
Fort Pierce Gets 'Fresh Shot' With National Award
Rick Scott Talks Budget and Vetoes in Weekly Radio Address
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Craig Fugate Rebuilds FEMA, Just in Time for Hurricane Season
As Florida heads into another hurricane season, the state has a friend in Washington. A knowledgeable and storm-savvy friend.
Craig Fugate, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), was battle-tested when he served as Gov. Jeb Bush's director of emergency operations. During Fugate's tenure from 2001 to 2009, Florida was wracked by an unprecedented series of storms, including back-to-back hurricanes that slammed into the peninsula's east coast in 2004.
Why Republicans Must Put Marco Rubio on 2012 Presidential Ticket
The Republican Party needs Marco Rubio on its 2012 ticket.
Conventional wisdom among the media elites (and their self-reinforcing polls) is that President Barack Obama is unbeatable. It's an odd, even disconnected, line of thought, considering $4 gas, high unemployment and an economy that continues to slump.
Rasmussen: Chris Christie, Mitt Romney Give Barack Obama Early Ride in N.J.
Let's look at Democratic-leaning New Jersey, says Rasmussen Reports, home state of the next bright light in the GOP galaxy of presidential possibilities -- Chris Christie.
Here's what Rasmussen found: Both Christie and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney are within single digits of President Barack Obama in hypothetical 2012 election match-ups. Believe it or not.
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New Poll Has Rudy Giuliani Leading the GOP Race in 2012
Rick Perry Leaves the Door Open for 2012 Presidential Bid
With the likes of Mike Huckabee, Mitch Daniels and Donald Trump announcing earlier in the month that they would not seek the Republican presidential nomination, Gov. Rick Perry of Texas opened the door perhaps for a run of his own.
Asked on Friday if he would consider running for the Republican nomination, Perry replied, Im going to think about it. He added that he would focus on it after the Texas Legislature leaves Austin sometime after Tuesday.
Attention, GOP: Independents Drove Quinnipiac Poll Numbers
If this week's Quinnipiac Poll looked bleak for Florida Republicans, the reason may be in the sampling.
The poll, which showed President Barack Obama's popularity rising and Sen. Bill Nelson whipping the GOP competition, surveyed an artificially low number of Republican voters.
While 27 of respondents identified themselves as Republicans, the party has 36 percent of the state's registered voters.
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