, we’re in the fight of our lives with the extension of the ACA tax credits that provides literal lifesaving health care coverage for health care patients,” Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz said.

    “So, we already have the difficulty and challenge of getting people to be aware of the opportunity to get screened for lung cancer. If you don’t have health care coverage, then you’re not going to be able to have access to that because you won’t be able to afford the cost of it.”

    A group of bipartisan House lawmakers, including Wasserman Schultz, have co-sponsored the Lung Cancer Screening and Prevention Act requiring Medicare to cover more screenings, and the Mobile Cancer Screening Act to expand access to rural and underserved communities. 

    The disease kills roughly 120,000 Americans every year, according to the LUNGevity Foundation

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    Corina Cappabianca

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  • AARP talks new report on caregiving, including Florida

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    WASHINGTON, D.C. — According to a recent state-by-state report from the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP), there are now more than four million caregivers in Florida assisting loved ones with disabilities or “complex medical conditions.”

    Advocates say as a result of that growing number, Congress should pass legislation to help ease the financial strain. 


    What You Need To Know

    • AARP has a new state-by-state look at caregiving across the country
    • Advocates say Congress should pass legislation to help ease the financial strain on caregivers
    • Some of the measures they support include the Credit for Caring Act and the Lowering Costs for Caregivers Act


    “We are in a caregiving crisis with 63 million caregivers in this country. And they are increasingly facing helping with medical tasks. We know there’s a huge financial toll on families as well,” said Megan O’Reilly, Vice President for Health and Family, AARP Government Affairs.

    Jessyca Sosa of Miami is what is called a “sandwich” caregiver. She is raising teenagers while also caring for her mother, Grisel, who has been recovering from strokes. 

    “We converted our garage in our house and made like a full apartment for her to live in,” Sosa said. “She has suffered several strokes, which have made the whole caregiving process a little bit more difficult and more taxing.”

    O’Reilly says the financial strain on caregivers is substantial and multifaceted. “On average, family caregivers are spending about $7,200 out of pocket. But, there’s also implications as it relates to, are you having to dig into retirement savings?” O’Reilly said. 

    Advocates are pushing lawmakers in Congress to pass bipartisan legislation to ease that strain. 

    “We have two bills that AARP has advocated for, bipartisan, bicameral — the Credit for Caring Act, which would provide a non-refundable $5,000 tax credit to really help family caregivers alleviate some of those financial responsibilities they’re taking on as they care for their loved ones,” O’Reilly said.

    “A second bill, the Lowering Costs for Caregivers Act, would allow you to use your existing FSA or HSA to help pay for expenses that you’ve paid for your parent or parent-in-law,” she said.

    Sosa says the tax credit is needed.

    “Absolutely, we should have those tax deductions the same way that I get tax credits for my children under the age of 17,” Sosa said. “I should have the same thing when I am the person that is constantly caring for my older parent.”

    So far, the bills haven’t gained enough support to pass either the House or Senate. The government remains in a shutdown.

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    Corina Cappabianca

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  • Acting NASA admin says future HQ location is not priority

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    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Earlier this year, members of Florida’s congressional delegation made a big push advocating to relocate NASA’s headquarters from Washington, D.C. to the Sunshine State. But, for now, the current head of the space agency says he has ‘more important issues’ to deal with than think about any potential move. 


    What You Need To Know

    • A bipartisan group of Florida lawmakers in Congress is seeking to move NASA’s HQ from Washington, D.C. to Florida
    • They introduced legislation in March called the CAPE Canaveral Act
    • Acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy tells Spectrum News he hasn’t “put one iota of mind space yet into where the headquarters should go”


    Back in March, a bipartisan group of Florida lawmakers introduced legislation in both the House and Senate called the CAPE Canaveral Act to transfer the headquarters of NASA to Brevard County.

    Proponents say the move would be a big boon for the Sunshine State. About 2,500 employees are based out of the space agency’s D.C. headquarters, but the current lease is ending in 2028. And Florida isn’t the only state vying for it.

    “So, a lot of considerations, right? Texas wants it. Florida wants it. You know, a lot of people make the argument that it should stay in Washington, D.C.,” acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy told Spectrum News in an interview last week.

    President Donald Trump selected Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy to be NASA’s acting administrator in July after pulling the nomination of billionaire commercial astronaut Jared Isaacman. But as Duffy juggles leading multiple agencies, he says examining the future location for NASA’s headquarters isn’t a priority right now.

    “I’m in a place, though, where we’re in a race to get to the moon before the Chinese, and all effort has been to make that happen. So, I haven’t put one iota of mind space yet into where the headquarters should go, because I have other way more important issues that I’m navigating at NASA,” Duffy said.

    While the prospect of moving NASA’s headquarters anytime soon seems to have fizzled, some other agencies are actively being moved out of D.C., or considering moves. In June, the Department of Housing and Urban Development announced plans to move its headquarters to Alexandria, Virginia.

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    Corina Cappabianca

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  • New tool launched to map out NOAA sites

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    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Environmental advocates have mapped out the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s 735 sites across the country with a new interactive digital tool as the Trump Administration seeks to cut about $2 billion from the agency in the 2026 budget year. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The Environmental Defense Fund has mapped out hundreds of NOAA sites across the U.S. 
    • EDF Senior Director for Ocean Public Affairs Reggie Paros says it was created to highlight the Trump Administration’s proposed budget cuts to the agency
    • The new federal budget year begins on October 1st, but Congress hasn’t reached a deal yet on legislation to fund the government


    The Environmental Defense Fund has created its new tool using NOAA data to map out hundreds of NOAA sites throughout the country, including more than 30 in Florida or off its coast.

    “NOAA oftentimes is viewed as just another sort of far away, distant federal agency in DC, when the reality is that NOAA is in local communities across the country and millions of Americans rely on programs and services that NOAA provides every day,” said the Environmental Defense Fund’s Senior Director for Ocean Public Affairs, Reggie Paros. Some of those services include weather forecasting and storm tracking.

    The Environmental Defense Fund map is color-coded. A red dot for example, shows an Office of Oceanic & Atmospheric Research site. While an orange dot represents a National Marine Fisheries Service site. 

    “As you’re going in and looking at the map, you can indicate and see what federal budget line items are potentially being cut by the Administration and how those will impact your local communities,” Paros said. 

    Among those proposed cuts is closing the Atlantic Oceanographic & Meteorological Laboratory in Miami. “One of the other biggest areas that they cut is the Marine Fishery Service. They suggested over a 40% cut to that part of the agency,” Paros said. 

    The Trump Administration’s Budget Estimates Congressional Submission argues, “A leaner NOAA that focuses on core operational needs, eliminates unnecessary layers of bureaucracy, terminates nonessential grant programs, and ends activities that do not warrant a Federal role, will provide better value to the American public while maintaining activities that are essential to protecting lives and property.”

    The new federal budget year begins Oct. 1, but Congress has not yet reached a deal to fund the government. 

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    Corina Cappabianca

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  • Union leaders sound the alarm on NASA staffing, proposed budget cuts

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    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Union leaders representing NASA employees and NASA workers gathered outside the National Air and Space Museum Tuesday, sounding the alarm against the Trump Administration’s staffing levels for the space agency and proposed 2026 budget cuts.


    What You Need To Know

    • NASA employees and leaders with the International Federation of Professional & Technical Engineers and the American Federation of Government Employees rallied against staffing levels and proposed budget cuts
    • They gathered outside the National Air and Space Museum 
    • Tuesday marked the 67th anniversary since legislation creating NASA was signed into law by then-President Dwight Eisenhower


    The gathering was organized by the International Federation of Professional & Technical Engineers and the American Federation of Government Employees.

    IFPTE’s president says roughly 4,000 NASA employees, about a quarter of the agency’s workforce, have left since President Donald Trump took office in January, amid downsizing efforts and a voluntary resignation program encouraging workers to exit.

    “They want even more of these brilliant minds to leave. The most disturbing thing of this is at some point this becomes irreversible. It becomes irreversible. Why would anyone want to go work at NASA anymore, given the way that these workers are being treated by this administration?” said Matthew Biggs, International Federation of Professional & Technical Engineers president.

    The Trump administration is proposing about a 25 percent cut to the agency’s budget for 2026, with big cuts aimed at the Science Mission Directorate conducting NASA’s research work.

    “If you just look at the money spent on science, they want to cut the science budget by 47 percent,” Biggs said. 

    Tuesday marked the 67th anniversary since legislation creating NASA was signed into law by then-President Dwight Eisenhower.

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    Corina Cappabianca

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  • Rep. Bilirakis discusses legislation to help find cure for Parkinson’s disease

    Rep. Bilirakis discusses legislation to help find cure for Parkinson’s disease

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    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Parkinson’s Disease is a non-curable neurological disorder that impacts more than 1 million Americans, according to the American Parkinson Disease Association.

    But this week, President Joe Biden signed off on bipartisan legislation sponsored by Rep. Gus Bilirakis aimed at putting an end to the disease.


    What You Need To Know

    • President Joe Biden signed the Dr. Emmanuel Bilirakis and Honorable Jennifer Wexton National Plan to End Parkinson’s Act into law this week
    • It will create an advisory council with federal officials, care givers, patients and experts to work together to fight the disease
    • More than 1 million Americans live with Parkinson’s Disease.


    The new law is called The Dr. Emmanuel Bilirakis and Honorable Jennifer Wexton National Plan to End Parkinson’s Act.

    It was named after Rep. Bilirakis’ brother, who passed away from the disease last year at just 61, and Rep. Jennifer Wexton, who has been diagnosed with Progressive Supranuclear Palsy.

    “My brother passed away last year from a Parkinson’s complications, my mother-in-law, my father has it. So, you know, I’m familiar with it. And, we want to bring in the caregivers as well, because we need treatments and to make things easier for the patients,” said Bilirakis.

    The National Plan to End Parkinson’s Act establishes an advisory council of federal agency members, caregivers, patients and other medical experts in the private sector to work together to create a plan to prevent and cure the disease. It will submit an annual report to Congress. The report will also look for ways to lessen the cost of the disease on patients and the federal government.

    Leading agencies in the fight to end Parkinson’s, including the Michael J. Fox Foundation, Parkinson’s Foundation and the American Parkinson Disease Association (APDA), support the law.

    “This is a historic moment for the one million people currently living with PD in the United States, the 90,000 receiving a new PD diagnosis each year, and the larger PD community, including the many advocates who have supported this legislation. APDA is proud to be counted among them,” APDA said in a statement.

    Bilirakis says he believes his brother Emanuel, who was a doctor himself, would be proud to see the bill signed into law.

    “His family was with me in the Oval Office. I told them that he’s smiling from above. So, I think he would be very pleased,” Bilirakis said.

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    Corina Cappabianca

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  • DeSantis vetoes social media restrictions

    DeSantis vetoes social media restrictions

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    Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed a social media restriction bill, and lawmakers in Washington tackle microplastics.


    Gov. DeSantis vetoes social media restrictions bill

    Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed the social media restrictions bill, House Bill 1, on Friday.

    In a statement on X, DeSantis said that he expected the Florida Legislature to approve a new bill that he feels would be superior.

    “Protecting children from harms associated with social media is important, as is supporting parents’ rights and maintaining the ability of adults to engage in anonymous speech,” DeSantis said.

    After days of backdoor negotiations, lawmakers are set to reveal the new and improved social media bill to replace the recently vetoed HB 1. The legislative session is scheduled to end March 8.

    The original bill would have prevented anyone under 16 from using social media, but DeSantis was a skeptic of the plan.

    Members of the House, the Senate and the governor’s office all made compromises to get to this point.

    “We’re happy. We believe we started out with a very good bill, and this bill is even better,” Florida House Speaker Paul Renner said.

    The bill still bans those 15 and younger from social media. However, it now allows parents to opt in, a point that was a major concern for DeSantis.

    “Parents need to have a role in this, so we’re working to make sure there’s a role for parents,” DeSantis said. “You can say it’s disfavored or not allowed for a 14-, 15-year-old, but a parent has the right to opt in.”

    Still, there are constitutional concerns. Social media bans have failed in other states, but Florida leaders said they believe this one is different.

    “I think ya’ll know me,” Rep. Michele Rayner said. “You know I’m a lawyer. You know that I’m not putting my name on something that I feel would not survive any constitutional scrutiny, and I think the product we’re going to end up with actually does that.”

    In his veto letter, the governor made two main points:

    • He believed parents deserve the right to allow their children to use social media.
    • He had concerns about data privacy and the process of verifying a user’s age.

    Judge to set court date in Trump records trial

    A federal judge in Florida heard arguments on when to hold former President Donald Trump’s trial on charges of mishandling classified documents.

    The decision, which is expected soon, could have enormous consequences for the case, and the presidential race.

    Judge Aileen Cannon is deciding when to re-schedule Trump’s May 20 trial on charges of keeping classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate, and hiding them from government investigators.

    Special Counsel Jack Smith requested a July 8 start, but Trump’s legal team pushed for a later date as part of a delay strategy his lawyers have employed in the four criminal cases against him.

    Some polling suggests that one or more guilty verdicts could damage Trump with voters. Delaying the trials puts off such a possibility. And if Trump wins the Republican nomination and defeats President Joe Biden, he could force the Justice Department to drop its two cases against him altogether.

    Trump has so far used the 91 total felony charges against him as a rallying cry for supporters.

    Lawmakers consider limiting microplastics

    Science and sustainability experts are sounding the alarm on micro and nano plastics found in drinking water, urging lawmakers on Capitol Hill to take action to limit their prevalence.

    A Senate Environment and Public Works Joint Subcommittee hearing on Tuesday comes after a recent study by Rutgers and Columbia University researchers found 240,000 pieces of microplastic in an average liter of bottled water.

    “Those invisible plastics are why we’re here today. Like people shed skin cells, plastics shed particles of plastics. These can be big micro plastics, which range from half a centimeter down to a micrometer, a micrometer being less than 170th the size of human hair, or they can be as small as nanoplastics, which are even smaller than a micrometer,” Sen. Jeff Merkley said. 

    Experts warn the tiny plastics may have harmful health effects.

    “There are about 13,000 different chemicals used during the manufacture of various plastic products,” said Penn State Behrend Director of Sustainability, Dr. Sherri Mason. “Many of these are known to be carcinogens or endocrine-disrupting chemicals, which means that they mimic hormones and the chemical messengers of the body by affecting the endocrine system,.” 

    Experts also say the tiny particles are pervasive, and many come from an unexpected source, the clothes we wear.

    “Potential solutions include requiring microfiber filters on washing machines, as has been bill has been introduced in Oregon and in California as well,”  Oregon State University Professor Susanne Brander said. “Also, catches for rain gardens can significantly reduce plastic pollution from stormwater runoff.”

    The last major federal initiative against micro plastics was in 2015, when then-President Barack Obama signed a ban on microbead plastics in personal care and cosmetic products.

    This October, Democrats introduced legislation called the Break Free from Plastic Pollution Act to encourage corporations to shift away from plastic use.

    But, in a divided Congress with Democrats controlling the Senate, and Republicans controlling the House, it’s not likely to get through.

    Republicans on the committee thanked the witnesses for their research, but cautioned about placing regulatory burdens.

    “As we’re moving forward looking at microplastics, we have to be careful that we’re not getting ahead of, as we would say, the science and do an undue burden or burdens,” Sen. Markwayne Mullin said. 

    Senate Democrats have also sponsored legislation to research the effects of microplastics in farming. 

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    Gary Darling

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  • Biden, Trump visit border; antisemitism gets attention

    Biden, Trump visit border; antisemitism gets attention

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    Both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump visited the border on Thursday, and lawmakers in Tallahassee passed a bill to combat antisemitism. 


    Trump and Biden visit the border

    Former President Donald Trump spoke alongside Texas and border patrol officials near the U.S.-Mexico border on Thursday, describing the humanitarian crisis there as a “war” and spouted false conspiracy theories that the flow of migrants into the country was an “invasion” orchestrated by President Joe Biden to import “entire columns of fighting-age men.”

    Biden is “allowing thousands and thousands of people to come in from China, Iran, Yemen, the Congo, Syria and a lot of other nations. Many that nations are not very friendly to us,” Trump baselessly charged. “He’s transported the entire columns of fighting-age men and they’re all at a certain age and you look at them, and I said, ‘They look like warriors to me, something’s going on.’ It’s bad.”

    The baseless claims and insinuations echo the white supremacist conspiracy theory known as “The Great Replacement.” The theory, which posits Democrats and other elites are intentionally bringing nonwhite migrants into the country to “replace” white Americans and sow chaos, has inspired racist mass shootings with death tolls in the hundreds in the U.S. and across the world in the last decade.

    “I think they’re looking for votes, they’re looking for something, nobody’s really been able to tell me how anybody could want it,” Trump charged, before stumbling through a commentary on non-English speaking migrants. “Allowing millions of people from places unknown, from countries unknown, who don’t speak languages — we have languages coming into our country, we have nobody that even speaks those languages. They’re, they’re truly foreign languages. Nobody speaks them.”

    Trump and his campaign have pledged that his second administration will orchestrate the largest deportation operations in U.S. history, attempt to end the constitutional right to birthright citizenship and bring troops home from abroad to be deployed at the southern border — including using the U.S. Navy to “impose a full naval embargo on the cartels,” as his campaign said this week.

    The 2024 GOP frontrunner’s visit to the border came simultaneously to Biden’s visit to Brownsville, Texas, where he also addressed border and immigration issues and appealed to Republicans — including Trump — to embrace bipartisan solutions. Trump opposed a bipartisan border deal and helped convince Republicans, including some negotiators, to abandon it earlier this month.

    “Here’s what I would say to Mr. Trump: Instead of playing politics with this issue, instead of telling members of Congress to block this legislation, join me, or I’ll join you, in telling the Congress to pass this bipartisan border security bill,” Biden said Thursday. “We can do it together.”

    “Let’s remember who the heck we work for. We work for the American people. Not the Democratic Party, the Republican Party. The American people,” the president added.

    The proposed deal would have given Biden the authority to shut down the border if the number of migrant crossings in a given day crossed 8,500, or an average of 5,000 over a seven-day period. It also would have provided $20 billion in funding to facilitate the hiring of an additional 1,500 border patrol personnel, 4,300 asylum officers and 100 immigration judges, as well as allocated funds for 100 machines to help detect fentanyl and around $1.4 billion for cities and municipalities struggling to address their community’s ballooning migrant populations, per the White House.

    “Trump said, ‘Blame it on me.’ And so I will. Trump’s need to boost his own fragile political ego has gotten us here with another manufactured logjam,” Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said on a press call organized by the Biden campaign on Wednesday, quoting Trump directly. “A few weeks ago, there was a chance for a real breakthrough on immigration policy. President Biden and congressional Democrats did what voters say they want from leaders: They sat down at a table with Republicans and negotiated a bipartisan compromise.”

    “But the same Republicans who helped write and were prepared to vote for it suddenly opposed it. Why? Because Donald Trump told them to because Donald Trump doesn’t want a solution,” Pritzker continued.

    Trump spoke at Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas, a park on the Rio Grande where migrants — including children — have died attempting to reach since Gov. Greg Abbott seized it, kicked out U.S. Border Patrol and set up miles of razor wire. The federal government successfully sued to regain access and cut the wire, but Abbott’s administration has continued to defy the Supreme Court order and challenge Biden’s authority. While in Eagle Pass, Trump met with Abbott, border patrol agents and state and local law enforcement officials.

    “Biden is using every tool that he can to tear down the borders that Texas is putting up in our state,” Abbott said on Thursday. “What our National Guard has done, they have sealed off this entire park and taken it over, because this area was being used by the Biden administration to violate the laws of the United States of America.”

    Abbott, Texas National Guard Maj. Gen. Thomas Suelzer and border patrol union president Brandon Judd spoke alongside Trump when he addressed the media after touring the heavily fortified park. Judd described his members, federal employees who answer to Biden administration appointees, as “your agents” to Trump, who has not been president for over three years.

    “Your agents, Mr. President, are pissed. Border Patrol agents are upset that we cannot get the proper policy,” Judd said. “Thank goodness we have a governor like Gov. Abbott. Thank goodness we have somebody that’s willing to run for president of the United States, forgo everything else that he’s been doing to serve the American people.”

    Abbott and Trump both played up the menace of crime from migrants, with the Texas Republican also claiming his state was the subject of an “invasion.” Both referenced rapes, assaults and murders by undocumented immigrants, though the high-profile cases do not reflect years of data and analyses that conclude migrants, regardless of their legal status, commit less crimes than natural-born U.S. citizens.

    “Immigrants are 30% less likely to be incarcerated than are U.S.-born individuals who are white,” a Stanford University report from last year found. The right-wing Cato Institute reported in 2020 that immigrants, regardless of their legal status, were less likely to commit crimes than native-born Americans.

    “This immigrant crime narrative is racist. It’s not true,” California Rep. Robert Garcia said on the Wednesday press call. “Trump is out here saying that we’re poisoning the blood of this country. And the facts actually don’t bear that out.”

    Trump directly addressed the murder of University of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley last week. Police have arrested a Venezuelan migrant who entered the country illegally, but was allowed to stay as his immigration case was processed. Trump and other Republicans have seized on the case as an example of the dangers migrants pose to U.S. citizens. 

    On Thursday, Trump said he had spoken to Riley’s parents.

    “She was a beautiful young woman. She was a great person, best nursing student there was. I spoke to her parents yesterday. They’re incredible people that are devastated beyond belief,” Trump said. “The monster that was charged in the death is an illegal alien migrant who was let into our country and released into our communities by crooked Joe Biden. He’s crooked — I took the name away from Hillary [Clinton]. Because she’s no longer relevant, I guess.”

    According to an AP-NORC poll in January, the share of voters concerned about immigration rose to 35% from 27% last year. Fifty-five percent of Republicans say the government needs to focus on immigration in 2024, while 22% of Democrats listed immigration as a priority. That’s up from 45% and 14%, respectively, from December 2022.

    The number of people who are illegally crossing the U.S. border has been rising for years for complicated reasons that include climate change, war and unrest in other nations, the economy, and cartels that see migration as a cash cow.

    The administration’s approach has been to pair crackdowns at the border with increasing legal pathways for migrants designed to steer people into arriving by plane with sponsors, not illegally on foot to the border.

    Arrests for illegal crossings fell by half in January, but there were record highs in December. The numbers of migrants flowing across the U.S-Mexico border have far outpaced the capacity of an immigration system that has not been substantially updated in decades. Trump and Republicans claim Biden is refusing to act, but absent a law change from Congress, any major policies are likely to be challenged or held up in court.

    “I am an immigrant myself, I came to the U.S. when I was a young kid. I know how difficult it is to go through the immigration process, to become a citizen, to to struggle with poverty and to struggle through the process,” said Garcia, the California Democrat who came to the U.S. from Peru as a young child. “We actually could fix our system, but Donald Trump is not interested in it, so I personally take great offense to the way he characterizes people like myself and my family. And the way he is essentially characterizing essentially going back to a system where he would forcibly remove people like me, like my family from our homes and neighborhoods into detention or to be deported.”

    “It is sick,” Garcia added. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Lawmakers pass antisemitism bill in Tallahassee

    The Florida Legislature unanimously approved legislation Thursday adopting a new definition of antisemitism. 

    The final version of the bill was passed by the House during the first-ever “Israel Day” at the Florida Capitol. The Senate passed its version of the bill on Wednesday.

    The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance drafted the definition Florida is adopting. If approved, Florida would become the 13th state to do so.

    The legislation’s definition of antisemitism is as follows:

    “Antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.”

    More information on the IHRA definition is available online.

    Supporters say Florida’s legislation empowers prosecutors and police to address hate crimes more effectively.

    The bill, House Bill 148, now awaits Gov. Ron DeSantis’ consideration. 

    “We will continue this fight to tempt down inequality in the State of Florida and raise up those who need to be raised,” said the bill sponsor, Democratic State Rep. Mike Gotlieb.

    Antisemitism nationwide is on the rise, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

    “When conflict erupts in Israel, antisemitic incidents soon follow in the U.S. and globally,” said ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt.

    “You can use the definition when there is a hate crime,” said Boynton Beach Democratic State Sen. Lori Berman. “You can use the definition when there’s discrimination.” 

    Despite bipartisan support, at least one lawmaker voiced concern.

    Palm Bay Republican Rep. Randy Fine said he supports the bill, but fears that some local leaders may not utilize it.

    “It will not matter if we don’t demand that they act on these laws as we pass them,” said Fine, a Jewish lawmaker. 

    DeSantis often touts Florida as the “most pro-Israel state” in the nation. 

    To date, he’s embarked upon two Israeli trade missions and provided logistical support to Israel after the Oct. 7 attack. 

    “Florida is doing everything right, and it should be done across the country and across the world,” said Consul General of Israel to Florida, Maor Elbaz-Starinsky. 

    Other pro-Israel legislation this session includes policy boosting security at Jewish schools and a new state holiday — Holocaust Remembrance Day.

    The 2024 Legislative Session ends March 8.

    Short-term spending bill passes both chambers of Congress

    The Senate and the House have both passed another short-term spending measure Thursday that would keep one set of federal agencies operating through March 8 and another set through March 22, narrowly avoiding a shutdown for parts of the federal government that would otherwise kick in Saturday.

    The measure now heads to President Joe Biden’s desk, where he is expected to sign it quickly.

    In a 320 to 99 vote, the House passed a short-term funding agreement to avoid a partial government shutdown Friday. Florida Republicans were divided on the measure. 

    Twelve of the 20 Florida Republicans in the House voted against the short-term spending bill, including Reps. Anna Paulina Luna and Matt Gaetz.

    “If it were up to me, if I was a speaker, I’d say look, we need those 12 standalone appropriations bills, we need to determine exactly where we can make some of those cuts,” Luna said. “And frankly, remember, it’s been a really long time since we’ve balanced the budget.”

    The short-term deal followed a meeting between congressional leaders of both parties with President Joe Biden at the White House earlier this week. It sets new funding deadlines for March 8 and March 22.

    It does not include the $95 billion foreign aid package for wartime funding to Ukraine and Israel that passed the Senate earlier this month.

    The funding agreement also does not include any new border provisions as both Biden and former President Donald Trump took dueling visits to the U.S. Southern Border Thursday.

    House Freedom Caucus members, including Luna, had sought a 1% across the board cut to discretionary spending.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson defended the deal opposed by many in his own party Thursday.

    “The appropriations process is ugly. Democracy is ugly. This is the way it works every year, always has, except that we’ve instituted some new innovations,” Johnson said. “We broke the omnibus fever, right? That’s how Washington has been run for years. We’re trying to turn the aircraft carrier back to real budgeting and spending reform. This was an important thing to break it up into smaller pieces.”

    This is the fourth extension of the government funding deadline since September. Lawmakers say they are hopeful a fifth won’t be needed, and that funding for the full budget year that began five months ago will soon be approved.

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    Joseph Konig

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  • McConnell to step down; gender bill dies in Senate

    McConnell to step down; gender bill dies in Senate

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    Lawmakers in Tallahassee work on final bills to leave committee, and few surprises expected in Michigan primary.


    McConnell announces he’ll step down as Senate leader

    Mitch McConnell announced Wednesday that he will step down in November as the leader of the Senate Republican conference, capping off his tenure as the longest-serving Senate party leader in U.S. history.

    McConnell’s announcement not only marks a milestone for the Kentucky Republican, but also signals a changing of the guard in the Senate Republican caucus — a departure from the brand of conservatism founded by Ronald Reagan in favor of the populism of Donald Trump.

    It was a point that he acknowledged in his remarks on Wednesday afternoon as he prepared to bid farewell to the power he’s wielded for nearly two decades. He reflected on his early time in the Senate, which “helped shape my view of the world,” particularly noting “the irreplaceable role we play as the leader of the free world.”

    “It’s why I worked so hard to get the national security package passed earlier this month — Believe me, I know the politics within my party at this particular moment in time. I have many faults. Misunderstanding politics is not one of them,” he joked. “That said, I believe more strongly than ever that America’s global leadership is a central to preserving the shining city on a hill that Ronald Reagan discussed. As long as I’m drawing breath on this earth, I will defend American exceptionalism.”

    McConnell, who turned 82 last week, acknowledged that a recent family tragedy — the recent death of his wife Elaine Chao’s younger sister, Angela — offered him a moment of introspection.

    “When you lose a loved one, particularly at a young age, there’s a certain introspection that accompanies the grieving process,” he said. “Perhaps it is God’s way of reminding you of your own life’s journey, to reprioritize the impact of the world that we will all inevitably leave behind. I turned 82 last week. The end of my contributions are closer than I prefer.”

    He also expressed his gratitude toward his wife, who served in the last two Republican administrations as labor secretary under George W. Bush and transportation secretary under Trump, as well as to Reagan, whose virtues and leadership he extolled.

    “For 31 years, Elaine has been the love of my life,” he said. “And I’m eternally grateful to have her by my side.”

    “My career in the United States Senate began amidst the Reagan Revolution,” he said. “Truth is when I got here, I was just happy everybody remembered my name. President Reagan called me Mitch O’Donnell. Close enough, I thought. My wife Elaine and I got married on President Reagan’s birthday, Feb. 6. It’s probably not the most romantic thing to admit, but Reagan meant a lot to both of us.”

    Gender ID bill dies in Senate

    HB 1639 is a bill that would have required that someone’s biological sex, not gender, be listed on state IDs and health insurance plans. But the head of the Florida’s Department of Motor Vehicles beat lawmakers by sending out a memo that says Florida residents can only identify by their sex at birth on their driver’s license. 

    The LGBTQ community calls these moves discriminatory, and they were out in full force today to make their voices heard. 

    They say the move is unfriendly to the LGBTQ community.

    “We’re in a really volatile time and a really unstable time so it’s just really hard to exist as a trans person in Florida,” Ame Leon said.

    Several Democrats joined Leon on the capitol steps. Together they’re raising issue with several Republican-led bills.

    “It’s not just an issue of equality. It’s also in issue of economics. If we want to attract talent to this state, then we have to be welcoming to every type of family,” Rep. Anna Eskamani said.

    Wednesday’s rally happened in the closing days of legislative session.

    “We’ve noticed that there’s a lot of confusion in the land apparently of what is a woman and what is a man,” Rep. Dean Black said.

    There is good news for advocates. After weeks of debate in the House and Senate, Senate President Kathleen Passidomo confirmed Wednesday that the bill is dead in her chamber.

    “That bill is still stuck in committee. Per Senate rules, we don’t take bills out of committee,” she said.

    The session is slated to end on March 8.

    Lawmakers address the short-term rental industry in Florida

    Visit Florida estimates that the vacation rental market in Florida is worth more than $1 billion per year. It’s an industry that affects many in our communities, either as a property owner, or a vacationer, perhaps staying at a gulf coast beach.

    But a bill passed by the state Senate this legislative session is focused on giving more regulatory power to the state when it comes to vacation rentals.

    The bill’s sponsor says it will help cut down on rowdy renters, while local leaders say it’s simply government overreach, and that the cities can regulate themselves.

    “The reason why this place is so fantastic is that we have a solid 5 blocks of main street with parks all around it. The main street is full of bars, restaurants, all kinds of offerings,” Jason Patino said.

    He like to talk up the city of Gulf Port   

    “Where else in Florida do you have a beautiful downtown strip and a beautiful beach right next to it?” He asked.

    He’s a real estate agent, and it’s part of his job. But he’s also heavily invested in short-term rentals of his own.

    “All of the people here, they aren’t residents. This money that’s transacting right now, that couldn’t be happening without a vacation rental market.

    He says the city is changing all the time. He’s starting to see younger families move in or rent here for a vacation.  

    Short-term rentals are regulated by the city they are in, but SB 280 would push regulating short-term rentals like Airbnb and VRBO to the state level.  

    It could regulate how many people can stay in a property, rental registration and impose fines if an owner is in violation.  

    Patino sees this as the state government overstepping its power.  

    “So you have to ask yourself, is the state going to identify what best for this vacation home market? Do you think anyone in Tallahassee knows what’s happening here right now?” He said.

    Republican Sen. Nick Diceglie is a sponsor of the bill.  

    “When our founding fathers enshrined these ideals in our form of government almost 250 years ago, they couldn’t possibly have imagined how innovations like VRBO or Airbnb would lead modern day communities to question the proper role of government in regulating the use of private property. I doubt they envisioned endless streams of drug and alcohol-infused ragers, loud music, and trash disturbing quaint beachfront streets, either. So here we are,” he said.

    Indian Rocks Beach Mayor Joanne Kennedy said several cities are concerned about the bill.  

    “We don’t think this is a one size fits all issue. And we do have designations in all of the communities. For example, in Indian Rock Springs, we have commercial tourism, we have mixed use,” Kennedy said.

    Patino said the bill favors the hotel industry, and this is state government overreach.

    “Why do they want to take over something they couldn’t understand? Tallahassee has no idea what the local populace of Gulf Port Beach needs, but the council here does,” he said.

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    Gary Darling

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  • Haley stays in GOP race; civil liablities bill pulled

    Haley stays in GOP race; civil liablities bill pulled

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    Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is staying in the Republican primary for president, and lawmakers debate a bill that would increase civil liabilities in Florida.


    Haley stays in race ahead of Michigan’s primary

    There’s been a number of developments on the presidential campaign trail.

    Starting with a shakeup at the Republican National Committee. The party’s chair, Ronna McDaniel, announced she will officially relinquish that role next month.

    She said she will allow the party to select a new chair of their choosing, following the tradition of letting a party’s presidential nominee pick a new chair.

    Former President Donald Trump has already suggested North Carolina GOP chair Michael Whatley for the job.

    Meanwhile, Trump is leading the Republican primary field, with 110 bound delegates compared to former Gov. Nikki Haley’s 20.

    Michigan’s primary election takes place Tuesday, where Trump and Haley remain on the Republican ballot alongside several candidates who have dropped out, including Gov. Ron DeSantis

    Michigan has been a crucial battleground state in the last two presidential elections and candidates will be looking not just to win the primary, but to see where they stand for the November general election as well.

    After Saturday’s loss in her home state of South Carolina, Haley is facing growing calls from fellow Republicans to end her presidential candidacy.

    “The sooner we come together, the better. There’s really no pathway for her after tonight,” Sen. Lindsey Graham said.

    Haley trails in the delegate count and in the polls, and late Sunday, Americans for Prosperity announced it will no longer spend money on behalf of her campaign.

    But Haley is vowing to stay in the race, both in Michigan on Tuesday and through March 5, Super Tuesday.

    She says her ability to win four out of 10 voters in the South Carolina primary Saturday is a danger sign for Trump’s campaign.

    “You can’t win a general election if you don’t acknowledge the 40% of Republicans who are saying we don’t want Donald Trump,” Haley said.

    There are 874 delegates at stake on Super Tuesday, when 15 states and one U.S. territory hold primaries, but experts say it will be nearly impossible for Haley to catch up.

    “They’ve redesigned the rules in a lot of these states. Trump and his team have been working on this for a couple of years. Most of them are now winner-take-all, or winner-take almost all, delegates,” University of Virginia professor Larry Sabato said.

    President Joe Biden is expected to easily win Michigan’s Democratic primary, but some left-wing Democrats are urging votes for uncommitted delegates, to protest Biden not being more critical of Israel’s tactics in its war against Hamas. Because Michigan has a large concentration of Arab-American voters, the protest vote could be significant. Some of Biden’s supporters are pushing back.

    “I think the progressives always had trouble with the perfect being the enemy of the good,” former DNC charman Howard Dean said.

    The results on Tuesday will be closely watched for any clues about where Michigan is trending before the November election. The state was critical to Trump winning the White House in 2016 and then Biden winning it in 2020. 

    Civil liabilities bill gets pulled from Committee

    A controversial bill concerning wrongful death lawsuits and the unborn could see big changes before it reaches the Senate floor, if it gets there at all.

    Lawmakers in Tallahassee Monday are busy renegotiating a bill that would give liability protections to Florida’s unborn with only one day left to advance bills in committee.

    Senate bill 476 would empower parents sue over the wrongful death of their unborn child. 

    For Florida Democrats, though, this is a veiled threat against access to abortion. 

    “We’ve been working with the sponsor but she doesn’t seem interested in taking some of the suggestions we have so again it begs the question… what are you actually doing?” Senate Minority Leader Lauren Book said.

    Under the bill, pregnant mothers would get immunity against civil lawsuits. Plus, a proposed amendment seemed to offer at least some protections to abortion providers too. 

    But after some outspoken skepticism, the bill sponsor pulled the bill out of committee.

    “Although I have worked diligently to respond to questions and concerns, I understand there is still work that needs to be done,” State. Sen. Erin Grall said.

    Meanwhile, in the house, Republicans are dismissive about those concerns.

    “This bill is narrowly tailored. It only applies to the wrongful death statute so while I’m happen to discuss personhood and whether a child should be a person, this is not that bigger conversation,” State Rep. Jenna Persons-Mulicka said.

    It’s unclear as of now what changes could be on the horizon for this bill, if any.

    New bill would increase penalties for youth gun crimes

    A bill that would toughen penalties for kids caught with guns is one step closer to becoming law.

    The Florida House of Representatives approved HB 1181 Thursday with a vote of 83-29. Under the bill, minors who illegally possess guns would be charged with a third-degree felony.

    That’s up from a first-degree misdemeanor. They’d also be detained longer — five days for a first offense and 21 days for a second offense. For third and subsequent offenses, they could be adjudicated delinquent and committed to a residential program. 

    Florida Rep. Berny Jacques sponsors the bill. He pointed to a Christmas Eve shooting in Pinellas County as an example of why it’s needed. A 14-year-old boy shot and killed his sister after an argument with his 15-year-old brother about Christmas presents. That 15-year-old then shot the 14-year-old.

    “It’s tragic, because now a young man is charged with first degree murder and the other is charged with attempted first degree murder, and it’s tragic because this could have been prevented,” Jacques said during debate. “It could have been prevented because these youth were known not only to carry their firearms, but they had multiple run-ins with the law, including on firearm offenses — one of them at 12 years old. Had a charge with minor in possession of a firearm, but at the time and at this current time, it’s only a misdemeanor, and there was no real mechanism to hold that child accountable. And who knows, if there were mechanisms in place, who knows what could have been prevented?”

    Those against the bill said they’re concerned the extended time teens can be detained is too harsh. According to the bill, if an adjudicatory hearing doesn’t take place after a young person has been detained for 60 days, the court must hold a review hearing within each successive seven-day review period until the hearing is held or the child is placed on supervised release.

    “If law enforcement is investigating what has happened in a matter, we get to hold a child basically until law enforcement and the state attorney can make a charging decision,” said Florida Rep. Michele Rayner. “That flies in the face of the Constitution, that flies in the face of human decency, that flies in the face of protecting our children.”

    Freddy Barton, executive director of Safe & Sound Hillsborough, said he and his team reviewed the bill Thursday with teens in its youth gun offender program.

    “I think that the bill does give a little bit more teeth to the existing language that’s out there, but I don’t think that it answers all of the concerns,” Barton said. “We still need to have parents to come to the forefront and make sure that they have a role and responsibility in keeping guns out of the hands of kids, and we need to look at more prevention-based programming.”

    Safe and Sound works with young people facing charges to help get them back on the right track.

    “Here in the pink and in the blue, those are kids that either are on probation or they’ve got some type of gun charge,” Barton said, referring to a map of Hillsborough County with colored stickers on it, representing teens currently taking part in the group’s programming.

    According to Barton, they were all court-ordered to work with Safe and Sound in the last month.

    “Unfortunately, the numbers are growing, and so we’re trying to do as much as we can early because we’re getting ready to go into spring break. We already know if we don’t have active programming in place for kids and they’re out of school, we see the numbers increase,” Barton said.

    He said it was important to talk with teens in the youth gun offender program about the bill to give them a better idea of the impact their actions today could have on their lives going forward.

    “You need to understand there are going to be deeper consequences for making some of these choices. So, let’s make better choices now so you don’t find yourself on the other end of that,” Barton said.

    Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said that’s the point of the bill — toughening consequences to stop kids from committing gun crimes.

    “It’s probably the worst that it’s ever been,” Gualtieri said of gun-related crime involving teens. “I think what it’s being caused by is all these kids are out in the middle of the night, breaking into all these cars, and there’s a lot more guns out there. There’s a lot more guns in cars.”

    Gualtieri helped work on the bill and said it’s about making sure the consequences match the crime.

    “Everything in 1181 focuses on gun crimes and also being reasonable about it and making sure that we give kids the opportunity to get on the right side of it. We’re using detention centers as a place those kids would be incarcerated for a minimum period of time to get the message across,” Gualtieri said. “Kids at 14, 15, 16 years old, 2 to 3 in the morning, standing on the street corner, should not have a gun sitting in their waistband.”

    Barton said he does share the concerns of critics about the length of time teens could be detained, saying it could set them far back when it comes to school.

    “If you can imagine when you were in high school and you were sick two, three days, you were already behind when you went back to school. Now, you’re being securely confined for 21, 30 days for the state to come back or someone to come back and say that, ‘Hey, this kid needs to be detained for another 21 days,’” said Barton. “Well, it’s almost a death sentence for the kids when we try to get them back in their school environment.”

    Gualtieri said the proposed new detention times are reasonable.

    “At the end of the day, there’s an easy solution to the problem for young kids: don’t commit gun crimes. If you don’t commit gun crimes, you don’t have to worry about it,” Gualtieri said. 

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    Gary Darling

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  • Civil liability and abortions; ‘momnibus’ considered

    Civil liability and abortions; ‘momnibus’ considered

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    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis joined a list of five others as potential VP contenders for former President Donald Trump’s run for the White House. In Tallahassee, lawmakers advanced a bill that would provide for civil liabilities involving the death of a fetus. 


    DeSantis joins list of potential VP candidates for Trump

    The latest developments in the Republican presidential primary, and Gov. Ron DeSantis’ latest actions.

    About a month after he ended his presidential campaign, DeSantis traveled to South Carolina.

    Tuesday’s visit was official state business for the governor, but it also didn’t stop him from commenting on the race for president.

    “And there’s no question that South Carolina is going to be a big victory for Donald Trump because he appeals to core Republicans in a way that Nikki Haley just does not or is not trying to,” DeSantis said in South Carolina.

    Former President Donald Trump was also in South Carolina last night. He participated in a town hall event with Fox News.

    During this, Trump confirmed a list of names floated to be on his shortlist for vice president. The list includes three former GOP candidates, including DeSantis.

    Laura Ingraham asked Trump if the rumored names were true, and the former president said that the list was full of good people.

    “You would like to get someone who could help you from the voter’s standpoint. And honestly, all of those people are good. They are all good, all solid,” Trump said.

    A civil liabilities bill advances despite opposition

    Negligence can land someone in some serious legal trouble. But Florida doesn’t recognize negligence against an unborn child in civil court.

    House Bill 651 is trying to change that. Or at least, that’s what the bill sponsor is saying.

    What is House Bill 651? Is it an abortion bill? Or is this about the law and grieving families?

    That’s a question that divided Florida lawmakers Wednesday.

    “This bill is about giving parents the opportunity to seek recovery when a wrong has been committed that took away their child and that child has value,” Rep. Jenna Persons-Mulika said.

    Proponents say this bill makes grieving parents whole.

    After the wrongful death of an unborn child, the bill empowers parents to sue for damages. As of now, Florida is just one of six states without such protections.

    “If you commit a negligent act or a wrongful act, you should be liable. We are protecting the very most vulnerable and those that should be able to recover from those situations,” Rep. Will Robinson Jr. said.

    Indeed, it sounds good on the surface. But for Democrats, this bill is a concern.

    They say it’s too broad and too vague. Critics also say the bill is dangerous to abortion providers in Florida.

    “The most dangerous 60 days in the state of Florida is a legislative session for creating fear in the hearts and minds of the people in Florida. I’m so tired of it. If you really want to stop abortions, get a vasectomy,” Rep. Yvonna Hinson said.

    Under the bill, mothers are immune to any sort of prosecution. That comes as good news to critics.

    But it’s not enough for those who want Florida to rethink its laws on abortion, sex and much more.

    This bill passed Wednesday along party lines. It goes next to the House floor.

    “Momnibus” package seeks to bolster parents

    Studies have found that Black women in the U.S. are far more likely than white women to die during or soon after childbirth. Several members of Congress are seeking to pass more than a dozen bills to address this disparity. A package of bills in Congress is normally called an “Omnibus.” The maternal health legislation is being called the “momnibus.”

    Giving birth to a child is supposed to be one of the happiest moments in a parent’s life, but for some women, and especially Black women in America, it can be a different story.

    “It has actively gotten more dangerous in the United States for women to give birth in our country. And that should never be the case,” Rep. Lauren Underwood said.

    According to the Centers for Disease Control, 1,205 women died from pregnancy-related complications in the United States in 2021, up from 861 in 2020. The problem is especially acute for Black women, who are nearly three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than white women.

    “There’s no genetic issue or there’s something about Black women where we can’t survive childbirth, absolutely not. This is about, you know, what’s going on with our health care system and the lack of providers,” Underwood said.

    Reps. Underwood and Alma Adams launched the Black Maternal Health Caucus four years ago to address the problem.

    “We have a lot of insensitivity toward women who look like me. I recall my daughter telling me that she was having, experiencing some difficulty. This was before she even wanted to give birth. And so they said, well go home and lie down on your side,” Adams said.

    Experts blame the racial disparity in maternal death rates on everything from bias in the health care system to a lack of equal access to quality care.

    Adams and Underwood have created a package of 13 bills they call the “momnibus.” They collectively aim to address every aspect of maternal health.

    One of those bills would provide funding to community-based organizations like Mamatoto Village in Washington, D.C.

    “We found ourselves on this motherhood journey, pretty lonely and needing community meeting women who were navigating motherhood in similar ways. And so this space for us became a sanctuary and a refuge,” Mamatoto Village co-founder Aza Nedhari said.

    Mamatoto Village supports women during their pregnancies and into postpartum with a range of services from childbirth education to lactation consultations.

    “We have to address the root causes of what is leading to maternal death, whether that is housing, whether that is safety, education, economics, all of these things that intersect and culminate into the maternal health crisis that we are seeing today,” Nedhari said.

    Many of the “momnibus” bills have bipartisan support. But so far, only one has passed.

    “We’re looking for legislative vehicles that are moving right. Let’s get this attached to a federal funding package or another must pass bill. So we can get this signed into law this year,” Underwood said.

    For community organizations working with women every day, the “momnibus” is a measure that can’t wait.

    “We can’t compel congress anymore. We can no longer beg for our lives, or beg for our futures. But there has to be that same urgency and will and desire to make it right for Black women,” Nedhari said.

    Underwood and Adams are also encouraging people to contact their representatives in Congress to urge them to support the momnibus package.

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    Gary Darling

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  • Home insurance tax breaks; social media restriction reaction

    Home insurance tax breaks; social media restriction reaction

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    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis joins Democrats in advocating for a home insurance tax breaks for consumers, and lawmakers advance a bill that would increase information for those with disabilities.


    Lawmakers tackle budget and proposed tax breaks

    This year’s legislative session has three weeks left. Lawmakers this week will dive into finalizing the state budget.

    The budget is the only thing that lawmakers are required to pass under the constitution.

    This year, the budget is anticipated to include roughly $115 billion in spending, plus a property insurance tax break. 

    The state can’t control insurance rates, but they can offer tax breaks.

    DeSantis wants to give a one-time, one-year property insurance tax break to consumers.

    “The state cannot control the different rates. A consumer has half a dozen options and then they compete for your business. That’s the only way you’re able to do it,” DeSantis said about insurance rates. 

    But in the House, they’re offering a similar break that would benefit companies instead.

    “You might wanna pause and think about it awhile about whether it will make sense. Unless you’re you’re just gonna say you’re gonna do that in perpetuity. Depending on how you structure it, it could be a lot of money,” House Speaker Paul Renner said.

    For Democrats, it’s a rare moment of solidarity. They, like DeSantis, want a consumer tax break. If passed, it would apply also to property insurance assessments. 

    All this comes as more than one million Floridians remain reliant upon state backed insurance plans.

    “We have to be very thoughtful as a legislature regarding the policy choices that we make when it comes to providing tax relief. If we can provide that sort of relief to large corporations, we certainly need to take into account the people,” House Minority Leader Fentrice Driskell said.

    Now lawmakers are optimistic that Florida avoided a market collapse. The problem is that they say consumer relief will take time. Meanwhile, at least six more home insurance companies entered Florida in the new year.

    That’s something leaders say is a very, very good sign.

    Bill to increase disability information advances

    Florida legislators are working on a bill that would require motor vehicle registrations to allow people to include information about specific disabilities or disorders.

    It’s called the Safeguarding American Families Everywhere (SAFE) Act, and advocates say one of the goals is to help first responders who may come in contact with that person.

    Holly Alexander, who has a disability with her spine, believes the bill would make details about her condition more accessible to people like her.

    “It would be nice to understand that somebody could be able to read or look up my profile and be able to see I am a person with a physical disability,” she said. “I am more frail than an average 30-year-old.”

    She would also not have to rely on a disability placard to relay information. The bill’s text says it would allow first responders to potentially get a heads up on who they are about to interact with and “will improve communication, reduce unnecessary adverse actions, and ensure that the person receives the specific response and care he or she requires.”

    Holly’s mother, Kandi, is a local volunteer advocate for special needs families and people with disabilities in Lake County.

    Kandi said the SAFE Act is a step in the right direction and hopes it’ll lead to first responders receiving more training on how to help people with disabilities.

    “It’s recognizing there’s more need for awareness, there’s more need for training, and fiscal budgeting,” she said.

    Holly is currently training a service dog, Zeus, to help her stand, and says making these distinctions about her condition more available to first responders could be the difference in life-or-death situations.

    “I lose stability with my legs so I can fall at any point in time,” she said. “Having that promptness availability to me could help me and potentially save my life.”

    Parent reacts to social media restriction bill

    The Florida Senate recently altered a bill to keep kids under 16 off of major social media platforms and it is now one step closer to the governor’s desk.

    Lawmakers included pornographic websites in the list of social media sites that minors would be barred from joining. All sites on the list will need users to verify that they are 18 or older.

    But the legality of the bill is still a primary concern for top lawmakers, including Gov. Ron DeSantis.

    For parents, their primary concern is their kids and how they are using the devices.

    “I’m afraid she won’t know what’s real anymore and try to make herself something she’s not,” Jaime Marco said about her 8-year-old daughter.

    To comply with the legislation as currently written, the platforms would be required to perform age verification of their users.

    “I think the concept is great,” Marco said. “It’s just for Florida, though, and Florida is just one state out of 50. It crosses over lines. It should be a federal bill if we are going to do that.”

    While she supports the idea, she doesn’t know if the restrictions are the right way to address social media and its impact on kids.

    “I don’t think it’s the government’s role to decide that, but I do think it’s the government’s role and responsibility to protect its citizens,” Marco said.

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    Gary Darling

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  • Trump ordered to pay in fraud trial and Donalds seeks to rename press gallery

    Trump ordered to pay in fraud trial and Donalds seeks to rename press gallery

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    Former President Donald Trump was ordered to pay $355 million in a civil fraud trial in New York City, and Rep. Byron Donalds discusses a push to rename the House Press Gallery for Frederick Douglass. 


    Trump fined $355 million in civil fraud trial

    A New York judge imposed $364 million in penalties in a civil fraud trial against former President Donald Trump accusing him of a scheme to dupe banks and others with financial statements that inflated his wealth.

    Trump himself was fined nearly $355 million and was barred from serving as an officer or director at a company in the state for three years.

    His adult sons, Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., both officers with the company, were fined more than $4 million each and received a similar punishment for two years. Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg was also fined $1 million.

    Weisselberg and former Trump Organization controller Jeffrey McConney were permanently barred from serving in the financial control function of any New York corporation.

    The ruling from Judge Arthur Engoron is the culmination of a years-long effort from New York Attorney General Letitia James, who sued Trump in 2022 over what she said was years of deceptive practices as he built the multinational collection of skyscrapers, golf courses and other properties that catapulted him to wealth, fame and eventually the White House.

    Engoron determined that Trump was involved in a lengthy scheme to mislead banks and others with financial statements that inflated his wealth.

    “In order to borrow more and at lower rates, defendants submitted blatantly false financial data to the accountants, resulting in fraudulent financial statements,” Engoron wrote in his ruling. “When confronted at trial with the statements, defendants’ fact and expert witnesses simply denied reality, and defendants failed to accept responsibility or to impose internal controls to prevent future recurrences.”

    The suit accused Trump and his co-defendants of routinely puffing up his financial statements to create an illusion his properties were more valuable than they really were. State lawyers said Trump exaggerated his wealth by as much as $3.6 billion one year.

    Donalds discusses push to rename House press gallery

    The legendary abolitionist Frederick Douglass is already celebrated with a statue and a plaque on capitol hill.

    A Florida representative is proposing one more honor for Douglass: Highlighting a part of his extraordinary career that most Americans know little about.

    Douglass was one of the most well-known abolitionists in American history.

    Born enslaved in Maryland in 1818, he escaped to New York City 20 years later and became a leader in the effort to end slavery.

    “Frederick Douglass is somebody in American history and Black history, who’s been a critical contributor to the fabric of our country, and even moving our country from, you know, the, one of the great sins in humanity, slavery, and moving us through from slavery to where we are right now,” Rep. Byron Donalds said.

    Although Douglass is well known as a skilled orator, it’s not as widely known that he was also a journalist.

    While living in Rochester,N.Y., Douglass founded the North Star in 1847, which later became Frederick Douglass’ paper in 1851. Both publications advocated against slavery.

    Then, in 1870, five years after the end of slavery, Douglass worked in the nation’s Capitol as part owner and editor-in-chief of the New National Era, a Black newspaper. He was the first Black reporter to become a member of the congressional press galleries, where journalists watch lawmakers on the floor of the Senate and House.

    Donalds is seeking to honor that work by designating the area where Douglass worked as the “Frederick Douglass Press Gallery”.

    “Frederick Douglass, obviously being born a slave, working his way into freedom, earning his freedom, I think it’s really a demonstration of what’s possible in his country,”Donalds said. “Especially going forward, considering all he did, all he provided, all he contributed to America.”

    A statue of Douglass stands in the capitol visitor center’s emancipation hall. And in 2007, the committee of reporters that controls access to the galleries dedicated a plaque and portrait to the abolitionist.

    Donalds’ resolution to name the galleries after Douglass was introduced in November, and it now has about a dozen co-sponsors, including fellow Florida Republican Cory Mills.

    “I think overall, this is something that every member can vote for with pride, something that can become really a part of the fabric of the House of Representatives going forward,” Donalds said.

    The resolution was referred to the House Committee on House Administration. A vote has not yet been scheduled. 

    Parent reacts to social media restriction bill

    The Florida Senate recently altered a bill to keep kids under 16 off of major social media platforms and it is now one step closer to the governor’s desk.

    Lawmakers included pornographic websites in the list of social media sites that minors would be barred from joining. All sites on the list will need users to verify that they are 18 or older.

    But the legality of the bill is still a primary concern for top lawmakers, including Gov. Ron DeSantis.

    For parents, their primary concern is their kids and how they are using the devices.

    “I’m afraid she won’t know what’s real anymore and try to make herself something she’s not,” Jaime Marco said about her 8-year-old daughter.

    To comply with the legislation as currently written, the platforms would be required to perform age verification of their users.

    “I think the concept is great,” Marco said. “It’s just for Florida, though, and Florida is just one state out of 50. It crosses over lines. It should be a federal bill if we are going to do that.”

    While she supports the idea, she doesn’t know if the restrictions are the right way to address social media and its impact on kids.

    “I don’t think it’s the government’s role to decide that, but I do think it’s the government’s role and responsibility to protect its citizens,” Marco said.

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  • A bill to make condos more hurricane-proof, and an RNC leadership rift grows

    A bill to make condos more hurricane-proof, and an RNC leadership rift grows

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    Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle prepare to increase access to hurricane preparedness funds and former President Donald Trump throws support behind one candidate for RNC chair. 


    Lawmakers plan to increase hurricane preparedeness

    Property insurance is a top concern for both Republicans and Democrats in Tallahassee. 

    While this session isn’t promising any big changes, there is at least one measure that would offer consumers some relief. 

    Condominium owners could be in luck if House Bill 1029 is passed. The proposal would expand the My Safe Florida Home Program. Previously, the program applied only to Florida homeowners. But under the bill, condo bosses might cash in too.

    Lawmakers have one big goal, to drive down rising home insurance premiums across the state.

    If passed, the state will expand matching grants to condo owners trying to harden their homes ahead of harsher tropical weather.

    “We were listening to the concerns of a lot of the 55 and older people who are on limited fixed incomes in older buildings. And the question came, why can’t they access this grant program? Because they’re homeowners, to Rep. Mooney’s point, like anybody else,” Rep. Christine Hunschofsky said. 

    The proposal would shift the current grant program to allow condo owners to have access to funds to prepare for hurricanes. 

    “The fact that they can now tap into what everybody else been tapping in to. They’re more resilient. They’re hardened. It should overall help the insurance rates in the state. Overall, great bill,” Rep. Jim Mooney said.

    The pitch comes as leaders triage a property insurance crisis. Rates in Florida are among the highest. What’s worse is another hurricane season in on the horizon.

    “A lot of condominiums have been placed on the coastal line. They’re the first line when a hurricane hits. Many of them are not hardened and so they’ve had a difficult time getting insurance, especially wind only,” Rep. Vicki Lopez said.

    Meanwhile, leaders are negotiating a property insurance dispute. In the budget, Gov. Ron DeSantis wants a one-year tax break on property insurance. But the House is offering that to commercial companies instead.

    In a statement, spokesperson for Speaker Paul Renner Andres Malave said, “At this stage in session, there are always differences between our initial proposal and what the senate and the governor each put forward, respectively.”

    The My Safe Florida Home Program isn’t new, but it’s gotten some renewed interest in recent years.

    This time around, lawmakers could inject the program with roughly $225 million.

    Trump throws weight behind potential new RNC Chair

    Former President Donald Trump is looking to shake-up the Republican National Committee.

    Trump endorsed North Carolina GOP Chair Michael Whatley to succeed Ronna McDaniel as the RNC chair.

    And he wants his daughter-in-law Lara Trump to serve as co-chair.

    Lara Trump also happens to be from North Carolina.

    Whatley has served as the chair of the North Carolina Republican Party since 2019. He is also the general counsel for the RNC. He led the state party as Republicans retook supermajorities in the state House and Senate. 

    He is also a close ally of Trump, who won North Carolina in both the 2016 and 2020 elections. Whatley has been criticized for repeating the former president’s false claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

    Whatley ran for co-chair of the RNC last year, but that effort failed despite an endorsement from Trump, according to the AP. South Carolina’s Drew McKissick won the seat for co-chair.

    Rep. Brian Mast discusses Israel trip

    Over the winter recess, Florida Republican Congressman Brian Mast flew overseas to help about 40 new amputees in Israel with their recovery process. 

    He was invited by “The Next Step,” a project of the Israel Medical Fund.

    “They were looking for somebody to come in, speak to all of these new amputees, some of them from the military, and in military treatment centers, some of them civilians that were just in their home on the morning of Oct. 7, some of them that were at the concert,” Mast said. 

    Mast once volunteered for the Israel Defense Force in 2014. On his most recent visit to Israel, he visited a rehab ward for wounded IDF soldiers and border police officers with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 

    He said the first advice he gives typically isn’t to the amputees themselves, but to their families.

    “I tell them, you gotta be a jerk, you gotta be a pain in their tush, as they say … because if you handle them with little soft gloves and don’t push them to sweat, and have blood, sweat, and tears during physical therapy, they’re never going to get strong enough to be to the point that they have the best possible mobility that they can to go forward in life for whatever the rest of their life is,” he said. 

    While they may be tough words, they came from someone who knows what it’s like to wear prosthetics himself. Mast lost both legs and a finger to a roadside bomb in 2010 while serving in the Army as a bomb technician in Afghanistan. 

    “I lost two limbs, serving my country, serving my brothers to my left and right in combat,” he said. “And because of that, I have no regrets.”

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  • Florida lawmakers react to Biden report

    Florida lawmakers react to Biden report

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    Lawmakers around the state reacted to the Justice Department’s report on President Joe Biden’s classified documents case and a new bill could change how Floridians get their driver’s licenses.


    Florida lawmakers react to Biden report

    Democrats were on the offensive in the aftermath of the Justice Department’s report about President Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents after his vice presidency, taking particular umbrage with special counsel Robert Hur’s comments about his memory and mental acuity.

    Republicans, on the other hand, seized upon the opportunity to declare the Democratic president unfit for office as he seeks another term in the White House.

    They also used the opportunity to try and paint a picture of a double standard between Biden’s case, which Hur declared was not warranting of criminal charges, and that of former President Donald Trump, who faces 40 felony charges for alleged mishandling of classified documents — though there are key differences in the two cases, namely in that the Republican also faces charges for allegedly trying to hamper the government’s efforts to retrieve them.

    The report puts the president’s age into the spotlight, a concern among voters per recent polling, as he makes his case for reelection this fall in a likely rematch against Trump — who despite being only three years Biden’s junior and committing gaffes of his own, does not appear to have the same level of scrutiny from voters on that issue.

    Special Counsel Robert Hur’s report found that Biden willfully retained classified documents following his tenure as Vice President… but said Biden will not face criminal charges.

    Florida’s members of Congress are reacting to the special counsel’s report. Republicans are firing sharp criticism over the findings the report made about the president’s memory.

    Several Florida Republicans are now seizing on comments the report made about the President’s age and mental acuity.

    “Biden can’t withstand the intellectual rigor of a trial because he’s an ‘elderly man with a poor memory’ but he’s OK to be the commander-in-chief with the world on fire?” Rep. Mike Waltz said.

    Biden delivered remarks Thursday night after the report’s release drawing distinctions between how he cooperated with investigators versus the classified document case brought against Trump, his lead GOP rival for the White House.

    He also fired back against the findings made in the special counsel report about his memory.

    “I know there’s some attention paid to some language in the report about my recollection of events. There’s even a reference that I don’t remember when my son died. How in the hell dare he raise that? Frankly? When I was asked the question, I thought to myself it wasn’t any of their damn business,” Biden said.

    But, later in his remarks, the President raised more eyebrows when he referred to the president of Egypt as the president of Mexico.

    Sen. Rick Scott suggested the President should be removed from office, posting, “In defending his mental sharpness, Biden just mixed up the presidents of Mexico and Egypt. This train wreck of a press conference confirms the need for the 25th Amendment.”

    Florida’s Democrats have been largely quiet over the matter.

    But, on X, Rep. Jared Moskowitz posted a meme pondering how “MAGA Republicans” are reconciling talking points that Biden is “old” with false claims that he is a “mastermind” who stole the 2020 presidential election.

    Biden, who’s 81, is the oldest President in American history. Trump is 77.

    Former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, who is trailing Trump, is 52. She’s called for Biden to take a mental acuity test.

    What’s next for the primaries

    Former President Donald Trump got nearly all the votes during the Nevada caucus last night with 99% of voters supporting him.

    His chief rival, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, chose not to compete. She took part in the state’s primary instead.

    So the only Republican on the ballot other than Trump was Ryan Binkley.

    The former president has now won all three Republican state contests so far.

    Nevada, Iowa and New Hampshire. The candidates are now turning their attention to South Carolina.

    But there are plenty of other events coming up as well.

    February 27 is the Michigan presidential primary for both parties. Michigan is once again expected to be a key swing state in the general election.

    Super Tuesday is coming up on March 5. More than a dozen states will hold contests that day.

    Bill would require biological sex on IDs

    A new piece of legislation, House Bill 1639, seeks to legally define the words of gender and sex in the state and for state IDs like to reflect a person’s sex at birth.

    “It removes it from that subjective issue that is going on socially to something concrete medically,” said Rep. Douglas Bankson, the bill’s sponsor. “If someone were to be incapacitated or unable to communicate, it’s important for first responders for when seconds matter to know the underlining characteristics of their physiology.”

    As the bill makes its way through committee meetings, the director of the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles released a memo saying Floridians can no longer change or update their gender on Florida driver licenses. The memo says that gender change is not supported by current statutory authority and says in part, “The term gender does not refer to a persons internal sense or his or hers gender role or identification — but has historically and commonly been understood as a synonym for sex.”

    The memo and the bill are seen by some within the LGBTQ+ community as discriminatory. Ashley T. Brundage, a local advocate for the transgender community, says these steps are nothing more than an attack on the LGBTQ+ community.

    “Its not just a driver’s license — it’s correctly identifying someone’s actual identity,” Brundage said. “I mean, it is power to be able to know that you have a document that brings validity to your existence in this world.”

    Brundage says these measures are simply a tool to create fear in the LGBTQ+ community.

    “It just seems like another layer that we’re trying to scare people to not live in Florida and that’s the hard part for me,” Brundage said. “Living in Florida is what I’ve always known and I know it be a great place — it’s all about trying to get a marginalized identity groups to be scared to live in Florida and have them move somewhere else.” 

    Despite these measures, Brundage says that you can still get your name changed and that it’s important to reach out to organizations that can help like the Southern Legal Council and changemyname.org.

    Equality Florida put out a statement saying in part: “This cruel policy threatens transgender Floridians with civil and criminal penalties and blocks them from obtaining the critical government-issued identification necessary to continue their daily lives.”

    The bill has more one more committee stop before it makes it to the House floor.

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    Gary Darling

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  • Border Security considered in Washington

    Border Security considered in Washington

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    Lawmakers in Florida reacted to a border security proposal in Washington that also provides funding for Ukraine and Israel. Meanwhile, legislators in Tallahassee considered how to alter a social media restrictions proposal.  


    Florida lawmakers react to border security bill

    The Senate eyes a test vote for Wednesday on the long-awaited budget security bill.

    Senate negotiators released the legislation yesterday. It was put together by a bipartisan group of lawmakers to try to curb the flow of migrants while also passing funding for the wars in Ukraine and Israel.

    But House Republicans already say this bill is going nowhere. The bill would give President Joe Biden more power to restrict migrant crossings during surges, allowing the Department of Homeland Security to restrict border crossings if migrant encounters reach more than 4,000 in a one week span.

    The bill also changes the asylum system by raising the standard for who can apply and also speeds up the process.

    The bill would also mean billions of dollars in funding for both foreign aid and border security.

    The current proposal would allocate $60 billion in aid for the war-torn country of Ukraine, and $14 billion for aid to Israel.

    “We have a huge issue in this country on our southern border. You can’t be a country if you can’t maintain control of your own territory. And really, this has been going on for many, many years, but it’s never been this bad,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said about the proposal. “They have now unveiled a piece of legislation, and I think people are seeing what a farce it is. To say that you only shut the border down once 5,000 people a day come in illegally, which is about 2 million a year. That’s basically legalizing illegal immigration. And there are so many other things wrong with it, but I just think it’s taking a step back. This shows me the contempt these people in D.C. have for American taxpayers,”

    Both of Florida’s Republican Sens. Rick Scott and Marco Rubio have come out against the legislation.

    Rubio called the legislation “an easy no.” He argued that Biden doesn’t need new laws to stop the migrant crisis.

    Scott criticized the bill for allowing some migrants to receive work permits more easily.

    Nationally, there’s division among Republicans in the Senate on this even as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is supporting it.

    There’s been more unity among Democrats supporting the proposal, but not all are on board.

    New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez says the bill would make it harder for asylum seekers to have their claims heard. He also said that Senate leaders haven’t provided enough time to review the 400 page package.

    Social media restrictions up for debate in the Florida Senate

    Florida lawmakers are working out how a proposed social media bill should be written to ensure that it can pass.

    A Senate subcommittee considered House Bill 1 Monday. If passed, the bill would require social media companies to verify how old people using their platforms are, and bans people under the age of 16 from using them.

    Florida House Speaker Paul Renner discussed the bill, and where the defining line is between allowing parents to regulate their children, and where the government steps in.

    “The vast majority of things, we want the parents to make those decisions,” he said. “It’s time to act. We can’t allow to lose our kids, or to have kids engage in self harm or spend their childhood in depression.”

    He also discussed proposed changes to the legislation so that it can be stronger and stand up to court challenges.

    “They have to meet certain criteria,” he said. “They are really not interested in pulling away from what would be a lucrative business.”

    Last week Gov. Ron DeSantis said he wants a pathway for the bill to withstand any legal challenges in court. But he also understands that could be an issue as the bill gets crafted in the state legislature.

    “Anything I do. I want a pathway for this to actually stick. So we’re going to look through that. So what I would say is I’m sympathetic to, as a parent, what’s going on with our youth,” DeSantis said. “But I also understand that to just say that, you know, someone that’s 15 just cannot have it no matter what, that may create some some legal issues. And so I told the speaker I’d work with them on it.

    “So I would say that, you know, this is something that’s likely going to evolve as it gets through the House and makes its way through the Senate. And we’ll see if we get a product that is going to be something that’s good. But I, I am concerned about the breadth of it, and I want to empower parents. I want to give parents tools to to be able to do this. And so I just think you got to be smart about how you do it.”

    Immigration bill could change some standards in Florida

    The clock is ticking for a bill being referred to as the “Welcoming Florida Act.” The bill was sponsored by State Sen. Victor Torres and is aimed at overturning some of the strict immigration laws put into place last session, but it needs to be heard before several committees before it can advance.

    Julia Aguayo de Hassler is no stranger to politics. Five years ago, she created the group known as the Libertad Club Hispano Republicano of Pasco County, which is a club aimed at educating people about the values of the Republican Party.

    “We meet the third Monday of every month, and we always invite people from our community,” she said.

    Members of the group also discuss legislation that they might not support. That’s the case with Senate Bill 1598.

    “It is important to realize there is a difference between the people that have been here for years and those people that this administration has let come by the thousands without properly being vetted,” she said.

    Bills like SB 1598 don’t help to strengthen the immigration system in the state, according to her.

    The bill would repeal provisions relating to patient status data collected by hospitals. It could also delete the requirement that an employer discontinues employing a person after learning that the person has no legal status in the state. 

    Those in favor of the bill say it is legislation that helps to combat last year’s immigration law, Senate Bill 1718.

    “What it does is it seems to clear up some misconceptions and probably some things that would have been challenged with SB 1718,” said Danielle Hernandez, founder of the DVH Law Group.

    Hernandez said last year’s law led the way to a town hall meeting to help educate the undocumented community about SB 1718.

    She said if SB 1598 is passed, it would be a is a step in the right direction toward protecting the immigrant community she serves.

    “This is an election year,” Hernandez said. “It’s also very important for people to understand what is coming in our laws.”

    SB 1598 is still in committee in the Florida Senate and has yet to see a vote that would advance it to the floor. 

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