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Will politics get in the way of jobs bill? Murzin calls Gaetz bill a headline grabber

by Dara Kam | February 9th, 2010

A race for an open Panhandle state Senate seat may stymie success of a jobs package.

State Rep. Dave Murzin, House Economic Development and Community Affairs committee chairman, took a swipe at the Senate’s jobs package sponsored by Sen. Don Gaetz.

Murzin, a Panhandle Republican who is running for a Senate seat neighboring Gaetz’s district, was asked about the Gaetz proposal at an Associated Industries of Florida event in Tallahassee yesterday.

“It’s a great package. If I had a $150 million it might be some good ideas. But quite frankly I don’t have $150 million. I think I stopped counting at about $150 million,” Murzin, R-Pensacola, told the crowd of business lobbyists.

Gaetz’ bill includes a $1,000 tax break for businesses that hire an out of work Floridian and a variety of other corporate tax breaks or incentives to induce them to put the unemployed back on the job and to get them off Medicaid and other state benefits.

Murzin said his package will be more realistic.

“So yeah, we’ll take a look at some stuff but quite frankly we’ll roll out a jobs package, an economic incentives package, an economy package that actually works, doesn’t necessarily cost a lot of money because …an economic package that Floridians can afford,” Murzin said. “I’m not really into it for the is still trying to figure out exactly how much it will cost and how much it could save).headlines. I’m actually into it to put Floridians back to work.”

Gaetz, who is backing Murzin’s opponent Rep. Greg Evers in the Senate race, expressed tongue-in-cheek surprise at Murzin’s inability to come up with the money to pay for the package. (Gaetz says his staff

“Well, Rep. Murzin is welcome to his opinions. I wish him well this session. And in his future. I wish him well in everything except his aspirations to be a senator. In all other cases I wish him well,” Gaetz, R-Destin, said.

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Congressional hopefuls differ on terror trials, taxes, immigration at debate

by George Bennett | February 9th, 2010

Three congressional candidates vying to replace Robert Wexler differed on terrorist trials, tax cuts and immigration reform during a debate west of Boca Raton this morning.

The West Boca Chamber of Commerce breakfast at Boca Lago Country Club was the first joint appearance by Democrat Ted Deutch, Republican Ed Lynch and no-party candidate Jim McCormick. The three are running in an April 13 special election to replace Wexler, who stepped down last month to head a Middle East think tank.

Deutch said accused 9-11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed should not be tried in New York City, as originally proposed by the Obama administration. But Deutch said he supports trying some accused terrorists on American soil in American civilian courts and noted that several high profile terrorists were tried and convicted in federal court during the Bush administration.

Lynch and McCormick took a harder line.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Crist: Release GOP party credit card statements

by Michael C. Bender | February 9th, 2010

Republican Gov. Charlie Crist today joined GOP gubernatorial candidate Paula Dockery in calling for the next party chairman to publish party credit card statements.

“I feel the same way,” Crist said. “I think its a decision for the new chairman, frankly. But that would be my sentiment.”

Crist said he’s never had a party credit card, but his U.S Sentate primary opponent, Marco Rubio, did.

Meanwhile, Dockery’s primary opponent, Attorney General Bill McCollum, said he would urge the incoming Republican Party of Florida chairman to not make internal party records public.

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Victory for no-party congressional candidate McCormick — he’s included in debate

by George Bennett | February 9th, 2010

McCormick

McCormick

No-party candidate Jim McCormick originally wasn’t invited to this morning’s West Boca Chamber of Commerce debate between Republican Ed Lynch and Democrat Ted Deutch.

But today McCormick has a place at the dais for the debate that’s set to begin soon. Chamber President Barry Epstein said the chamber changed its mind after McCormick sent an e-mail last night suggesting he might file a lawsuit if he wasn’t included.

McCormick, Lynch and Deutch are running in the April 13 special election for the District 19 congressional seat to replace Robert Wexler, who left office last month to head a Middle East think tank.

“We’re a chamber of inclusion, not exclusion,” said Epstein. On Monday, Epstein said McCormick wasn’t invited because he’s “not viable.”

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Should the Florida Republican Party release its credit card statements?

by Michael C. Bender | February 8th, 2010

Should a new RPOF chairman release the party's credit card statements?

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Republican gubernatorial candidate Paula Dockery is beating the drum for the incoming Republican Party of Florida chairman to release all its credit card statements and put an end to the “drip, drip, drip” of embarrassing news stories that has hampered fund-raising in recent months. From her letter today to Sharon Day and John Thrasher, RPOF chairmen candidates:

You are campaigning to lead our party back to its conservative ways. One of you will be tasked with ending this public-relations nightmare, a distraction that is getting in the way of electing Republicans statewide.

And so, on behalf of common-sense conservatives, let me ask this: can we count on you to follow best practices and come clean about the extent of the spending problem?

It’s not exactly clear how many credit cards soon-to-be-former Chairman Jim Greer passed out. We know former House Speaker Ray Sansom had one (it’s part of the lawsuit in which he’s accused of falsfying the state budget). And we know that former RPOF Director Delmar Johnson had one (it was leaked to the press last week).

We also know that Senate President Jeff Atwater and House Speaker Marco Rubio each had one while directing the campaigns within their respective chamber. Both say they’ll release their statements if everyone else does, too.

Today, Atwater said he would support a new chairman disclosing the statements.

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Deutch-Lynch congressional debate Tuesday at West Boca Chamber breakfast; indy candidate not invited

by George Bennett | February 8th, 2010

Democrat Ted Deutch and Republican Ed Lynch, rivals in the April 13 special congressional election to replace Robert Wexler, are scheduled to debate Tuesday at a West Boca Chamber of Commerce breakfast at Boca Lago Country Club.

Deutch and Lynch won their respective primaries last week in Palm Beach-Broward District 19. Wexler left his seat last month to head a Middle East think tank.

A third candidate, Jim McCormick, is on the April 13 ballot with no party affiliation. West Boca Chamber President Barry Epstein said McCormick wasn’t invited because he is “not viable.”

The 7:30 a.m. breakfast costs $25. To make a reservation, call 561-852-0000.

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Congressional primaries a cautionary note for Tea Party, 9-12 activists

by George Bennett | February 8th, 2010

Lynch: wins low-turnout GOP primary with 40.7 percent

Lynch

Last Tuesday’s special GOP congressional primary was not an auspicious sign for Tea Party and 9-12 activists hoping to make a Scott Brown-type of national statement in the April 13 special election for Robert Wexler’s old U.S. House seat.

“I was really surprised with how lousy the turnout was. I was expecting at least twice as many voters as that,” said Ed Fulop of the local Glenn Beck-inspired 9-12 group. Ed Lynch won a Republican primary that had only 7.4 percent turnout after all three GOP candidates aggressively courted the Tea Party/9-12 vote.

Read about it in this week’s Politics column.

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State officials agree to test soil, water at homes of Acreage kids with cancer

by Michael C. Bender | February 6th, 2010

State officials will test the water and soil at brain-cancer-stricken children’s homes in The Acreage, Florida Department of Health’s chief of staff said Friday — an appeal those children’s families have been making for months.

The decision comes a day after Gov. Charlie Crist pledged to seek federal help to investigate whether something in particular has caused higher-than-normal rates of pediatric brain tumors and cancer, particularly for girls, in The Acreage.

It also comes one day after — and appears to be a departure from — Florida Surgeon General Ana Viamonte Ros’ statement that state health officials had exhausted their research options in The Acreage.

Story here.

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Crist inspector general finds no meat in ‘Wafflegate’

by Dara Kam | February 5th, 2010

Gov. Charlie Crist’s inspector general found Transportation Department Secretary Stephanie Kopelousos did no wrong by using breakfast words as subject lines in e-mails dealing with the controversial SunRail project.

And IG Melinda Miguel also cleared the department of any wrongdoing by not providing e-mails on the SunRail deal to Sen. Paula Dockery until after Crist’s open government office was brought in.

“No evidence was found to suggest that any Department official intentionally withheld documents in violation of the law,” Miguel wrote in her 45-page report. “To the contrary, evidence shows that an unintentional, human error occurred during the initial public records request.”

Kopelousos and her aides insisted that they used the words “Pancakes” and “waffles” in subject lines to draw attention to the messages about the rail deal out of the thousands that the secretary receives daily.

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Proposal to repeal don’t-ask-don’t-tell splits U.S. Senate candidates

by Michael C. Bender | February 5th, 2010

A proposal from President Obama to repeal a ban on gays serving openly in the military — better known as “don’t ask, don’t tell” — has split Florida’s U.S. Senate candidates along party lines.

Republican Gov. Charlie Crist“We are a nation at war. The governor believes the current policy has worked, and there is no need to make changes.”

–Republican Charlie Crist spokeswoman Amanda Henneberg.


marco-rubio“Marco Rubio supports the current policy and doesn’t see any evidence it needs to be changed.”

–Republican Marco Rubio spokesman Alex Burgos.


maurice_ferre_small“Before the Civil Rights Bill passed, Everett Dirksen told Lyndon Johnson that, ‘This is an idea whose time has come.’ Well this is also an idea whose time has arrived.”

–Democrat Maurice Ferre


meek“Admiral Mike Mullen’s testimony that repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell comes down to an issue of integrity for citizens in uniform, and for the military as an institution were powerful words of conviction and truth. As a congressional cosponsor of legislation to promote a policy of nondiscrimination in the Armed Forces on the basis of sexual orientation, and having spoken to senior commanders about this issue, the position voiced by the military is a welcome one.”

–Democrat Kendrick Meek

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Despite ‘unfortunate’ focus on Crist-Obama hug, Rubio will mark the occasion with rally

by Michael C. Bender | February 5th, 2010

“Unfortunately, that gets a lot of attention.”

That quote from Republican U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio wasn’t about this embrace or this sign of affection, he was talking about this one.

Rubio said on CNN on Thursday that “the hug” between Gov. Charlie Crist and President Obama gets too much attention. Crist’s support of the stimulus plan was what was really important, he said.

It was the Rubio campaign, however, that called a picture of Obama and Crist the “MOST POWERFUL ONLINE FUNDRAISING SITE IN FLORIDA HISTORY” in November.

The site is no longer active, but the picture is on a fund-raising page on Rubio’s campaign Web site. A money bomb for Rubio features Crist and Obama embracing.

Today, Rubio is announcing that he’ll return to the site of the Fort Myers rally on Wednesday - the one-year anniversary of the Obama-Crist get-together.

The event, coordinated by FreedomWorks PAC, will feature former House Republican Leader Dick Armey.

From Rubio’s press release today:

“Every day, I am encouraged by the growing support I see for limited government principles throughout Florida and our nation,” said Rubio. “February 10 marks the first anniversary of Governor Crist’s embrace of a failed stimulus policy that has neither stimulated our economy, nor prevented the dramatic job losses that have taken a toll on over 1 million Floridians and families.”

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Florida Republican Party used staffer’s AmEx after party chief public cut up his own credit card

by Michael C. Bender | February 5th, 2010

The Orlando Sentinel reported earlier this week that former Republican Party of Florida Director Delmar Johnson earned more thank $400k in an year from the state party, which is in turmoil over spending controversies.

Today, the Sentinel details Johnson’s credit card expenses, including $134k in charges in one month.

From the story:

The internal accounting records indicate that after chopping up his own card, Greer used Johnson’s AmEx card to pay for his own travel, and trips taken by Crist campaign staffers and a handful of state legislators.

Johnson said charges to his card increased after (RPOF Chairman Jim) Greer recalled all the party’s other credit cards and that “only a small fraction” of the travel was really his. However, he refused to be specific about how much of the travel charges were his own.

In several instances, Greer used a charter pilot to fly him in his own plane across the state, the records suggest. Just two months of charges billed by Baer Air in Merritt Island, where Greer keeps his plane, totaled more than $45,000.

Johnson also used the card to charter a $15,000 flight to Washington for U.S. Sen. George LeMieux’s swearing-in ceremony in September.

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Crist vows to devote ‘every ounce of energy’ to finding Acreage cancer cause

by Michael C. Bender | February 4th, 2010

Florida health officials will appeal to the federal government for help investigating the cancer cluster in The Acreage, Gov. Charlie Crist said Thursday, just one day after the state had ruled out searching for an environmental cause.

“This is of grave concern to me,” Crist said in an interview. “The people deserve every ounce of energy that can be put into this situation to reveal how this happened, what the cause might be and what can be done to help these residents.”

Crist’s remarks were a turnaround from a statement Wednesday by Palm Beach County’s health department director, Dr. Alina Alonso, who had said the state didn’t intend to search for an environmental cause of higher-than-normal rates of brain tumors and cancer in The Acreage.

Story here.

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Save Our Homes snafu: Despite home-value plummet, assessments going up

by Michael C. Bender | February 4th, 2010

More than 42 percent of Palm Beach County’s homesteaded property owners might be in for a surprise when they get their property tax bills this year, Property Appraiser Gary Nikolits warned Thursday.

Story here.

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Court records show Florida foreclosures increasing; Palm Beach County levelling off

by Palm Beach Post Staff | February 4th, 2010

Florida’s courts tackled 398,825 foreclosure cases in 2009, an 8 percent increase over the previous year and a glut that led to a new statewide mediation rule aimed at reducing the overload.

Story here.<

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Florida Senate Republican changes horses in GOP gubernatorial primary

by Michael C. Bender | February 4th, 2010

Detert

Detert

It sounded vaguely familiar when Republican gubernatorial candidate Paula Dockery announced today that she won the endorsement of fellow state Sen. Nancy Detert. Turns out that Detert has endorsed in the governor’s race, just another candidate.

In July, about four months before Dockery entered the race, Republican Bill McCollum announced that Detert, a Venice Republican and head of the Senate K-12 Committee, was part of his extensive “Statewide Campaign Leadership Team”.

A McCollum spokeswoman said Detert told the campaign about her intention to join Dockery’s effort in November, when she accompanied Dockery to the state elections office to file official campaign papers.

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Jeb ‘proud’ of Rubio campaign

by Michael C. Bender | February 4th, 2010

Former Gov. Jeb Bush continues to thinly veil his support in the U.S. Senate race. From his interview today with WGCU in Fort Myers:

“I’m proud of what Marco has been able to accomplish in the campaign, but there’s a long, long way to go.”

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There’s a tea party next door and the Florida Senate budget chief is invited

by Michael C. Bender | February 4th, 2010
Tea party activists march in West Palm Beach's July 4th parade. Allen Eyestone/The Palm Beach Post

Tea party activists march in West Palm Beach's July 4th parade. Allen Eyestone/The Palm Beach Post

Florida Republican leaders bristled at the suggestion Wednesday from Palm Beach County schools Superintendent Art Johnson that the conservative, anti-spending tea party movement could force the district to cut 1,600 jobs in 2011-12.

“If the common-sense approach of reducing government spending and cutting taxes makes me part of the tea party movement, then pass me some sugar,” House Republican Leader Adam Hasner of Boca Raton said.

Senate budget chief J.D. Alexander said his spending decisions will be driven by the state’s 11.8 percent unemployment rate, not by a particular political message.

But in a page from the “All Politics is Local” chapter of Florida government, the Republican leader has a tea party activist living next door to his Lake Wales home. Alexander said he’s attended two of his neighbor’s meetings.

“He walks my dog from time to time and I have to go over and say hello to everybody,” Alexander said. “They’re very reasonable people. They are concerned about the course of the country. I welcome everybody’s involvement in the discussion of how we move the state forward.”

Read the rest of this entry »

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Schwarzenegger says Florida is for ‘old people,’ state CFO invites Governator for visit

by Michael C. Bender | February 4th, 2010

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Florida Gov. Charlie Crist in a 2007 file photo.

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Florida Gov. Charlie Crist in a 2007 file photo.

Trying to pump up his own state as a top destination for tourists and businesses, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger told a Silicon Valley conference this week that Florida is “for the old people.”

Schwarzenegger said California has a diverse reputation — Hollywood, technology startups, agriculture — while other states are noted for just one attribute.

“Like one state is known for its potatoes; one state is known for its oil,” Schwarzenegger said. “And another state like Florida is known for the old people.”

Sink

Sink

Florida CFO Alex Sink, the leading Democratic candidate for governor, shot back that the ‘Governator’ forgot to mention his state’s “high taxes and ballooning deficits.”

“It seems that Florida, one of the most beautiful, diverse, and business friendly states in the nation, with no state income tax, has intimidated the ‘Governator’ - given that his state may be best known for its high taxes and ballooning deficits. I invite Governor Schwarzenegger to take a trip to the Sunshine State and see firsthand what brings people of all ages and cultures to visit and settle in Florida,” Sink said in a release from her governor campaign.

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Lawmaker has a beef with DOC ‘food loaf’

by Dara Kam | February 4th, 2010

Food loaf. It’s what inmates hope isn’t for dinner.

As if prison food isn’t bad enough already, naughty inmates are fed a mystery “meat” called “food loaf.”

What exactly the loaf is made up of and what prisoners do to warrant the punishing meal isn’t clear either.

“Food loaf” is also known as called “meal management loaf,” “nutri-loaf” or “behavioral loaf in prison circles. In some prisons the concoction is made up of all of the day’s food put into a blender with some oats thrown in and baked into a loaf.

It is given in some prisons to unruly inmates who throw their food trays at correctional officers and was served in the past to Florida inmates with no utensils.

Currently, inmates in Vermont are suing prison officials over the use of the food loaf and which some states have banned.

Sen. Arthenia Joyner, D-Tampa, asked Department of Corrections Chief of Staff Richard Prudhom at this morning’s Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations meeting morning to give her, in writing, the caloric value of the mystery package and the department policy on offenses that result in the loaf.

Prudhom said he will report back.

The state spends $2.33 a day for three meals and a snack on the 100,000 prisoners behind bars.

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