ReportWire

Tag: Nikki Fried

  • Nikki Fried slams CFO’s proposal to allow removal of locally elected officials

    [ad_1]

    Credit: Blaise Ingoglia @GovGoneWild/X

    Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried is blasting proposed legislation introduced this week by Florida Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Blaise Ingoglia aimed at increasing local government spending transparency — specifically, a provision that would allow removal of local officials found to have committed “financial abuse.”

    The legislation, scheduled to be filed ahead of the coming legislative session in the Florida House by Rep. Monique Miller, R-Palm Bay, and in the Senate by Nick DiCeglie, R-Indian Rocks Beach, would increase local government transparency and formally establish Ingoglia’s Florida Agency for Fiscal Oversight (FAFO) effort into statute.

    The proposal includes a provision that would codify the state’s CFO’s ability to recommend removal of any elected official who is found to have committed “financial abuse, malfeasance or misfeasance.”

    “I have heard zero from our new CFO about what he plans on doing to hold our property insurance companies accountable,” Fried said on a Zoom conference call on Thursday. “Instead, he’s bullying our local governments, creating fictitious formulas, and now he wants to overreach even more by putting a clause in there about removing elected local officials.”

    More than any recent governor, Ron DeSantis has aggressively exercised the power within his office to remove elected officials from office, including school board memberssheriffs, and most controversially, two Democratic state prosecutors, Andrew Warren in Hillsborough County and Monique Worrell in Orange and Osceola counties.

    Worrell rebounded from her 2023 suspension, winning re-election by a large margin in 2024.

    “We see how Ron DeSantis has abused that power throughout his eight years in this administration, and so that is just them bullying our local governments that are the ones who are closest to the people,” Fried added.

    In addition to those above listed suspensions, Attorney General James Uthmeier threatened other local governments officials in Florida earlier this year in Orange County and Key West when they raised objections to signing 287(g) agreements with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    In the case of Orange County, Mayor Jerry Demings said in August that he signed an updated agreement with ICE under “protest and extreme duress” after Uthmeier threatened the mayor and all six county commissioners that their failure to do so would result in their removal from office by Gov. Ron DeSantis.

    Other provisions in the legislation introduced by Ingoglia at a press conference in Tampa on Wednesday include allowing the Department of Financial Services to pursue financial penalties from local governments if they don’t respond to inquiries “promptly,” including by withholding any state funds until they do so.

    “If we ask for the information on a Monday, and we’re giving you five days to compile the information — get it in five days; if you don’t, then you face a $1,000 a day penalty,” he said at the press conference.

    The legislation comes as Ingoglia continues to make the case that local governments have been engaged in “excessive and wasteful spending” by comparing their fiscal year 2024-2025 budgets with what they were spending in 2019-2020. So far, after reviewing the budgets of 11 local governments this year, he says they have engaged collectively in $1.86 billion in alleged wasteful and excessive spending.

    Local government officials who have received those FAFO audits have questioned the accuracy of the methodology used by the CFO’s auditors. Ingoglia has called such criticisms “bogus” and “not well thought out.”

    Fried argued that if Ingoglia were serious about cutting excessive government spending, he should look inside the DeSantis administration’s own spending excesses. She referred to a Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald story published last week reporting that the DeSantis administration spent $36.2 million in taxpayer funds last year to purchase ads against the proposed marijuana and abortion ballot measures, both of which were contested by the governor.

    “If [Ingoglia] wants to talk about saving dollars and making sure that the people are getting a return to the taxes they have put into this state, he should be focused on what’s happening in Tallahassee,” she said. “Ron DeSantis stole $38 million from the people of this state, and so that’s really where the attacks should be. That’s where his energy should be.”


    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook Bluesky | Or sign up for our RSS Feed


    Gun-violence prevention groups want Florida’s Senate President to reject a proposal to lower the age to purchase guns from 21 to 18

    There’s still more than 10 months until Floridians elect a successor to DeSantis

    The troubling statistics continue despite lawmakers’ efforts to increase road safety for cyclists



    [ad_2]

    Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix
    Source link
  • Nikki Fried: ‘The pendulum is swinging towards Democrats’ after victory in Miami election  

    [ad_1]

    Credit: Nikki Fried/Facebook

    Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried took a victory lap Wednesday, fresh off seeing Miami voters elect former Miami-Dade County commissioner Eileen Higgins as mayor, the first time a registered Democrat has taken the seat in decades.

    Higgins defeated former Miami City Manager Emilio González Tuesday by more than 18 percentage points, 59%-41%.

    That race was technically nonpartisan, but there was no question about party affiliation with such an intense national focus on the contest.

    González received endorsements from President Trump and Ron DeSantis and campaigned with Rick Scott, while national Democrats like former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Arizona U.S. Sen. Ruben Gallego came down to Miami to stump for Higgins.

    “The message that was delivered last night here in the state of Florida is that the pendulum is swinging towards Democrats and is powered by the people on the ground and our candidates and our electeds every single day,” Fried said in a Zoom conference call with reporters Wednesday morning.

    “And so we’re thrilled by the victories that we saw all over our state from Miami Beach all the way up to the SD 11 overperformance. These are all showing that the pendulum is swinging in our favor.

    Senate District 11 swing

    The “SD 11 overperformance” referred to the special election in Florida’s Senate District 11 Tuesday night to replace Blaise Ingoglia, who vacated the seat this past summer after being appointed by DeSantis as the state’s chief financial officer.

    Republican Ralph Massullo defeated Ash Marwah by 18 percentage points, 59%-41%, in a district encompassing Citrus, Hernando, Sumter and part of Pasco County.

    In November, Ingoglia had defeated Democrat Marilyn Holleran, 69%-31%, meaning Tuesday’s result had shifted 20% towards the Democratic candidate.

    Fried specifically referred to the results in Hernando, where Ingoglia resides. Massullo won that county by just six percentage points, whereas in November Ingoglia took Hernando by 34 points. “That isn’t because it’s a special election. It’s because people are tired of chaos. They’re tired of elected officials not showing up for them,” she said.

    Republican Party of Florida Chair Evan Power said Fried’s excitement wasn’t warranted.

    “This is a great Nikki Fried tradition to take one lean-D race and try to turn it into momentum,” he said in a text message. “Everyday Floridians are rejecting the far-left Democrat Party. It’s why we now have a 1.4 million Republican voter advantage.”

    Given that disadvantage, Fried has said throughout the year that Democrats will need support from independents and disaffected Republicans to win legislative and congressional seats in 2026. She argued that’s what happened in some parts of Florida Tuesday night.

    “Because these coalitions that came together all across the state were Democrats, Republicans, Independents,” she said. “And that’s how we’re going to build a better Florida and make sure that we’re turning the page of 30 years of one-party control of this state, which is why this state is so unaffordable.”

    It should be noted that while a Democrat had not been elected mayor of Miami since the late 1990s, there are more registered Democrats than Republicans in the city (Miami-Dade County did flip Republican earlier this year). And while it is accurate that voters there had elected Republicans in every election since 2009, Manny Diaz, who served as Miami mayor from 2001-2009, was a political independent who went on to chair the Florida Democratic Party from 2021 to 2023.

    MAGA influencer Laura Loomer, who lost two previous races for Congress in Florida, said on X Tuesday that Higgins’ victory meant that “a bright red city in a bright red state just went blue.”

    She went on to predict: “Midterms will be a bloodbath.”

    DCCC weighs in

    Meanwhile, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) announced Wednesday that it had added Republican Laurel Lee’s 15th Congressional District in the Tampa Bay area to its list of “districts in play” in 2026. The other GOP Florida seats in play, according to the DCCC, are Cory Mills’ District 7, Anna Paulina Luna’s District 13, and Maria Salazar’s District 27.

    “Laurel Lee represents the worst of what voters hate about Congress — an out-of-touch politician who cares more about prioritizing the wealthy and well-connected over helping Florida’s working families,” said DCCC Chair Suzan DelBene in a statement.

    “As Republicans continue to push their failing agenda that leaves everyday Americans behind in favor of Laurel Lee’s wealthy donors, Democrats will fight to ensure that next November, Florida’s 15th Congressional District will elect a representative that cares about them and their issues.”

    Republicans control 20 of the state’s 28 congressional districts and are threatening to take more if they are successful in redrawing Florida’s congressional map sometime before next year’s midterm elections. Fried said she’s not worried if that happens.

    “The fact of the matter is people are seeing through their chaos, they’re seeing through their corruption, and regardless of what those seats look like, I do believe that we’re going to be able to hold on to our Democratic seats and flip a whole bunch more,” she said.


    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook Bluesky | Or sign up for our RSS Feed


    “Today I announced the ‘Floridians First’ Budget, which will keep Florida on the course of fiscal responsibility and delivers on the priorities that have made Florida the greatest state in America.” 

    The suit alleges Starbucks has violated a state civil-rights law through race-based hiring and race-based compensation decisions

    The bill would make Charlie Kirk only the second person — after Ronald Reagan — to be commemorated in Florida statute



    [ad_2]

    Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix
    Source link