John Rutherford has his work cut out for him in Congress as he stands in the shadows of three congressional representatives from Northeast Florida.
John Rutherford has his work cut out for him in Congress as he stands in the shadows of three congressional representatives from Northeast Florida.
Gov. Rick Scott declared the Wynwood area of downtown Miami Zika-free on Monday, but the Centers for Disease Control was more cautious in saying the virus was finished spreading, lifting the travel ban for pregnant women going to the area.
Democrats may have declared victory in Florida during the last two presidential cycles, but they shouldn’t be so certain they’ll have the same results in 2016.
Social media lit up like a Christmas tree Saturday after Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton's subdued, even sleepy response to a bomb that went off in midtown Manhattan, injuring more than two dozen New Yorkers.
Was she drugged? Is there something wrong with this picture? You be the judge. Watch the video here or at the end of this story, recorded aboard her plane Saturday night.
A GOP super-PAC is using Democrat Joe Garcia's secretly recorded sexist remark about Hillary Clinton last Sunday as a springboard to remind voters of Garcia's scandal-plagued record. And the campaign is just getting started. It has all kind of tricks up its sleeve for the former congressman who narrowly beat Annette Taddeo in the Democratric primary.
Signs weren't the only things causing fights in Florida politics this week. In fact, at times it looked like just about everyone was either battling someone else or getting ready to.
Billionaire casino founder Sheldon Adelson has given another $1 million to the campaign against medical marijuana in Florida, recent records from the Florida Divisions of Elections show.
Florida will be throwing an extra $10 million into the fight against Zika.
With energy exploration and offshore drilling becoming an increasingly important part of the economy of Cyprus, two Florida Republicans are pushing for increased American ties with that Mediterranean nation.
Nearly eight years after Gov. Rick Scott and the Florida Cabinet did away with quasi-automatic restoration of civil rights, voters may have a chance to approve a constitutional amendment that would automatically restore voting rights for non-violent felons.
Supporters of the proposal have gathered enough signatures to trigger a review from the Florida Supreme Court, whose approval is required for the initiative to make it onto the 2018 ballot.