Floridians gathered by the hundreds in front of the Old Capitol in Tallahassee Tuesday, watching with genuine admiration the governor they supported take the oath of office for a second term.
Floridians gathered by the hundreds in front of the Old Capitol in Tallahassee Tuesday, watching with genuine admiration the governor they supported take the oath of office for a second term.
It's a big year for St. Augustine, a settlement in existence since 1565.
Anybody who thinks Charlie Crist's loss in November was a career-ending outcome doesn't know Charlie Crist.
Win or lose in Pasadena on New Year's Day, quarterback Jameis Winston should rethink declaring his eligibility for the 2015 NFL draft.
2014 was more than just an election year.
Fresh out of entertainment of the pregnant pigs and dwarf tossing ilk, Florida nevertheless found a way to be Florida in 2014, weird and wondrous and indulging in our patented quirkiness, a Sunshin
In case you think the old adage "it's who you know" only pays off in the private sector, you might want to consider a promotion made last week at one of the busiest, lawyery-ist state offices in Ta
Florida in 2014 wasn't all about the election, but certainly Nov. 4 cast a long shadow across state news much of the year.
The national free-enterprise legal organization Pacific Legal Foundation filed its response Wednesday to the state of Floridas motion to dismissa PLF lawsuit challenging Florida's
Anitere Flores is willing to test her clout in the Florida Senate to fight a leadership decision to delay indefinitely the remaining $3.5 million in payments owed to the victim of one of the
Is there a Seminole Tribe of Florida deal afoot to bring unions to the Florida Hard Rock Hotel and Casinos? Nobody is saying -- not even to issue a denial.
(UPDATED) It's presumptuous of me to put myself in the head of Jameis Winston, I know.
During the campaign Gov. Rick Scott's aghast opponents made a mountain of the "record $77 billion budget" he signed this year.
Debbie Wasserman Schultz is all over television, peddling the darndest notion. She insists voters really do agree with Democrats on the issues, they just don't come out for midterms.
Could there be a bigger political pariah in corporate Florida than Duke Energy?