With the Legislature meeting in Tallahassee next week as its regular session begins, the Associated Industries of Florida (AIF) unveiled its legislative priorities on Friday.
From his perch as chairman of the U.S. House National Security Subcommittee, U.S. Rep. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla., slammed former U.S. Sec. of State Hillary Clinton after information was released showing she had staff send classified information over unsecure connections.
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With the Legislature meeting in Tallahassee next week as its regular session begins, the Associated Industries of Florida (AIF) unveiled its legislative priorities on Friday.
On Friday, U.S. Rep. David Jolly, R-Fla., highlighted the Thin Blue Line Act that he introduced last year.
While increasingly liberals are urging the Democratic National Committee (DNC) to throw U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., overboard, the Florida congresswoman does have a major ally on Capitol Hill in her corner.
A Florida congressman is going to bat for a measure censuring President Barack Obama on his executive action on gun control and other matters.
After the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Office of the Inspector General (OIG) reported there were almost 42,000 unopened packages and letters in the VA’s claims office in St. Petersburg, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., renewed his call to reform that department.
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Billionaire businessman Donald Trump made Ted Cruz's citizenship a household conversation, but it's Democratic Florida Rep. Alan Grayson who will challenge the Texas senator's eligibility to run for president.
If Cruz wins the Republican nomination, that is.
It puzzles me that the liberal media in Florida made little effort to see past their dislike of Gov. Rick Scott, spending the last five years painting virtually every Scott appointee as a liability for the taxpayers of Florida. None of Scott's lieutenants deserve the disdain less than Jesse Panuccio.
Floridians overwhelmingly back the current Seminole gaming "compact" and support what they know of a bigger gambling deal Gov. Rick Scott has asked lawmakers to approve, according to a Florida Chamber of Commerce poll released Thursday.
Scott and the Seminole Tribe of Florida reached agreement last month on a compact that would allow tribal casinos to add craps and roulette in exchange for a guarantee of $3 billion to the state over seven years. That came after lawmakers in 2010 approved another gambling compact, part of which expired last year.