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Tag: Jason Delgado

  • James Fishback talks run for governor; Florida can kick kids off social media

    Investor James Fishback sits down with Spectrum News to discuss his run for governor, and a federal appeals court allows Florida to enforce its social media law.


    James Fishback has been a vocal advocate for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and an opponent to Rep. Byron Donalds, who is also running for the governor’s seat.

    He wants to eliminate property taxes, stop foreign investment companies from buying up property in Florida, and stop American companies from hiring foreign employees through the H-1B visa program.

    Now, he sits down with Spectrum News’ Holly Gregory to talk about his campaign plan and his governing goals. Watch the interview above ⬆️

    Florida will start enforcing its social media law

    Children under 14 years old will be blocked from creating accounts on some social media platforms in Florida.

    Fourteen- and 15-year-olds will need parental consent to create those accounts.

    That’s the result of a federal appeals court ruling. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit put on hold a lower court’s injunction, which would have prevented the enforcement of HB-3.

    “Rather than blocking children from accessing social media altogether, HB-3 simply prevents them from creating accounts on platforms that employ addictive features,” Judge Elizabeth Branch wrote in her decision.

    The ruling allows the state to enforce the law, for now, while further legal proceedings play out.

    Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier responded to the ruling.

    “HB-3 is now the law of the state and will be enforced. We’re putting all big tech companies on notice: endanger our kids, and find out what happens!” he wrote.

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff

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  • James Fishback runs for governor, and Florida bear advocates take FWC to court

    A vocal advocate for Gov. Ron DeSantis announces his campaign to replace him, and Florida’s upcoming bear hunt survives a legal challenge.

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    An investor who founded the firm Azoria announced Monday he will run for governor as a Republican in the 2026 election.

    James Fishback has been a vocal advocate for Gov. Ron DeSantis and an opponent to Rep. Byron Donalds, who is also running for the governor’s seat.

    Fishback, 30, said he is running to defend DeSantis’ legacy and create a more affordable Florida.

    He wants to eliminate property taxes, stop foreign investment companies from buying up property in our state, and stop American companies from hiring foreign employees through the H-1B visa program.

    Fishback has made it clear he is going to attack his fellow Republican, Donalds, the Florida congressman who got an early endorsement from President Trump.

    “Byron Donalds is a slave. I’m sorry, he’s a slave,” he said of Donalds. “He is a slave to his donors, he is a slave to his corporate interest, to the tech bros that want to turn our state into, in his own words, a financial capital.”

    The campaign for Donalds sent out this statement before noon Monday: “Byron Donalds will be Florida’s next governor because he is the proven conservative fighter endorsed by President Trump. Anyone running against him is an anti-Trump RINO and will get crushed in the Republican primary.”

    RINO stands for Republican In Name Only.

    Fishback is facing a lawsuit from his former employer, Greenlight Captial. He is accused of inflating his resume with them after leaving the company.

    He joins a list of people running for governor that also includes Florida House speaker Paul Renner, Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings and former Republican congressman David Jolly.

    The primary for the governor’s race is next August.

    Florida bear advocates take FWC to court

    As the state’s first bear hunt in 10 years approaches, a conservation group’s lawsuit against the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission went before a judge.

    Bear Warriors United asked on Monday for an injuction to stop the hunt before it starts. 

    The judge sided with the state, so the hunt will go on as scheduled on Dec. 6.

    FWC in August approved a proposal to allow 187 bears to be removed from the state in four designated “bear harvest zones.”

    A total of 172 permits statewide were made available through a random lottery system, and the recipients of those permits had to pay $100 for them.

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff

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  • Florida offshore drilling reactions; Scott healthcare plan

    A U.S. representative from South Florida has been indicted on charges related to the alleged misuse of disaster funds, and Florida lawmakers remember former Vice President Dick Cheney.


    The Trump administration announced on Thursday new oil drilling off the California and Florida coasts for the first time in decades, advancing a project that critics say could harm coastal communities and ecosystems, as President Donald Trump seeks to expand U.S. oil production.

    The oil industry has been seeking access to new offshore areas, including Southern California and off the coast of Florida, as a way to boost U.S. energy security and jobs. The federal government has not allowed drilling in federal waters in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, which includes offshore Florida and part of offshore Alabama, since 1995, because of concerns about oil spills. California has some offshore oil rigs, but there has been no new leasing in federal waters since the mid-1980s.

    Since taking office for a second time in January, Trump has systematically reversed former President Joe Biden’s focus on slowing climate change to pursue what the Republican calls U.S. “energy dominance” in the global market. Trump, who recently called climate change “the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world,” created a National Energy Dominance Council and directed it to move quickly to drive up already record-high U.S. energy production, particularly fossil fuels such as oil, coal and natural gas.

    Meanwhile, Trump’s administration has blocked renewable energy sources such as offshore wind and canceled billions of dollars in grants that supported hundreds of clean energy projects across the country.

    The offshore drilling proposal drew bipartisan pushback from lawmakers in Florida, where Republican Sen. Rick Scott said the state’s coasts “must remain off the table for oil drilling.” In California, Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, a frequent Trump critic, called the administration’s plan “idiotic.”

    Tourism and access to clean beaches are key parts of the economy in both states.

    Sen. Scott, a Trump ally, helped persuade officials in Trump’s first term to drop a similar offshore plan in 2018 when Scott was governor. Scott and Florida Republican Sen. Ashley Moody introduced legislation this month to maintain the drilling moratorium from Trump’s first term.

    Newsom, who often touts the state’s status as a global climate leader, said in response to Thursday’s announcement that California would “use every tool at our disposal to protect our coastline.”

    California has been a leader in restricting offshore drilling since an infamous 1969 Santa Barbara spill helped spark the modern environmental movement. While no new federal leases have been offered since the mid-1980s, drilling from existing platforms continues.

    Newsom expressed support for greater offshore controls after a 2021 spill off Huntington Beach and has backed a congressional effort to ban new offshore drilling on the West Coast.

    A Texas-based company, with support from the Trump administration, is seeking to restart production in waters off Santa Barbara damaged by a 2015 oil spill. The administration has hailed the plan by Houston-based Sable Offshore Corp. as the kind of project Trump wants to increase U.S. energy production.

    Trump signed an executive order on the first day of his second term to reverse Biden’s ban on future offshore oil drilling on the East and West coasts. A federal court later struck down Biden’s order to withdraw 625 million acres of federal waters from oil development.

    Scott announces alternative health care plan

    Sen. Rick Scott introduced a proposal to address rising health care costs as subsidies affiliated with the Affordable Care Act are set to end at the end of the year.

    The plan would use HSA-style “Trump Health Freedom Accounts” that families could use to help pay for healthcare. The funds sent to these accounts can be applied to premiums for health insurance as long as they don’t fund abortions.

    “Obamacare has failed to deliver on its promises: families didn’t get to keep their insurance plans, couldn’t keep their doctors, and didn’t save money – and neither did the federal government. Instead, Obamacare created a system that left American families with fewer choices, higher costs, and health care that doesn’t meet their needs. That’s obvious, and it’s why President Trump and the American people are demanding solutions to fix this broken system,” Scott said.

    “My new bill makes simple fixes to Obamacare that will make a world of difference to American families by making Americans the consumer, not the government, while giving them options and transparency,” he said.

    The deal to reopen the government signed by the president last week did not include a key demand from Democrats — an extension of Affordable Care Act enhanced subsidies.

    Democrats like Rep. Morgan McGarvey, D-Louisville, have warned that without that extension, many families will face skyrocketing health insurance premiums in 2026.

    Some Kentuckians, said McGarvey, are already dropping their health insurance because it’s too expensive.

    “I had business owners just this week tell me that they’re watching their premiums for the two of them go from $625 per month to $2,501 per month,” McGarvey said Friday. “That’s a $2,000 increase. Nobody can afford that. We have to do something about this.”

    This year alone, more than 125,000 Kentuckians have received coverage through kynect Qualified Health Plans, according to the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services.

    Kynect is the state-based marketplace for the Affordable Care Act.

    From Nov. 1, when the open enrollment period began, to Nov. 7, about 1,500 Kentuckians had changed those plans, about 1,200 canceled their 2026 coverage, and there were an estimated 800 new enrollees—a number that lags behind the pace of previous years, according to the cabinet.

    It’s not clear from the data exactly why Kentuckians changed or canceled plans.

    On Friday, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., told CNN that House Democrats have introduced legislation to extend the ACA tax credits for three years.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., addressed the possibility of a vote on the credits.

    “Am I gonna guarantee a vote on ACA unreformed COVID-era subsidies that is just a boondoggle to insurance companies and robs the taxpayer? We got a lot of work to do on that. The Republicans would demand a lot of reforms before anything like that was ever possible.”

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Phillip Stucky, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Florida Rep. indicted; lawmakers remember Cheney

    A U.S. representative from South Florida has been indicted on charges related to the alleged misuse of disaster funds, and Florida lawmakers remember former Vice President Dick Cheney.


    U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick of Florida has been indicted on charges accusing her of stealing $5 million in federal disaster funds and using some of the money to aid her 2021 campaign, the Justice Department said Wednesday.

    The Democrat is accused of stealing Federal Emergency Management Agency overpayments that her family health care company had received through a federally funded COVID-19 vaccination staffing contract, federal prosecutors said. A portion of the money was then allegedly funneled to support her campaign through candidate contributions, prosecutors allege.

    “Using disaster relief funds for self-enrichment is a particularly selfish, cynical crime,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement. “No one is above the law, least of all powerful people who rob taxpayers for personal gain. We will follow the facts in this case and deliver justice.”

    Cherfilus-McCormick released a statement, denying the allegations.

    “This is an unjust, baseless, sham indictment — and I am innocent,” she said in the statement. “The timing alone is curious and clearly meant to distract from far more pressing national issues. From day one, I have cooperated with every lawful request, and I will continue to do so until this matter is resolved.”

    Cherfilus-McCormick was first elected to Congress in 2022 in the 20th District, representing parts of Broward and Palm Beach counties, in a special election after Rep. Alcee Hastings died in 2021.

    In December 2024, a Florida state agency sued a company owned by Cherfilus-McCormick’s family, saying it overcharged the state by nearly $5.8 million for work done during the pandemic and wouldn’t give the money back.

    The Florida Division of Emergency Management said it made a series of overpayments to Trinity Healthcare Services after hiring it in 2021 to register people for COVID-19 vaccinations. The agency says it discovered the problem after a single $5 million overpayment drew attention.

    Cherfilus-McCormick was the CEO of Trinity at the time.

    The Office of Congressional Ethics said in a January report that Cherfilus-McCormick’s income in 2021 was more than $6 million higher than in 2020, driven by nearly $5.75 million in consulting and profit-sharing fees received from Trinity Healthcare Services.

    In July, the House Ethics Committee unanimously voted to reauthorize an investigative subcommittee to examine allegations involving Cherfilus-McCormick.

    Dignitaries and loved ones of former Vice President Dick Cheney assembled in Washington, D.C., on Thursday to pay tribute to the late conservative political leader at his funeral.

    Cheney — who served as vice president for both of former President George W. Bush’s terms, as chief of staff to the late President Gerald Ford and as secretary of defense for the late President George H.W. Bush –– died Nov. 3 from complications of pneumonia and cardiac and vascular disease. He was 84.

    “My dad’s devotion to America was deep and substantive,” Cheney’s daughter, former U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney, said in her eulogy for her father Thursday. “He spent his life studying the history of our great republic. He knew you couldn’t truly appreciate what it means to live in freedom if you didn’t understand the sacrifices of the generations who came before.”

    George W. Bush also spoke about Dick Cheney, calling him “my vice president and my friend,” during the service at the Washington National Cathedral.

    The historic Episcopal church in Washington D.C. has hosted state funerals for five U.S. presidents, including Dwight D. Eisenhower, Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford, George H.W. Bush and Jimmy Carter.

    Orlando resident and former U.S. Sen. Mel Martinez reflected on the life of Cheney, who officiated two swearing-in ceremonies for Martinez. The first was when Martinez was appointed HUD secretary under former President George W. Bush, and a few years later when he was elected as U.S. Senator for Florida.

    “He was there for me during two of the most important days in my life,” Martinez said.

    Martinez shared his perspective before getting on a plane to Washington to attend Cheney’s funeral.

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Phillip Stucky, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Bear hunt protest, Florida ACA costs

    Bear Warriors United protests Florida’s upcoming bear hunt, and a new report outlines the impact of ending ACA subsidies for Florida residents.


    Local groups hold protest in Tallahassee against Florida’s upcoming bear hunt

    Activists held a large demonstration on Monday in Tallahassee to protest Florida’s upcoming bear hunt.

    They are urging state leaders to rethink the state’s upcoming bear hunt.

    The bear hunt will last for 23 days, starting on Dec. 6 and ending Dec. 28. It’s been more than a decade since the last statewide bear hunt.

    More than 100 people gathered outside the Florida Capitol to call the state’s upcoming hunt both unsound and unneeded.

    “The FWC was entrusted to protect wildlife, to protect it, for the people to manage it,” Bear Warriors United Attorney Raquel Levy said. “And it’s destroying the very thing it’s entrusted to protect.”

    Officials with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission argue the hunt will help manage the bear population and salvage the habitat, too.

    “While we have enough suitable bear habitat to support our current bear population levels … we will not have enough habitat at some point in the future,” the agency said in a statement.

    Under the rules of the hunt, 172 bears are planned to be taken across 31 Florida counties. Bows, guns and traps have all been approved in the hunt.

    “Sierra Club isn’t against all hunting,” Sierra Club of Florida Senior Managing Organizer Cris Costello said. “We’re against hunting that isn’t part of a sane, science-based management policy.” 

    The last hunt lasted only two days and hunters killed roughly 295 black bears.

    Bear Warriors United has sued to stop the hunt, and a hearing on the matter is scheduled for next week.

    New report outlines which Florida districts will be hardest hit after ACA subsidies end

    Some congressional districts in Florida will be among those hardest by the expiration of the enhanced federal subsides to pay for health insurance through the Affordable Care Act.

    Florida has the most Affordable Care Act enrollees in the country with an estimated 4.7 million enrollees.

    A non-partisan research group, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, recently released an analysis of how the end of enhanced subsides to pay for ACA coverage will affect residents of each congressional district in the state.

    Florida’s 3rd Congressional District, which includes Gainesville, and South Florida districts will be some of the hardest hit districts in the country. In the 3rd Congressional District, a 45-year-old making $32,000 per year would see a nearly $1,500 annual increase in premiums if the enhancements go away. One reason for the differences among congressional districts is that health care costs vary from community to community.

    “It’s more just local health care costs vary a lot, just in small areas, even from hospital to hospital,” CBPP Senior Fellow Gideon Lukens said. “And, so, different districts, you’ll have greater, smaller health care costs, and you also have, like, local markets where insurers and providers are negotiating different rates.” 

    The enhanced ACA tax credits will expire at the end of the year if Congress and the president do not extend them. Experts say their disappearance will likely make health insurance too expensive for some Americans.

    “There’s five districts where over 30% of the population is enrolled in marketplace coverage, and in every district in Florida, over 10% is enrolled,” Lukens said. “So this is like, you know, a lot of people around you have marketplace coverage and are going to be looking at these big increases if the extensions, the enhancements are expected.”

    According to Lukens, the higher premiums will hit small businesses and the self-employed especially hard.

    “I think they make up about a quarter every year of  marketplace coverage,” he said. “So it’s particularly important for those groups.”

    As part of the short-term government funding deal that passed last week, Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune committed to holding a vote next month on extending the subsidies, though it’s not clear if it has enough Republican support to pass. And in the House, Speaker Mike Johnson has not promised to take up the bill. 

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Phillip Stucky, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Florida adopts ‘Phoenix Declaration,’ Epstein’s powerful friends

    The Florida State Board of Education has unanimously adopted the Heritage Foundation’s “Phoenix Declaration,” and newly released emails show that Jeffrey Epstein still had a complex network of wealthy and influential friends, even after he was convicted of soliciting prostitution from an underage girl in 2008.


    Florida is now the first state in the nation to adopt the “Phoenix Declaration” — a set of education philosophies put forth by the Heritage Foundation, a high-profile conservative think tank.

    The State Board of Education approved the declaration unanimously, setting it up to be the driving force for how public schools will instruct students.

    “Every child should have access to a high-quality, content-rich education that fosters the pursuit of the good, the true, and the beautiful, so that they may achieve their full, God-given potential,” reads the declaration.

    The declaration emphasizes seven principles — parental choice and responsibility; transparency and accountability; truth and goodness; cultural transmission; character formation; academic excellence; and citizenship. 

    “I don’t know how anyone could disagree with parental choice and responsibility, curriculum transparency, academic excellence, and instruction on objective truth,” said Education Commissioner Anastasios Kamoutsas. “These principles are principles that everyone across the board on both sides of the aisles can agree with.”

    The declaration says that students “should learn that there is objective truth and that it is knowable.”

    “Science courses must be grounded in reality, not ideological fads,” it continues. “Students should learn that good and evil exist, and that human beings have the capacity and duty to choose good.”

    The declaration goes on to decry “fads or experimental teaching methods” in favor of “core knowledge and tried-and-true pedagogy.”

    As for educational policies governing how students learn about the history of the United States, the declaration insists that schools should “foster a healthy sense of patriotism and cultivate gratitude for and attachment to our country and all who serve its central institutions.”

    “Students should develop a deep understanding of and respect for our nation’s founding documents and the ideas they contain about ordered liberty, justice, the rule of law, limited government, natural rights, and the equal dignity of all human beings,” the declaration says. “Students should learn the whole truth about America — its merits and failings — without obscuring that America is a great source of good in the world and that we have a tradition that is worth passing on.”

    Critics, including the Florida Education Association, rebuked the declaration as a politicized document authored by a conservative organization, which, among other things, championed the controversial Project 2025.

    “The Phoenix Declaration is the latest thinly veiled attempt by billionaire-backed special interests to dismantle and politicize Florida’s public education system,” the union said in a statement.

    Supporters, however, say they believe the declaration’s philosophies will help improve teaching, learning and civic outcomes in Florida’s public schools.

    “Many students are just being taught what to think,” said Orlando school board member Alicia Farrant. “And parents want their kids to learn how to think, how to think critically, and that gets us back to those foundations that made our nation great.”

    Other states are considering adoption of the Phoenix Declaration — state leaders in South Carolina and Oklahoma have endorsed it.

    By the time Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to soliciting prostitution from an underage girl, he had established an enormous network of wealthy and influential friends. Emails made public this week show the crime did little to diminish the desire of that network to stay connected to the billionaire financier.

    Thousands of documents released by the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday offer a new glimpse into what Epstein’s relationships with business executives, reporters, academics and political players looked like over a decade.

    They start with messages he sent and received around the time he finished serving his Florida sentence in 2009 and continue until the months before his arrest on federal sex trafficking charges in 2019.

    During that time, Epstein’s network was eclectic, spanning the globe and political affiliations: from the liberal academic Noam Chomsky to Steve Bannon, the longtime ally of President Donald Trump.

    Some reached out to support Epstein amid lawsuits and prosecutions, others sought introductions or advice on everything from dating to oil prices. One consulted him on how to respond to accusations of sexual harassment.

    Epstein was charged with sex trafficking in 2019, and killed himself in jail a month later. Epstein’s crimes, high-profile connections and jailhouse suicide have made the case a magnet for conspiracy theorists and online sleuths seeking proof of a cover-up.

    The emails do not implicate his contacts in those alleged crimes. They instead paint a picture of Epstein’s influence and connections over the years he was a registered sex offender.

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Phillip Stucky, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Rep. Steube votes against shutdown deal; Bill bans hemp THC

    The spending bill that ended the government shutdown has new restrictions on THC products, and the lone Republican representative to oppose the spending bill discusses what led to his vote.


    Shutdown resolution has impacts for THC products

    The longest federal government shutdown in U.S. history is officially over. The House passed a funding plan Wednesday, which was then quickly signed by President Donald Trump.

    Furloughed federal employees returned to work and are eagerly awaiting back pay from the multiple paychecks they missed, though it’s currently unclear when the money might hit their accounts.

    The bill Trump signed to reopen the government also includes a provision that significantly impacts THC products.

    It criminalizes most THC-infused products on the market today. That includes hemp or synthetic products like Delta-8.

    Any product containing more than .4 milligrams of total THC will be illegal.

    Some local hemp shop owners say this could have a significant impact on their business. Proponents of the legislation say it will help keep kids safe.

    It’s not the end of the road, though. There is a one-year delay in implementing the provisions, which means Congress could debate this further and come up with new regulations.

    The Florida legislature passed a bill in 2024 that would have closed the farm bill loophole but ultimately Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed the proposal.

    Lone GOP opponent to spending bill discusses his vote

    Speaker of the House Mike Johnson says his chamber will vote next week to repeal a provision in the shutdown deal that allows senators to sue the Department of Justice if they seize or subpoena data without notifying them.

    The bill is a unique advantage for eight Republican senators whose phone records were collected as part of former special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into the January 6 attack.

    When asked about the provision, which was tucked into the bill to reopen the government, Johnson said he knew nothing about it.

    “I found out about it last night. I was surprised. I was shocked by it, and I was angry about it, to be honest,” Johnson said.

    The bill entitles senators to $500,000 for each violation of the provision, and it prevents the government from invoking immunity in response to any claims.

    South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham told reporters yesterday he plans to sue.

    All Florida Democrats voted against the continuing resolution, and Rep. Greg Stuebe was the only Republican to vote against the proposal. He said that he voted that way because he is opposed to the late addition allowing senators to sue.

    He shares his reasoning with Political Connections.

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Phillip Stucky, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Florida immigration enforcement; SNAP benefits state funding

    Polk County deputies lead in immigration enforcement according to a new report, and Florida Democrats call on lawmakers to fund food banks amid the ongoing federal government shutdown.


    The Polk County Sheriff’s Office has reported more immigration-related encounters than any other local law enforcement agency in Florida. That’s according to the state board of immigration enforcement.

    The Polk County Sheriff’s office polices around 850,000 people, and its goal is to keep everyone safe.

    “We’re not out here going to job sites, going to businesses, going to agriculture fields. We’re just bumping into people as we do our normal daily business,” Sheriff Grady Judd said about the office’s immigration enforcement.

    Since August, the Polk County Sheriff’s Office has had more than 400 immigration encounters, second in line after the Florida Highway Patrol. That’s according to the state board of immigration enforcement.

    The board was created in February by Gov. Ron DeSantis to help deport people without legal status. The board recently experienced a change in leadership.

    Larry Keefe is no longer the executive director of the State Board of Immigration Enforcement. Keefe held this position since February of this year, and it is not clear where he will head next.

    “Larry has done a number of things in our administration over the years, and he has performed at a very high level with honor and integrity, and we really thank him for his service,” DeSantis sai during Tuesday’s cabinet meeting over the phone.

    DeSantis appointed Anthony Coker as the next executive director. He was the liaison to the state of Florida for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    Florida Democrats call on lawmakers to fund local food banks amid government shutdown

    Florida Democrats are urging Gov. Ron DeSantis to declare a state of emergency amid the ongoing government shutdown.

    That’s because millions of Floridians may soon find themselves without federal food assistance — like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).

    Some lawmakers are urging DeSantis to use emergency dollars to help resupply local food banks.

    “Florida has the fiscal strength to respond. What’s needed now is the moral will to act,” Florida Democrats wrote in an open letter.

    The request by all 43 Florida Democrats comes as federal funds for food stamps are set to expire November 1.

    After that, it’s estimated that nearly three million Floridians would lose access.

    “If feeding our neighbors doesn’t count as a state of emergency I don’t know what else would,” State House Minority Leader Fentrice Driskell said.

    SNAP provides food assistance to almost 42 million Americans. Among them are seniors, the unemployed, and people with disabilities.

    The office of the governor didn’t return a request for comment. 

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Asher Wildman, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Democrats add to property tax proposals; Shutdown could last

    Florida Democrats release their own proposals for eliminating property taxes in the state, and a Florida Republican reports the federal government shutdown could last past Thanksgiving. 


    Florida Democrats join property tax elimination fight with new proposals

    The path to eliminating property is getting more complicated. Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Florida Legislature, especially the Florida House, seemingly on different pages.

    There’s one goal, and yet, there are more than a dozen ideas on how to get there.

    Senate Democrats have joined the discussion with proposals of their own. One proposal would call for a non-school property tax exemption for Floridians 65 and older. This proposal has a requirement that homeowners must have a household income of less than $350,000 a year. Under this proposal, homeowners will have needed to reside in the state for at least five years.

    “Although I’m a Democrat, what we’re going to do is work as a Senate body to provide relief for the residents,” State Sen. Bernard Mack said. “And working with the house and the governor’s office, at the end of the day, whatever your party is, it doesn’t matter. What we want is to provide relief to the residents of this great state.” 

    Senate Democrats are proposing other relief too — like a limit on assessments for small businesses.

    “What we want to do is provide relief for the small businesses in this whole conversation,” Mack said. “And so, well, what I don’t want to do is for us to provide relief, but then we shift the burden to a lot of our small businesses. So and that’s the reason why I put, put out that package.”

    The proposals come as Florida Republicans debate strategy.

    Currently, the Florida House wants to propose seven different ideas to voters. That’s a plan that DeSantis doesn’t support.

    “Placing more than one property tax measure on the ballot represents an attempt to kill anything on property taxes. It’s a political game, not a serious attempt to get it done for the people,” he wrote on X last week.

    Meanwhile, leadership in the Florida House is expressing its frustrations with DeSantis.

    “The governor has not produced a plan on property taxes. Period,” Florida House Speaker Danny Perez said. “It’s unclear what he wants to do. I’ve personally reached out to share with him the house’s proposals, and he has, so far, not wanted to engage in a conversation.” 

    All this and more will need to resolve in the coming weeks to months. The 2026 legislative session kicks off in January.

    As unpaid federal workers line up at food banks and airports experience staffing shortages and flight delays, Republicans and Democrats remain at odds over how to resolve a federal funding showdown that has shuttered the government for 27 days.

    With hundreds of thousands of federal workers missing paychecks, and 40 million low-income Americans at risk of losing food benefits beginning this weekend unless the government reopens, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said Monday that the stalemate is “a simple math problem. We need Democrats to help.”

    There is currently no sign that lawmakers on either side of the aisle are moving toward a compromise.

    Florida Rep. Anna Paulina Luna suggested the shutdown could continue for weeks in a Sunday interview with Fox News.

    “Look, behind the scenes, Maria, I’m hearing that we potentially might not be back until even around the Thanksgiving timeframe or after that,” she said. “And it’s really unfortunate, because as you know, the military’s going without paychecks potentially, we have the SNAP and EBT program that’s potentially, especially going into the holiday season, going to be on the chopping block here.”

    The federal government has been closed since Oct. 1 when Democrats and Republicans in Congress failed to pass legislation that would fund it for the 2026 fiscal year. A stopgap funding bill to keep the government open through Nov. 21 has repeatedly failed in the Senate, as Democrats demand an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies that will otherwise expire at the end of the year.

    On Monday, Democrats yielded no ground to Republican demands that five Democratic Senators join their ranks and vote for the bill.

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said on the Senate floor: “Donald Trump says there’s no money to pay federal workers but he’s spending $40 billion to bail out Argentina, $300 million on his vanity ballroom, $172 million on two luxury jets for Kristi Noem (and) hundreds of millions for outfitting his foreign jet.”

    Calling President Donald Trump’s priorities “warped,” he said, “Here’s what the president needs to do. He should negotiate with Democrats.”

    Last week, Senate Democrats blocked a Republican bill called the Shutdown Fairness Act that would have allowed pay for air traffic controllers, military troops and other essential federal workers the Office of Personnel Management has approved while the government is shut down. On the same day, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., objected to requests for unanimous consent to pass two Democratic bills that would have paid federal employees, including one to pay all the workers.

    On Monday, the American Federation of Government Employees union that represents 800,000 workers said in a statement: “Put every single federal worker back on the job with full back pay — today. … It’s time for our leaders to start focusing on how to solve problems for the American people, rather than on who is going to get the blame for a shutdown that Americans dislike.”

    If the government remains closed, about 2 million active-duty U.S. troops and reserve military will miss full paychecks Friday. Johnson said Monday that the recent $130 million donation to the Trump administration to pay troops “is a small fraction of what’s needed.”

    He also said the 40 million Americans who rely on the Agriculture Department’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, will not be helped by a contingency fund to cover their benefits because it would pull money away from congressionally appropriated funds for school meals and infant formula.

    Schumer said it is “bunk” that the Trump administration will not fund SNAP.

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Asher Wildman, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Government workers miss paycheck; U.S. carrier group sent to Latin America

    Hundreds of thousands of federal workers went unpaid Friday as the government shutdown enters its 24th day, and the U.S. sends an aircraft carrier strike group to Latin America. 


    As hundreds of thousands of federal workers went unpaid Friday during the 24th day of an agonizing government shutdown, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., called on House Republicans to return to Washington to negotiate a bipartisan agreement.

    “We need Republican support for a bipartisan path forward in order to get out of this situation,” Jeffries said Friday during a news conference at the Capitol.

    “I said this directly to the president with (House Speaker Mike) Johnson and (Senate Majority Leader John) Thune right next to me,” Jeffries said, referencing a White House meeting in late September to avert the current shutdown. “This does not get resolved until you decide to give permission to Republicans on Capitol Hill to negotiate a bipartisan resolution.”

    House Republicans have been in recess since Sept. 19 after passing a stopgap funding bill to keep the government open through Nov. 21. That bill has repeatedly failed in the Senate as Democrats demand an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies that will otherwise expire at the end of the year.

    The federal government has been closed since Oct. 1, when Democrats and Republicans in Congress failed to pass legislation that would fund it for the 2026 fiscal year. Hundreds of thousands of essential federal workers are now working without pay while others are furloughed.

    On Thursday, Senate Democrats blocked a Republican bill called the “Shutdown Fairness Act” that would have allowed pay for air traffic controllers, military troops and other essential federal workers the Office of Personnel Management has approved while the government is shut down.

    “Deranged Democrats just blocked our bill to pay essential workers who keep Americans safe. Why? They believe that forcing Americans to work without pay gives them leverage,” Senate Republicans wrote on X after the failed vote.

    On Friday, Jeffries reiterated a point he has made multiple times since the shutdown began.

    “We’re prepared to support any bipartisan legislation that comes out of the Senate that is designed to decisively address the Republican health care crisis, reopen the government and enact a bipartisan spending agreement that actually makes life better for the American people,” he said.

    Jeffries refuted the idea that Democrats bear responsibility for any lasting fallout from the shuttered government and pushed back on the Republican contention that their stalled funding bill continues spending levels approved during the Biden administration.

    He said the spending levels the Republicans would like to extend are based on the Republican stopgap funding bill Congress passed in March to keep the government running through the end of September. That bill cut $13 billion for domestic programs, including Medicaid.

    “We’ve made clear we will not support a partisan Republican spending bill that continues to gut the health care of the American people,” Jeffries said Friday. “We’ve been saying that for six weeks. We have not moved off our position.”

    Neither have Republicans, who insist the government must reopen before any negotiations can happen. 

    “It’s becoming clearer by the day that Democrats don’t want an outcome, they want a political issue,” Thune wrote on X on Friday. “They’ve refused to reopen the government — 12 times. They’ve refused my offer to discuss Obamacare’s failures. They’ve refused my offer to hold a vote on their own proposal to address a problem they created. They’ve refused to pay the troops and federal employees who are working without a paycheck. The only thing they’ve said yes to? The Schumer Shutdown and political ‘leverage.’”

    The U.S. military is sending an aircraft carrier strike group to the waters off South America, in the latest escalation and buildup of military forces in the region, the Pentagon announced Friday.

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered the USS Gerald R. Ford and its strike group to deploy to U.S. Southern Command to “bolster U.S. capacity to detect, monitor, and disrupt illicit actors and activities that compromise the safety and prosperity of the United States,” Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said in a social media post.

    The U.S. military has conducted its 10th strike on a suspected drug-running boat, Hegseth said earlier Friday, blaming the Tren de Aragua gang for operating the vessel and leaving six people dead in the Caribbean Sea.

    In a social media post, Hegseth said the strike occurred overnight, and it marks the second time the Trump administration has tied one of its operations to the gang that originated in a Venezuelan prison.

    The pace of the strikes has quickened in recent days from one every few weeks when they first began to three this week, killing a total of at least 43 people since September. Two of the most recent strikes were carried out in the eastern Pacific Ocean, expanding the area where the military has launched attacks and shifting to where much of the cocaine from the world’s largest producers is smuggled.

    In a 20-second black and white video of the strike posted to social media, a small boat can be seen apparently sitting motionless on the water when a long thin projectile descends, triggering an explosion. The video ends before the blast dies down enough for the remains of the boat to be seen again.

    Hegseth said the strike happened in international waters and boasted that it was the first one conducted at night.

    “If you are a narco-terrorist smuggling drugs in our hemisphere, we will treat you like we treat Al-Qaeda,” Hegseth said in the post. “Day or NIGHT, we will map your networks, track your people, hunt you down, and kill you.”

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Asher Wildman, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Supreme Court redistricting case; Alligator Alcatraz lawsuit

    The United States Supreme Court considers a redistricting case in Louisiana, and Friends of the Everglades files another lawsuit in relation to “Alligator Alcatraz.”


    U.S. Supreme Court considers Louisiana redistricting case

    In one of the first major cases of this term to come before the U.S. Supreme Court, justices will hear arguments over Louisiana’s effort to draw new congressional maps in which the state is seeking to dismiss any consideration of race.

    The state will not defend its current map, which includes two districts represented by Black Democrats.

    That map was drawn two years ago, after the Supreme Court found Louisiana’s prior map likely violated the Voting Rights Act.

    But now, a group of white Louisiana voters claims that race was the driving factor in drawing this map, leading the case back to the high court.

    Justices first heard the case in March, and several conservative members suggested they could throw out the current map, and potentially make it harder to bring redistricting lawsuits under the Voting Rights Act.

    At the time, the justices ultimately ordered the re-argument of the case.

    In a brief filed with the court, the state of Louisiana says the Voting Rights Act’s rules regarding race-based maps are “unworkable and unconstitutional.”

    “No amount of surgery can eliminate the constitutional defects inherent in a system that, at the end of the day, requires states to sort their citizens by race,” the brief stated.

    “Make no mistake: Black Louisianians are entitled to the same fair and representative maps as voters anywhere in this country,” Louisiana Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union Alanah Odoms said. “We remain steadfast in our commitment to that pursuit — until equality is not just promised, but realized.”

    If the court overturns Louisiana’s maps, it could have implications in Florida.

    Gov. Ron DeSantis has said that a ruling declaring racial consideration in map drawing unconstitutional could require Florida to redraw its maps.

    The governor also defended the practice of making political considerations in drawing maps.

    “The Constitution prohibits discrimination based on race, which is why the court is likely to find racial gerrymandering to be unconstitutional,” DeSantis wrote on a post on X.

    The Constitution says nothing about political gerrymandering, which is why the court has found such claims to be non-justiciable.

    New lawsuit accuses state agency of illegally withholding public records concerning ‘Alligator Alcatraz’

    A new lawsuit filed by Friends of the Everglades against the Florida Department of Emergency Management is accusing the state agency of denying the existence of public records requested by the nonprofit, only to later admit they existed all along.

    Despite acknowledging their existence, FOTE attorneys say the state has still not produced the records.

    According to the lawsuit, which was filed Tuesday in Circuit Court in Leon County, just five days after FDEM announced plans to open and operate the so-called “Alligator Alcatraz” immigrant detention center in the Everglades on June 19, Friends of the Everglades, Inc., requested documents under Florida’s open records law concerning communication between the state and federal officials about the site.

    At the time, the lawsuit claims the state agency initially denied the existence of any communication records, before later making “an incomplete production.”

    On Sept. 11, the nonprofit’s attorneys sent a follow-up on its request, “to make clear that Plaintiff’s request specifically sought ‘[a]ll documents pertaining to or constituting any application for funds or grants to FEMA, DHS or other federal agency from FDEM or another state agency for financial assistance in connection with building any immigration detention center in Florida including without limitation to the (‘Alligator Alcatraz’) detention center.”

    The lawsuit does not accuse the state agency of denying the existence of the communication records following the Sept. 11 request, but rather, claims the Florida Department of Emergency Management simply did not respond to it at all.

    On Aug. 21, a federal judge ruled that the “Alligator Alcatraz” detention site could not expand or take in additional detainees, and gave the state 60 days to begin removal of fencing, lighting fixtures  and “all generators, gas, sewage, and other waste and waste receptacles that were installed to support this project.”

    An appeals court later blocked the lower court’s order, noting several times in its ruling that the state had not applied for, or received federal funding for the project — which would have required the site to “comply with a host of regulatory prerequisites in support of that application” that would not otherwise be necessary.

    The lawsuit specifically points to a line in the appellate court’s ruling that said: “Without an application, there is simply nothing on which a decision can be made.”

    Unbeknownst to the court or the plaintiffs in the case, though, was the fact that Florida had in fact applied for a federal grant almost a month before the appeals court made its ruling. The Friends of the Everglades lawsuit cites a single-page email disclosed by FDEM on Oct. 10 that showed a FEMA grant application — titled “Fiscal Year 2025 Detention Support Grant Program” — had been filed by the state at 7:05 p.m. on Aug. 7.

    “More than a month later, FDEM has not corrected the Eleventh Circuit Court’s misimpressions,” the lawsuit filed Tuesday said. “What the federal District and Circuit Courts (and Plaintiff) were unaware of, because FDEM did not disclose the fact or produce the documents, is that FDEM had already applied for federal funding on August 7, 2025.”

    The Florida Department of Emergency Management’s release of the funding email comes a little more than a week after Florida announced that FEMA had awarded the state $608 million to cover costs associated with “Alligator Alcatraz.”

    The Friends of the Everglades lawsuit claims that the Florida Department of Emergency Management “has not asserted that any documents requested by Plaintiff are exempt from disclosure under the Public Records Act.”

    The nonprofit’s lawsuit is asking the court to force the state to release all requested records within 48 hours, to find that the department violated the law by not releasing the requested documents, and award it attorney fees and any other appropriate relief.

    State officials did not immediately respond to the Friends of the Everglades court filing.

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Asher Wildman, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Israel/Gaza ceasefire reaction; Florida may end long gun law

    Florida lawmakers react to the ceasefire in Israel, and a bill being considered in Tallahassee could lower the age requirement to buy long guns.


    U.S. attorney general discusses political violence after event in Tampa

    Israelis on Monday celebrated the return of the last surviving hostages from Gaza — a defining exchange in the fragile ceasefire that has paused two years of war between Israel and Hamas.

    As Palestinians awaited prisoner releases, world leaders, including U.S. President Donald Trump, were arriving in the Middle East to discuss postwar plans, while aid was expected to flow into famine-stricken Gaza.

    Members of the Florida congressional delegation are reacting to the release of Israeli hostages and the ceasefire in Gaza. Although Republicans and Democrats are united in applauding the developments, some Republicans are highlighting Trump’s role.

    “For the first time in over two years, Hamas holds NO living hostages,” Rep. John Rutherford said in a post on social media. “This is a major, historic win for the Trump administration, and is an accomplishment that no one else could have delivered. Promises made, promises kept.”

    Republican Rep. Mike Haridopolos also celebrated the president’s “leadership and relentless diplomacy.”

    “After two agonizing years, all of the living Israeli hostages have been BROUGHT HOME! Thanks to President Trump’s leadership and relentless diplomacy, families can finally welcome their loved ones home,” Haridopolos said in a social post.

    As part of the deal, Israel released roughly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees. But not all of the remains of the deceased hostages have been returned to Israel yet.

    In addition, Florida Democrats hope the current track for peace in the region will last.

    “A weight has been lifted off the world as the remaining hostages are released. Amazing day for the families, and for @POTUS and all the negotiators who made this day possible. Let’s honor their return by staying committed to lasting peace so another October 7 never happens again,” Rep. Jared Moskowitz posted.

    Rep. Darren Soto called for aid for Palestinians in need, as well as a “lasting peace” in the region.

    “Grateful that the remaining 20 living Israeli hostages are finally free. Today, their families will rejoice! We also remember those who died before this day by Hamas’ terrorist attack. We must ensure this ceasefire holds, that aid is surged to help Palestinians in need, and build upon it for lasting peace between Israel and Gaza,” Soto said in social media post.

    Some Florida Republicans also cheered on Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a former U.S. senator from Florida who traveled alongside Trump Monday and helped broker the deal.

    “Our community in South Florida is incredibly proud of the brilliant work coming from @SecRubio. World leaders recognize his leadership, and Secretary Rubio truly understands every corner of the world,” Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart said in a social post.

    Roughly 200 U.S. troops have been stationed in Israel to monitor the implementation of the ceasefire deal. 

    Florida lawmakers to take up proposal to lower the age to purchase long guns

    Firearms are shaping up to be a major issue in Florida’s upcoming legislative session.

    For the fourth straight year, lawmakers appear ready to revisit a proposal to lower the buying age for long guns from 21 to 18.

    A court ruling last month struck down the state’s open carry ban as unconstitutional, making the potential decision on gun policy both highly visible and potentially far-reaching.

    Florida Republicans say they’re determined to uphold the Second Amendment, especially as the state enters a new era for gun ownership.

    “We want to protect the Second Amendment at all costs,” State Rep. Sam Garrison said. “We will protect your right to bear arms. We also believe very strongly in public safety and keeping our schools in particular.” 

    That promise could include House Bill 133. If approved, the bill would lower the buying age to 18 for long guns like rifles, shotguns and more.

    Florida lawmakers raised the purchase age to 21 after the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, something that was endorsed by then-Gov. Rick Scott.

    “I know that many wanted more gun control than what is included in this bill,” Scott said at the time. “And I know that many believe this bill has too much gun control. I respect the sincerity and validity of both those viewpoints.”

    Looking ahead, Democrats are warning about the implications of more long guns in public.

    “I think about parents playing with their kids at the park, and they’re worried someone might stroll up carrying an AR-15,” State Rep. Fentrice Driskell said. “These are politically sensitive and heated times, and it’d be better to cool the temperature down.”

    There have also been calls for Republicans to clarify the rules around open carry, saying the law lacks uniformity statewide.

    “I mean, it’s sad, but the issues tied to the Second Amendment have become so political and so polarizing that even small tweaks to current law may prove challenging,” State Rep. Anna Eskamani said.

    The House passed the measure to lower the purchase age for long guns last year, but the bill failed to advance in the Senate.

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Asher Wildman, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Senate votes down funding bill; Palm Bay leaders seek councilman’s removal

    The U.S. Senate failed to pass a stopgap funding bill for the fourth time Friday, and the Palm Bay City Council has voted to ask Gov. Ron DeSantis to remove a councilman from the governing body.


    The Senate on Friday once again failed to pass a short-term funding bill to reopen the federal government, making it likely that the shutdown now in its third day will stretch into a second week.

    Two Democratic senators and one independent who caucuses with Democrats crossed party lines to join all but one Republican in backing the bill, which passed the GOP-House earlier this month and seeks to keep the government funded through mid-November. The same three also joined with the GOP in backing the bill two previous times. Two senators, one Democrat and one Republican, did not vote. Friday’s vote marked the Senate’s fourth attempt at ushering the funding measure through the upper chamber. 

    Republican leader Sen. John Thune of South Dakota signaled earlier that he would save the next try for next week, telling reporters at a press conference “hopefully over the weekend they’ll have a chance to think about it,” referring to Democrats. After Friday’s vote, House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana declared that Tuesday of next week through the following Monday would be a district work period, meaning lawmakers in his chamber will not return to the Capitol. 

    Per Senate rules, Republicans need 60 votes for the bill to pass, meaning seven Democrats — or eight if Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky continues to vote no — need to support the measure. 

    Along with the GOP-supported, short-term funding patch, senators have also rejected a counter bill Democrats offered that would reopen the government and address their health care concerns. 

    The shutdown has the potential to impact the economy, with hundreds of thousands of workers expected to be furloughed. And President Donald Trump has marveled at the “unprecedented opportunity” he says Democrats in Congress handed him to enact potentially permanent layoff and cuts to “Democrat Agencies” during the shutdown. 

    The president said he was meeting with his Office of Management and Budget chief, Russ Vought, to discuss just that.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, who referred to the potentially permanent layoffs as an “unfortunate consequence” of the shutdown at Friday’s press briefing, said earlier this week that the firings were “imminent” and could be in the thousands. 

    “Unfortunately, we’re having to do a massive review of the bureaucracy to be good stewards of the American taxpayer dollar, and it’s the Democrats who have forced the White House and the president into this position to shut the government down,” Leavitt said Friday. 

    A major topic of discussion during Thursday’s Palm Bay City Council meeting was about one of their council members, Chandler Langevin, and whether he should keep his position after making multiple derogatory social media comments about people in the Indian and Indian American communities. 

    Hundreds of people showed up at the meeting to share their thoughts on the matter. Dozens also filled an overflow room and waited outside of the City Council chambers, listening to the meeting on speakers as they waited to get inside. 

    Seventy-six people signed up for public comment on the topic of Langevin, leading to several hours of discussion, with some feeling that the disdain is being pointed in the wrong direction.

    “Tonight shouldn’t be about the resignation of Councilman Langevin, it should be about the resignation of each and every one of you to who failed this community and ignoring multiple accusations of discrimination and done nothing,” Former Palm Bay Deputy Chief Lance Fisher. “Nothing to prevent tonight from happening.”

    Some of his comments on X, previously known as Twitter, include: “Deport every Indian immediately.” And “Indians are destroying the South.”

    The majority, however, pointed to this not being the first time that Langevin has spoken negatively about a racial group, and they questioned him about his comments. Earlier in the year, he made comments about Muslims and their faith, saying in one post, “Islam is neither peaceful nor strictly a religion.”

    “Do you want your legacy to be that of an elected official whose overheated words incited and justified violence against the harmless, the innocent and law-abiding citizens,” said former Brevard County Judge Alli Majeed.

    Several federal and state legislators have also weighed in and condemned Langevin’s comments.

    That mindset was felt by multiple speakers at the meeting as they asked for an apology and for the council to make sure that these types of actions never happen again.

    “So, please make sure that nothing like this ever happens,” Mike Shah said. “Nobody should make comments like this, not in Brevard County, not in the United States, and I would like to see apologies from the person who said that.”

    About an hour before the meeting, Langevin did post a statement on X, saying that he was willing to talk and work with the Indian community to solve issues at a local and national level.

    Just before 11 p.m., the Palm Bay City Council voted 4-1 to move forward with drafting a letter to Gov. Ron DeSantis, asking him to remove Langevin from his position on the council as they do not have the power to do it themselves.

    As part of that vote, the council moved to censure Langevin and remove him from his appointments and outside boards for the city of Palm Bay. They’re also planning to send an ethics violation letter to State Sen. Debbie Mayfield (R) so she can send it to the governor.

    After the vote, Langevin took to X again, posting, “For every lefty looney that came to yell at me tonight there are thousands of normal Americans that live in my city that don’t come to meetings because they know I will represent them.”

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Asher Wildman, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • ‘Deportation Depot’ opens; Lindsey Langston vs Rep. Mills

    Florida’s second immigration detention facility called “Deportation Depot” opens, and Rep. Cory Mills faces off against Miss United States in court. 


    The Florida Division of Emergency Management confirmed Friday that the new immigration detention facility dubbed “Deportation Depot” by Gov. Ron DeSantis is officially open and receiving detainees. 

    The governor announced the additional facility in August, saying the facility will have the capacity to hold more than 1,300 detainees, and would be set up with the same services as the “Alligator Alcatraz” facility. He announced at the time that the Baker Correctional Institution in Sanderson would be used to create the new detention center.

    “Baker Correctional Institution in Sanderson will now serve as a ‘Deportation Depot’ to detain and process illegal immigrants for removal, building on the success the state has had with Alligator Alcatraz,” DeSantis said last week. “We’ll enforce the law, we’ll hold the line, and we will keep delivering results.” 

    DeSantis also said that state leaders are in talks with law enforcement in the Panhandle to open another facility.

    “We’re actually in the process of figuring out how we can set up a ‘Panhandle Pokey’, and we are going to have that in the Panhandle. So the mission continues,” DeSantis said.

    This would make the third detention center after the opening of the “Deportation Depot” near Jacksonville in Baker County.

    The governor also said he is confident that the federal government will reimburse the state to cover the millions of taxpayer dollars he spent to get “Alligator Alcatraz” up and running.

    “Everything we’re doing on this mission, everything we’re doing is reimbursable from FEMA,” DeSantis said.

    The state also has been cleared to continue to use “Alligator Alcatraz” to hold additional detainees after an appellate court blocked an injunction issued by a federal judge.

    The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday blocked a prior ruling by a federal judge to shut down operations at “Alligator Alcatraz.” 

    Florida Rep. Cory Mills spent Friday morning in court for a hearing to determine if a restraining order should be issued against him.

    Lindsey Langston, the reigning Miss United States, and Mills’ ex-girlfriend, filed for a restraining order against him, claiming he threatened to release personal nude photos and videos after their relationship ended.

    The Columbia County court heard both from Langston and Mills.

    Mills described the allegations as a mischaracterization, while Langston described Mills as a scorned lover.

    The pair dated for roughly three years until Langston said she discovered Mills was unfaithful in their relationship.

    What happened in the months that followed their breakup was at the heart of the hearing.

    Langston said that over the course of several months, she received threatening messages from Mills that implied violence and/or retribution against her and any other potential partners.

    Langston claimed that Mills also threatened to leak nude images and videos of her after she asked him to stop contacting her multiple times.

    “Internally I was reeling, I was so scared, I didn’t want to face any backlash for coming forward,” Langston said on the stand. “But I was scared, and I reached out to several people beforehand to make sure that what I was doing was just. Because I had begged him to leave me alone and he wouldn’t. So, I needed to go to law enforcement. Maybe if he wouldn’t listen to me, he would listen to them.” 

    Mills also took the stand and commented on his relationship with Langston.

    “This is a family I grew to love, and I still love. Her father became a close friend of mine,” he said. “When I was hearing things that could jeopardize her crown, or as you talk about with this morality clause, I wanted to let her know things were being murmured.”

    The judge did not issue a ruling on the restraining order during Friday’s hearing.

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Asher Wildman, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ closing; Crosswalk ‘no defacing’ signs

    Florida’s “Alligator Alcatraz” begins to wind down operations, and Orlando authorities post signs warning chalk protesters to not “deface” roadways.


    Florida officials being to remove equipment from ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ after court order

    Immigration attorney Magdalena Cuprys has clients at Florida’s migrant detention facility known as “Alligator Alcatraz.” She said she hadn’t communicated with her clients since wind-down operations started.

    “They’re moving people like cattle, and they’re really not telling their representatives anything about where they’re moving them,” she said.

    We have continuing coverage tonight as the population at the detention facility is decreasing due to a court order.

    White House Border Czar Tom Homan says he disagrees with a federal judge’s recent ruling.

    “I disagree with the judge who made that decision. I went down there. I walked through the detention areas where these people sleep and live. I saw a clean facility, a well-maintained facility. I went to the medical center and talked to the nurses there on staff, looked at the medical facility. It was great,” he said.

    The Department of Homeland Security reported Friday it is complying with the judge’s order, moving detainees out of the Everglades facility.

    After the order, large trucks have been seen taking away large equipment.

    While the gates remain open for now at “Alligator Alcatraz,” the process of shutting things down is ramping up.

    Cuprys has two clients detained there. With a court order in place calling for everyone to be moved, she has been in the dark with no direct communication with her clients.

    “No one has notified us as their attorneys that they will be transferred where they will be transferred or when they will be transferred. And it’s very concerning because this is a trend,” she said.

    There were reports Thursday of riots and unrest inside the facility, something the state has since denied.

    “These reports are manufactured. There is no unrest happening at ‘Alligator Alcatraz.’ Detainees are given clean, safe living conditions, and guards are properly trained on all state and federal protocol,” the state said in a statement.

    Betty Osceola is an environmental activist and member of the Panther Clan of the Miccosukee tribe, and she lives near the detention center.

    “I was very optimistic but cautious at the same time, seeing all the traffic come with all the tents coming out, I think there is light at the end of the tunnel,” Osceola said.

    Still, state leaders are vowing to fight this order…the Department of Homeland Security said, “DHS is complying with this order and moving detainees to other facilities. We will continue to fight tooth-and-nail to remove the worst of the worst from American streets.”

    For the time being, Osceola says she is keeping a watchful eye over her native land…not celebrating this as a win until the operation is completely shutdown.

    “Until those FEMA trailers come out, I’m not going to do my happy dance yet,” she said.

    According to the judge’s ruling, the state has at least 60 days to formally shut down the facility.

    Traffic signs now warn people on the sidewalk next to the Pulse memorial crosswalk on Orange Avenue and Esther Street that defacing the roadway is prohibited.

    This comes after the Florida Department of Transportation has repeatedly painted over the crosswalk to its traditional black and white stripes since the controversy started on Aug. 20.

    Day after day, residents and advocates for the LGBTQ+ community have colored in the lines of the crosswalk with either chalk or paint, returning the surface to its former rainbow colors.

    It has been over a week since FDOT crews first repainted the rainbow-colored crosswalk without warning the city of Orlando.

    Later that week, the state agency sent a letter to city officials and other Florida municipalities, ordering the removal of at least 14 separate pavement markings that state officials say don’t comply with guidelines for the appearance of crosswalks, sidewalks and roadways.

    They gave the city until Sept. 4 to make the changes or face losing state funds.

    On Aug. 27, Orlando announced crews had started replacing previously state-approved crosswalks and intersection treatments with traditional pavement markings.

    “Per the orders from the state, these previously approved treatments must be replaced with traditional pavement markings. As a municipal government, the City of Orlando must comply with state and federal law, and we will begin this work at the locations listed below beginning Wednesday, August 27, 2025, and it is expected to continue for several days. Expect delays and minor detours from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m.,” the city’s statement read.

    Signs posted near Pulse crosswalk in Orlando warn about defacing the roadway

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Asher Wildman, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Judge pumps brakes on FSU lawsuit against ACC

    Judge pumps brakes on FSU lawsuit against ACC

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A Leon County judge is pumping the brakes on Florida State University’s lawsuit against the Atlantic Coast Conference, ruling that the university must amend its lawsuit within a week before the case moves forward in court, if at all.


    What You Need To Know

    • A judge on Monday ordered the pair into mediation and gave FSU a week to refile its lawsuit
    • FSU is suing to exit the ACC without fees, though the court must first determine its jurisdiction
    • The ACC believe it’s home state of North Carolina is the proper forum
    • The judge reminded attendees the case is “not over”

    Second Judicial Circuit Judge John Cooper made the bench ruling Monday in Tallahassee while weighing the conference’s effort to dismiss the lawsuit. 

    The judge’s order will require the two parties to attend a mediation within 120 days. The order also stipulates that FSU must refile its complaint with “clear language” in seven days, excluding weekends and holidays.

    “I want to make sure everyone understands this case is still going on,” said Cooper. “It’s not over.”

    Hanging in the balance is a multi-million-dollar media rights deal between FSU and ACC, plus $130 million in exit fees the university may owe the ACC if they split. 

    The total exit price, per FSU: roughly $572 million. FSU sued the conference in January, calling the fees “draconian” and the existing media deal “weak.” 

    “The ACC has negotiated itself into a self-described ‘existential crisis,’ rendered itself fiscally unstable and substantially undermined its members’ capacity to compete at the elite level,” the lawsuit reads. “In doing so, the ACC violated the contractual, fiduciary and legal duties it owed its members.”

    They’re accusing the ACC of breach of contract, trade restraint and failure to perform, accusations that underscore the university’s frustrations over their media earnings through the ACC.

    “It wasn’t until Florida State read that other conferences may be getting more money for media rights agreements… that they started to complain,” said Amber Nunnally, an attorney representing the ACC. 

    The judge’s refile request comes as the court is trying to determine whether it’s got jurisdiction over the case, as the ACC is based in North Carolina. North Carolina is also where the conference preemptively filed a lawsuit against FSU, just a day after the university’s board voted to sue the ACC.

    Lawyers for FSU, however, argue otherwise. Peter Rush, an attorney representing FSU, described Florida State University and University of Miami as “citizens” of Florida. He also accused the ACC of drawing “daggers.”

    “That’s hardly the harbinger of happy future family gatherings,” Rush told the judge.

    The ACC, meanwhile, maintains that North Carolina is the proper forum. They’re accusing FSU of trying to score an “advisory opinion” through the lawsuit, given that they’ve yet to exit the conference and that a ruling in the case would likely impact their decision to stay or go.

    “Florida State is now asking you to invalidate the contract they believe no longer serves them,” said an ACC attorney. 

    There are no scheduled hearings between FSU and the ACC as of Monday. The ACC is contracted to hold FSU’s media rights till 2036.

    Jason Delgado

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  • Judge advances Florida State exit lawsuit against ACC

    Judge advances Florida State exit lawsuit against ACC

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A Leon County Judge upheld Florida State University’s lawsuit against the Atlantic Coast Conference on Tuesday, while also accusing the ACC of “forum shopping” against the Tallahassee-based school.


    What You Need To Know

    • FSU’s lawsuit in Florida against the ACC is moving forward
    • The judge denied the ACC’s motion to pause the case until a judge resolves their suit against FSU in North Carolina
    • The Leon County Judge accused the ACC of forum shopping
    • Forum shopping is the legal practice of targeting one court over the other in hopes of more favorable odds

    As FSU athletics seeks to exit the ACC, the two parties are feuding over a multi-million-dollar media deal and a roughly $130 million dollar exit fee — an amount hovering in the ballpark of $500 million.

    The high-profile disagreement resulted in two lawsuits: one filed by FSU against the ACC in Florida. The other filed preemptively by the ACC in its home state of North Carolina, which happened just days before the FSU board approved its plan to file suit.

    Attorneys for the ACC asked the judge Tuesday to pause or dismiss the case until their lawsuit in North Carolina is resolved. The court, however, denied the motion and accused the conference of shopping forums.

    Forum shopping is the legal practice of targeting one court over the other in hopes of more favorable odds.

    “There’s only one reason you would want to engage in forum shopping and that’s because the forum you just shopped is better than the other place,” said Second Judicial Circuit Judge John Cooper.

    FSU is accusing the ACC of financial mismanagement and a “draconian” exit fee, among other things, thus they should exit the conference without financial penalty.

    “This is Florida State’s money,” said FSU attorney Peter Rush. “This is Florida State’s team. This is Florida State’s media rights.”

    The ACC, meanwhile, is suing back in a North Carolina court, maintaining that their contract with FSU is binding. They also note that they sued first, which they claimed should place the case in North Carolina’s hands under Florida law.

    “We served first,” said ACC attorney Alan Lawson in his ending arguments. Lawson served previously as a Florida Supreme Court Justice.

    The cases’ outcome poses large implications for the ACC, among the largest collegiate conferences in the nation. It also comes as schools in recent years have begun gravitating toward conferences with more lucrative deals. 

    With both the Florida case and the North Carolina case in motion, questions remain about how the two parties may resolve their issues if the courts publish opposing opinions.

    The next hearing in Florida is scheduled for April 22.

    Jason Delgado

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  • DeSantis vetoes social media restrictions

    DeSantis vetoes social media restrictions

    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. 

    Gary Darling

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  • Biden, Trump visit border; antisemitism gets attention

    Biden, Trump visit border; antisemitism gets attention

    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.

    Joseph Konig

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  • McConnell to step down; gender bill dies in Senate

    McConnell to step down; gender bill dies in Senate

    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.

    Gary Darling

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