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Tag: Florida politics

  • Daniel Perez rattled Tallahassee. What will he do in year two as House Speaker?

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    Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, leaves after speaking with the media during the first day of the legislative session at the Florida State Capitol on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in Tallahassee, Fla.

    Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, leaves after speaking with the media during the first day of the legislative session at the Florida State Capitol on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in Tallahassee, Fla.

    mocner@miamiherald.com

    In his first year as Florida’s young and powerful speaker of the House, Miami Republican Daniel Perez created a new political dynamic in the Sunshine State, in which legislators began to claw back the power they had ceded for so long to Gov. Ron DeSantis and reassert their control over policy and the purse.

    Lawmakers in the Florida House launched explosive inquiries into the DeSantis administration’s spending and decisions. They spearheaded the first ever override of DeSantis’ vetoes. And, working with the Senate, they largely bucked his agenda, letting some of his priorities languish.

    But that was last year. Heading into Perez’s second and final session in charge of Republicans’ agenda in the House, the dynamic has changed, and Perez may be the odd man out.

    Perez, 38, says his relationship with the governor — who he says isn’t returning his calls — remains icy. And he doesn’t seem optimistic about his once-warm relationship with Senate President Ben Albritton following a blowup last year over taxes and spending that appeared to push the leader of the Legislature’s upper chamber closer to the governor.

    With Florida’s legislative session beginning Tuesday, that evolving power dynamic is a wildcard that could affect the state’s ability to lock in more than $100 billion in spending, address the pressing problems facing Floridians and set in stone some of the GOP’s priorities, like drawing new congressional districts and cutting property taxes.

    More than a dozen interviews with Republican members of the Legislature and players in the political process revealed just how fraught the relationship between the House speaker and Senate president remains — though both say they are looking forward.

    “It doesn’t have to be a tough environment,” Perez told the Herald/Times this week in an interview. “It’s just a matter of having a willing and able partner, which, right now, doesn’t seem like something that’s feasible.”

    The governor’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, hands Florida Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, the gavel during the first day of the legislative session at the Florida State Capitol on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in Tallahassee, Fla.
    Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, hands Florida Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, the gavel during the first day of the legislative session at the Florida State Capitol on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in Tallahassee, Fla. Photo by Matias J. Ocner mocner@miamiherald.com

    Priorities and Politics

    Just like last year, Perez, a lawyer by trade, is playing his cards close to the vest.

    He has no legacy bill that he is shepherding through the process. He says he believes the state has put the necessary changes in place to fix Florida’s property insurance crisis. And he has resisted calls from cash-strapped condo owners to overhaul the building-safety law he championed after the fall of the Champlain Towers South in Surfside.

    His main goal, he says, is to pass a conservative budget that is smaller than last year’s, potentially setting up another difficult negotiation with the Senate, which is concerned with revenue shortfalls.

    “This will be the first time that there will be a back-to-back cut in the budget coming out of the House since the recession,” Perez said. “And we’re proud to voluntarily take that task on.”

    It’s hard to discern what measures Perez personally wants to pass. He isn’t sharing his preferences. And while he is addressing the governor’s priorities of redistricting and reducing property taxes, both issues have succumbed to the committee process with multiple proposals and much debate.

    “We’re looking forward to that proposal if he were to ever have one,” Perez said of DeSantis’ desire to do away with property taxes for Florida residents with homestead exemptions on their primary residences. “And then I’m sure the Senate will soon thereafter follow his lead, so we’ll have that conversation at the right time.”

    Just a year ago, the House and Senate appeared to be in lockstep, with DeSantis suddenly struggling to bend the Florida Legislature to his will.

    That was clear before Florida’s regular 2025 legislative session. When DeSantis called for a special session on immigration, they called their own and passed legislation that they championed and he panned. Those battle lines appeared to persist when the House and Senate announced a plan for a state budget that would include billions in tax relief.

    “I’m pleased to share with you that we have reached a framework for a budget plan,” Albritton said on the Senate floor on May 2. “As part of our agreement with the House, we will take up the most historic tax relief package in the history of our state.”

    But Albritton says his Senate colleagues balked when it came time to whip votes on Perez’s specific plan to cut $5 billion from Florida’s sales tax as the policy was publicly denounced by the governor. He called Perez several days later and told him the Senate didn’t go for it.

    “I can’t make the Senate do anything,” Albritton told the Herald/Times about the outcome.

    Perez sent out a memo lamenting how the deal had been “blown up,” threatening a government shutdown as lawmakers approached the next fiscal year without a budget.

    “The House and Senate had a deal on the budget,” Rep. Juan Carlos Porras, a Miami Republican, recounted to the Herald/Times this week. “And then over the weekend, the Senate president reneged on that deal, and that resulted in the numerous days that we didn’t have a budget.”

    Ed Hooper, the Senate budget chairman from Clearwater, remembers it differently. The Senate was preparing a state budget for less economic growth in the future as fewer people retire in Florida, he said, and Perez didn’t give them heads up about the House’s planned tax cut.

    “That was a $5 billion surprise,” Hooper said. “There was no deal agreed on a sales tax reduction.”

    The dispute kept lawmakers for months from passing a timely budget, leading ultimately to a deal in June that required two extensions of Florida’s legislative session. In the fallout, the close relationship between Perez and Albritton frayed.

    Albritton told the Herald/Times in an interview on Thursday that he was focused on the future, not the past.

    “I do not have disdain for the speaker,” said Albritton, a Wauchula Republican.

    A policy Albritton cares about will be an early test for that resolve.

    Next week, the Senate will pass the president’s Rural Renaissance package. It is supposed to drive economic growth in sparsely populated regions of the state—an affordability agenda that could be a powerful message during the midterm elections centered on high costs of living.

    Perez killed the bill last year as part of the budget blow up. He’s likely to do it again.

    Herald/Times Tallahassee Bureau reporter Garrett Shanley contributed to this story.

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    Alexandra Glorioso

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  • The most bizarre things that happened in Orlando this year

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    This year was one filled with puzzling headlines both on big and small scales, and Orlando was definitely not exempt. Ranging from silly animal sightings to downright egregious political attacks, Central Florida contributed its fair share of unhinged news.

    From alligator wrestling to flying cars to scuba diver robbers, here are the most bizarre stories that Orlando Weekly published this year. 

    Credit: Shutterstock

    A woman drowned her dog in Orlando airport bathroom, and then the police lost her
    An arrest affidavit said Alison Lawrence “is believed to have taken extreme and tragic action by killing the dog” after she was denied boarding her 9-year-old miniature schnauzer named Tywinn because she lacked the proper paperwork. When deputies later went to Lawrence’s home to arrest her, she was not there. A neighbor told them she no longer lives at the location.

    Credit: J.D. Casto

    DeSantis erased “LGBTQ and Hispanic communities” from Pulse remembrance statement
    One day before the nine-year anniversary of the Pulse Nightclub shooting, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis directed flags to be flown at half-staff in remembrance. His statement, however, omitted mention of LGBTQ and Hispanic communities, two groups that made up most of the victims.

    Credit: Orange County Comptroller’s Office

    Visit Orlando spent $75K of taxpayer funds on lavish NYC dinner
    The dinner, hosted at New York restaurant The Musket Room, took place in May 2023, according to a
    blog post published by the Michelin Guide. Forty guests, including Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer, were invited to attend a dinner featuring chefs from Capa, a Michelin-starred steakhouse located in the Disney-adjacent Four Seasons hotel.

    Credit: via Gov. Ron DeSantis/X

    DeSantis said he wants to test flying cars in Central Florida
    After recently admitting he was “mildly excited” about the effort to reduce congestion along the I-4 corridor, the governor said Florida will first try to attract the growing technology to Polk County.
    While few details were released, DeSantis in October announced plans for an aerial test bed at the SunTrax facility.

    Credit: New College of Florida/X

    New College launched effort to erect a bronze statue of Charlie Kirk
    In a move to honor the late right-wing conservative activist Charlie Kirk, New College of Florida announced plans in September to commission a bronze statue for its Sarasota campus. Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA, was shot and killed during a speaking event at Utah Valley University on Sept. 10.

    The initial design, depicted in an AI-generated image shared on social media, shows Kirk seated at a table with a microphone in hand, gesturing while “speaking” to three empty chairs. What could possibly go wrong at this prank photo-op setup?

    Credit: Photo by J.D. Casto

    Florida Highway Patrol arrested people for “aggressively chalking” over Pulse crosswalk
    A Florida Highway Patrol officer arrested two people in November for allegedly “defacing” the formerly rainbow-colored crosswalk outside Orlando’s Pulse nightclub — the latest in a string of questionable arrests at the time.

    According to court records, on Nov. 23, 28-year-old James Houchins and 29-year-old Austin “Bubba” Trahan were caught on video “aggressively” chalking the word “Resist” onto the crosswalk, which is owned and maintained by the state Department of Transportation. 

    Credit: Orlando Police Department/X

    A swan stopped traffic, then waddled across a busy Orlando highway
    If you honked your car horn on the 408 on this March Friday, you might have gotten an especially wild honk back.

    Credit: SpaceX/X

    Debris from Elon Musk’s SpaceX launch grounded Orlando flights
    MCO issued a ground stop declaration just after SpaceX launched its largest rocket, Starship, on its eighth test flight from its base in Boca Chica, Texas.

    Just minutes after launch, the ship spun out of control, exploded and lost contact with SpaceX mission control. Debris from the rocket landed in the Atlantic Ocean.

    Credit: J.D. Casto

    DeSantis called a crosswalk outside a mass shooting memorial “political”
    A day after the state quietly removed a rainbow crosswalk outside of the site of a gay nightclub mass shooting that killed 49 people, DeSantis in August took to his X account to call the strip of road “political.”

    “We will not allow our state roads to be commandeered for political purposes,” the governor wrote.

    Credit: Shutterstock

    UCF received threats that “directly targeted” Black students
    Several Historically Black Colleges and Universities, plus UCF, said in September they received threats targeting Black students and went under lockdown. 

    An email sent to students from UCF said “threats of violence like this seek to create fear and division, and they have no place at UCF. But let us be clear: Violence and threats of violence are never tolerated.”

    Credit: Shutterstock

    Man in scuba gear robbed Disney restaurant, then swam away
    Disney Springs restaurant Paddlefish, which is shaped like a steamboat, was robbed in September by someone who swam up dressed in goggles and a wetsuit.

    He swam to the restaurant, stole thousands of dollars, put his gear back on, jumped into the lake again and swam away, OCSO reported.

    Credit: via Lake County Sheriff’s Office/Facebook

    A cop wrestled an alligator in someone’s backyard
    Two deputies followed a trespassing alligator from a home’s front porch to the backyard, which the gator got into by ramming open a fence attached to the house. 

    The officers are seen in a video securing the alligator with rope before one wrestles the animal down and mounts it. Submission!

    Credit: Shutterstock

    Woman sues SeaWorld Orlando after she says a duck hit her in the face on ride
    According to the lawsuit, filed Monday, the duck struck Martin in the face, “causing loss of consciousness and personal injury.”

    The suit alleges that SeaWorld failed to “maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition by negligently failing to correct a dangerous situation” that the park “either knew or should have known about.” Martin’s attorney also argues the park did not warn her about the potential risk of bird strikes before riding.

    Credit: Google Maps

    Orlando bar owner and his partner indicted on multiple child pornography charges
    Richard Kowalczyk, former owner of Southern Nights Orlando and Tampa, and his partner, Eric Patrick, were indicted on charges of conspiracy to entice a minor, attempted coercion and enticement of a minor, attempted coercion and enticement of a minor, two counts of receipt of child pornography and possession of child pornography. Patrick has been charged with coercion and enticement of a minor and distribution of child pornography. Both men are awaiting trial, and are living in separate residences with third-party custodians under pretrial release.

    The January indictment said Kowalczyk participated in conversations on private messaging platform Telegram that went back as far as 2019. The “graphic exchanges” found on Kowalczyk’s phone during the investigation reportedly included images and videos featuring minors suspected to be as young as 7 years old.

    Ownership was quickly transferred and the bars no longer have ties to the couple. 

    Credit: Shutterstock

    Campbell’s VP was exposed for saying soup is bioengineered ‘sh-t for poor people’ — and then James Uthmeier got involved
    Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier said Tuesday the state’s Consumer Protection division is launching an investigation into canned soup company Campbell’s use of lab-grown meat. 

    The announcement comes as a former Campbell’s employee launches legal action against the company following a meeting with the vice president that turned into an hour-long rant mocking “poor people,” calling Indian employees “idiots,” admitting to working while high on edibles, and claiming Campbell’s uses bioengineered meat.

    Credit: Screenshot via DeSantis Facebook

    Florida announced plans to gut vaccine mandates for kids
    Florida’s anti-vax surgeon general Joseph Ladapo in September announced plans to get rid of the state’s vaccine requirements, earning swift criticism from the statewide teachers union, public health experts and Democratic lawmakers.

    The Florida Education Association warned that eliminating vaccine mandates would make public schools less safe for students and teachers and worsen student absenteeism. According to the New York Times, Florida would be the first state in the U.S. to end all vaccine mandates, if the proposal moves forward.

    Credit: FloridaGOP/X

    DeSantis opened insultingly named immigration detention camps; the RPOF made merch
    The Republican Party of Florida began selling merchandise themed after the immigrant detention camp dubbed the “Deportation Depot.” The hats, shirts and coffee mugs ripped off Home Depot’s logo and colors — and they didn’t last long. The line was pulled just days later, when Home Depot objected to the use of its brand’s likeness.

    Credit: Screenshot via Zoom

    A Hope Florida meeting was derailed by racial slurs, porn and swastikas
    Amid the fiasco that was Hope Florida — in which the DeSantis administration was accused of diverting millions of dollars in healthcare and child welfare funds toward political attack ads — one meeting went even worse than anyone thought it would. The highly anticipated Zoom call was canceled after a short time due to hackers screen-sharing offensive images and language including racial slurs, pornography and Nazi symbols.



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    Orlando Weekly Staff
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  • Reading Books by Black Authors to Kids? Only if Parents Say OK

    Reading Books by Black Authors to Kids? Only if Parents Say OK

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    Florida, it seems, is at it again.

    Some parents in the Sunshine State are outraged that their children’s school is asking them to sign permission slips allowing a book by a Black author to be read to their kids.

    “I had to give permission for this or else my child would not participate???” parent Charles Walter, wrote on Feb. 13 on X, formerly known as Twitter. Attached to the post: a Miami-Dade County Public Schools permission slip.

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    Aziah Siid

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  • Florida’s tussle with Disney wouldn’t have happened ‘if Bob Iger had been CEO,’ says top DeSantis ally

    Florida’s tussle with Disney wouldn’t have happened ‘if Bob Iger had been CEO,’ says top DeSantis ally

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    Florida lawmakers are reviewing ways to restore some of the privileges that the state stripped from Walt Disney Co., still reducing the company’s benefits dramatically without going as far as ending them all, a key legislator said.

    Earlier this year, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed a law that in 2023 would dissolve a special government district that’s granted sweeping benefits to Disney for half a century, called Reedy Creek, unless it’s reinstated by the legislature. The move was triggered by what the Republican governor saw as Disney’s criticism of a law he signed that limits elementary school teachings about gender identity.

    The sponsor of the law axing the entertainment giant’s Florida perks, state Representative Randy Fine, said he’s encouraged by last month’s ouster of Disney Chief Executive Officer Bob Chapek, who led opposition to DeSantis’s so-called “Don’t Say Gay” law. Fine said discussions were helped by signs that Disney’s returning CEO Bob Iger will steer clear of Florida politics. 

    “I think Mr. Iger has already said it probably was a misstep on the company’s part and how they handled it,” Fine said in an interview.  “I don’t think we’d be in this situation if Bob Iger had been CEO.” 

    The move pitted DeSantis against one of Florida’s largest and most powerful employers, known for several iconic theme parks in Orlando. DeSantis, who’s widely believed to be plotting a run for president in 2024, has made the blow against Disney a key part of his so-called “anti-woke” agenda. The Florida governor has vowed repeatedly to go after corporations that side against him on culture-war fights over race, gender identity and abortion. Fighting what he called “the woke” was the foundation of a reelection campaign that gave DeSantis one of the largest landslide victories of any Republican in the US midterm elections in November.

    DeSantis won’t make any “U-turns” from the law he signed this year, his chief spokesman said. The governor will not reverse pledges to remove “the extraordinary benefit given to one company,” Press Secretary Bryan Griffin said in an emailed statement.  “A plan is in the works and will be released soon.”

    Iger to ‘quiet things down’ in Florida

    One goal would be to ensure that Disney would be responsible for paying back the nearly $1 billion in municipal bonds issued by the special district, DeSantis has said. “We will have an even playing field for businesses in Florida, and the state certainly owes no special favors to one company,” Griffin said. “Disney’s debts will not fall on the taxpayers of Florida.”

    A Disney spokesperson declined comment. In a recent hall meeting with Disney employees, Iger, said: “Do I like the company being embroiled in controversy? Of course not.” 

    “It can be distracting and have a negative impact on the company. To the extent I can quiet things down, I’m going to do that,” he said, adding that he’s still getting “up to speed” on the situation with Reedy Creek and that he doesn’t have all the details about the ramifications of Florida’s decision.

    Legislation to replace Reedy Creek will seek to strip away benefits that no other company except Disney enjoys, said Fine, who said he’s involved in discussions among lawmakers and the governor. Fine declined to comment on details of the discussions or what privileges might be on the chopping block once a new law is proposed in the legislature. 

    But he cited perks Disney has enjoyed such as government-like powers to seize land via eminent domain and to sell bonds. The Reedy Creek tax district was created by the legislature in 1967 in a deal that led to the construction of Disney World. It gave Disney self-governing power over 25,000 acres, including overseeing its own building code and permits, which helped the company build faster. 

    “I think what you’ll likely see is some of the things that just made no sense,” said Fine. “You know, it isn’t going to be, ‘Oops, let’s go back to the way it was.’ You’re gonna see something substantially different.”

    Iger, in the wide-ranging meeting with employees, said he’s not going to back down on having Disney be a “good citizen of the world,” which is sometimes mistakenly branded as political. 

    “I think there’s a misperception here about what politics is,” he explained. “I think that some of the subjects that have proven to be controversial as it relates to Disney have been branded political, and I don’t necessarily believe they are.” 

    —With assistance from Thomas Buckley

    Our new weekly Impact Report newsletter will examine how ESG news and trends are shaping the roles and responsibilities of today’s executives—and how they can best navigate those challenges. Subscribe here.

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    Michael Smith, Bloomberg

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  • Manuel P. Asensio Announces His ‘Smoking-Gun’ Campaign for the Republican Nomination in Florida’s 3rd Congressional District

    Manuel P. Asensio Announces His ‘Smoking-Gun’ Campaign for the Republican Nomination in Florida’s 3rd Congressional District

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    Asensio seeks to defeat corruption now before it leads to total tyranny against his fellow citizens.

    Press Release


    Nov 19, 2021

    Manuel P. Asensio, a tried-and-true fighter of institutionalized corruption and champion of freedom of religion, the press, and speech rights, has announced his campaign for the Republican nomination in Florida’s 3rd Congressional District. When elected, Asensio promises to expose and end the corruption that has enabled the Left to wrongfully take control of the U.S. Constitution. He is running for Congress to expose and dismantle the federal corruption that seeks to destroy the Constitution’s protections of the American liberties and freedoms, and private property.

    Asensio seeks to defeat corruption now before it leads to total tyranny against his fellow citizens. 

    “I am repulsed by the unholy alliance and dirty politics used by both sides to enable the Radical Left. This has resulted in canceled facts, reasoning, and religion in all levels of government and made a disgraceful farce of our Constitution,” said Asensio.

    “Republican voters are tired of the corruption they see in their party’s Washington leadership. They are fed up watching the establishment colluding with the Radical Left to violate the Constitution’s most important doctrines. These are our only protections against dictatorship. I will expose how, where, and why the establishment has aligned with the Left to ruin values, truth and reason and the integrity of America’s courts, borders, and the 2020 census, the presidential and all elections,” said Asensio.

    “I will stop the nonsense and political absurdities that have taken over our federal government. I will stand up and fight political corruption with undeniable smoking-gun facts and law,” he added.

    Asensio founded Asensio & Company, the first Wall Street firm dedicated to fighting corruption. His phenomenally successful investigations uncovered fraud harming investors and improved capital markets. As a result, he became known as a pioneer of information arbitrage. In 2016, Asensio founded the Institute of Judicial Conduct to research corruption in the regulation of the federal judiciary and the administration of family liberty and individual rights. His congressional campaign brings this wealth of knowledge and experience to the political arena.

    A conservative Christian Republican, Asensio has experience with left-wing government takeovers in Cuba, Venezuela, and the United States of America. He earned his undergraduate degree from the Wharton School of Business and his graduate degree from Harvard Business School.

    Asensio was born in Cuba and fled communism at six years old, two weeks after the Bay of Pigs invasion. His parents taught him since childhood to embrace conservative values and to fight for individual dignity and independence. Caridad Asensio, Asensio’s mother, is cofounder of the Caridad Center, Florida’s largest free health clinic and one of the largest in the nation. She is a member of the Florida Women’s Hall of Fame and a recipient of the National Jefferson Award.

    Visit the candidate’s website at asensio4congress.com.

    To support the cause, please visit https://secure.winred.com/asensio4congress/donate-today.

    For further information, call (352) WIN-RED1, visit asensio4congress.com or email info@Asensio4Congress.com.

    Source: Asensio 4 Congress

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