Two years after Amendment 2 went down to defeat, Florida voters say they support medical marijuana as another proposed state constitutional amendment on it looms on the November ballot.
Two years after Amendment 2 went down to defeat, Florida voters say they support medical marijuana as another proposed state constitutional amendment on it looms on the November ballot.
With six months to go, Florida voters are unsure of who they want to replace Marco Rubio in the Senate, a new poll shows.
Quinnipiac University released a poll on Tuesday which shows a large segment of voters--more than 20 percent--remain undecided in the Senate race. Many voters are in the dark on the major contenders in the Senate race.
“The Florida U.S. Senate race is wide open with none of the seven candidates particularly well-known to voters,” said Peter Brown, the assistant director of the Quinnipiac University poll.
Barack Obama may have carried the Sunshine State twice but he’s upside down with Florida voters are still divided on even as they generally support his nomination of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court while two Florida Republicans are also underwater.
It should be obvious to all by now that Donald Trump knows nothing of what he speaks. His disastrous economic ideas are but the latest in a litany of nonsensical proposals.
I agree with the recent op-ed by Mac Stipanovich about GOP presumptive presidential nominee Donald Trump, to a point.
Floridians just got a lesson in -- or perhaps a reminder of -- why they can't trust their deadbeat dad of a federal government.
Lawyers for opponents of the state's de facto school-voucher program asked an appeals court Tuesday to reinstate a lawsuit against the system, saying they had the right to bring the case under the Florida Constitution.
Florida Commissioner of Agriculture Adam Putnam may not be totally happy Donald Trump is the Republican Party’s presumptive nominee for the 2016 election, but that doesn’t mean he’ll turn his back on voting for the billionaire businessman come November.
Republicans might as well stop looking at Marco Rubio as Donald Trump's vice presidential running mate. The Florida senator doesn't want the job.