Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Patrick Murphy had himself another rough week last week. Even he admits he’s “in a really bad place.”
Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Patrick Murphy had himself another rough week last week. Even he admits he’s “in a really bad place.”
Florida voters remain open to supporting a proposed state constitutional amendment on medical marijuana and back the idea of a law for transgender individuals using “bathrooms that correspond to their gender at birth rather than their gender identity,” a new poll shows.
Hillary Clinton has a slight lead over Donald Trump in Florida, a new poll finds--and adding Marco Rubio or Jeb Bush to the ticket won’t help Republicans flip the Sunshine State.
Charles McBurney for judge? No way, no how, says the National Rifle Association.
The Jacksonville Republican and attorney, who served as the Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, is one of the six finalists to become a circuit judge in the state’s 4th Judicial Circuit, which covers Duval, Clay and Nassau counties.
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are running close in Florida which looks poised to remain the largest swing state in presidential elections, a new poll shows.
CBS News released a poll over the weekend showing Clinton at 43 percent and Trump right behind her at 42 percent. When Bernie Sanders replaces Clinton as the Democratic nominee, he ties Trump at 44 percent apiece.
On top of selecting a new president, voting on a new U.S. Senator and choosing Florida lawmakers, Floridians will vote on five constitutional amendments later this year. Getting a constitutional amendment to pass isn’t a walk in the park. Each amendment needs 60 percent of the vote in order to pass, and groups in favor of and against each amendment typically tend to spend millions of dollars in campaigns to push their message.
You could say that it all depends on how you define "lie." Or, perhaps, that it's hell to have a public record.
It got little attention last week, but one U.S. House vote passed Thursday is some kind of major victory for veterans fighting pain.
Redstate.com points out that in the last week, two different polls have shown the same thing -- 20 percent of Americans would vote for a generic, unidentified “independent” or third party candidate over Trump and Clinton.
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