GOP Names Mike La Rosa to Replace Mike Horner in District 42
Rick Scott to Join Search For Missing UF Student
Gov. Rick Scott will be in Gainesville Saturday morning lending support to the search efforts to find University of Florida student Christian Aguilar, according to the governors office.
Gainesville Police charged Pedro Andres Bravo with first-degree murder late Friday afternoon in Aguilars disappearance.
His body has not been recovered.
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RPOF Chair Lenny Curry Defends Opposition to Retention
Weekly Roundup: Three Justices, No Peace, and a House Race Game Change
A trio of Florida Supreme Court justices girded for battle this week following last week's announcement by state Republicans that they will try to take the "activist" justices down.
The fight over efforts to remove Justices R. Fred Lewis, Barbara Pariente and Peggy Quince went from backwater to front burner this week with attorneys groups and former colleagues jumping to the jurists' defense in the face of a recall campaign now officially blessed by the Republican Party of Florida.
Cleaning Up Their Act ...
It’s Debatable
WASHINGTON -- The spectacles we persist in dignifying as presidential "debates" -- two-minute regurgitations of rehearsed responses -- often subtract from the nation's understanding.
Maybe Best to Button Lip
Replacement For Mike Horner Expected on Saturday
Mike Horner Replacement Expected from List of 18
The Republican Party executive committees from both Osceola and Polk counties expect to whittle a list of 18 applicants to take Rep. Mike Horners place in the House District 42 contest to five later today.
The committees expect to be able to name the new candidate by Saturday afternoon after private one-on-one interviews at the Omni Hotel in Champions Gate, said Danny Sexton, chairman of the Osceola County Republican executive committee.
Im extremely confident from the 18 that there is someone we can agree upon, Sexton said.
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Are City Officials Fighting Florida Property Tax Breaks on the Taxpayers' Dime?
What theyre doing is probably not illegal, but from now until Nov. 6 city officials across the Sunshine State are being urged to use taxpayer-funded instruments to convince their citizens to oppose the Florida Property Tax Amendment, and the amendment's supporters are not happy about it.
