Supporters of medical marijuana have finally gotten their wish. On Tuesday evening, Florida voters finally passed Amendment 2, approving the measure by 71 percent.
Supporters of medical marijuana have finally gotten their wish. On Tuesday evening, Florida voters finally passed Amendment 2, approving the measure by 71 percent.
Have you had a look at TV this morning? At sunrise, network news journalists were coiffed, in full makeup, clucking like free-range chickens in a barnyard. I know they live for nights like the one ahead, and in a way, so do I. But these folks really should pace themselves.
Despite some changes to reassure the business community, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection continued to hear objections Monday to a pollution-notification rule proposed in the wake of high-profile incidents in Pinellas and Polk counties that raised questions about state environmental regulations.
As has so often been the case in recent presidential elections, all eyes are on Florida as the nation chooses the 45th president on Tuesday. But there’s more than the presidency on the line in the Sunshine State.
The presidential election is down to the wire the day before Election Day in Florida and the final poll before Election Day shows Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and Republican candidate Donald Trump too close to call.
The Quinnipiac University poll, release Monday, shows Clinton with an ever-so-slight lead over Trump, taking 46 percent to Trump’s 45 percent -- which means anything goes come Tuesday.
When courts redrew districts for Florida's congressional delegation and the state Senate, assumptions quickly poured in.
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are locked in a dead heat in Florida in the final poll before Election Day on Tuesday.
Sunday is a day of worship but this weekend, it was also a day of voting -- and on Sunday, thousands of African-American clergy members helped make sure their church members headed to the polls.
With the presidential election looming on Tuesday, Sunshine State News caught up with Trish Regan, an anchor and markets reporter with the Fox Business Network.
Four months ago, nearly six out of 10 Americans were already feeling exhausted by election coverage, according to the Pew Research Center
Voters were worn out long before Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump earned the nominations of their respective parties, and before stories of Russian email hacking and accusations of groping subsumed deeper topics, like the candidates' actual stands on issues such as the economy.