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Romney, Scott and the Economy

June 21st, 2012 by flanews

A drastic turnaround in the presidential race tonight. According to a new Quinnipiac poll President Barack Obama now has a four point lead in Florida over Mitt Romney. It’s a 10 point swing. Obama was down six in the same poll in May. As Whitney Ray tells us, to turn things around in Florida Romney may be asking more of Governor Rick Scott than he’s willing to give.

By our count, the only time Romney and Scott have gotten together publically in Florida in the past year was during an October campaign stop in Tallahassee. Even then they met behind close doors far away from journalists and cameras.

Over the past month Mitt Romney has made several campaign stops in Florida. Absent from the major GOP events, Governor Rick Scott. Democratic Strategist Steve Schale says it’s no coincidence.

“Rick Scott is head of the RPOF in Florida. He’s got 39 percent job approval. I’m sure that’s not what Romney wants,” said Schale.

A new survey of Florida voters shows President Barack Obama turning a six point deficit into a four point lead, forecasting a tight race with no room for mistakes.

The poll comes amid reports, that the Romney campaign is asking Scott to stop boasting about the economy, but if those reports are true, Scott isn’t listening.

“There’s a lot of work to do but we are clearly headed in the right direction,” said Scott.

Scott boasted about the state’s falling unemployment rate to a group of business leaders in Tallahassee Wednesday and afterward in front of our camera.

“We are bucking the national trend. We’ve come down 2.5 percent in the last 17 months,” said Scott.

The Republican Party of Florida also continues to tout Florida’s economic gains.

“We are seeing a lot of improvement here in our state and that’s thanks to the governor, but so much more could be done if we had a national partner in the White House,” said Kristen McDonald, RPOF Spokeswoman.

But working together on policy may mean avoiding each other in politics. Thursday as Romney stumped in Orlando, Scott stayed behind closed doors with a packed schedule.

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Dems, Reps Say Presidential Poll Not a Big Deal

June 21st, 2012 by flanews

President Barack Obama has turned a six point deficit into a four point lead here in Florida. A new Quinnipiac Poll released today shows Mr. Obama up 46 to 42 over Mitt Romney. Less than a month ago Obama trailed Romney 41 to 47. Steve Schale, the state director for the Obama Campaign in 2008 says the president’s message is beginning to resonate with Florida voters.

“I think we’re going to see polls go up and down for the next five months. I think what we’re really beginning to see though is people paying attention. People are seeing what Mitt Romney is really all about. They are beginning to understand his economic record in Massachusetts and what it would mean for them and they clearly don’t really like it,” said Schale.

Republican Party of Florida Spokeswoman Kristen McDonald says polls don’t matter much at this point in the campaign.

“Polls go up and polls go down. It’s really nothing to be concerned about especially at this point. Romney has plenty of time to make his case for Floridians and he has plenty of time to let them know why his vision for the future of Florida and our nation is better than the failed policies of Obama,” said McDonald.

There’s good new for Romney. The margin of error is 3.7 percent, the Republican National Convention is being held in Tampa and will increase his visibility in Florida and there’s still five months to make his case to Florida voters.

Posted in State News | 3 Comments »

Scott’s Popularity falls to 39 Percent

June 20th, 2012 by flanews

Governor Rick Scott’s popularity is plummeting. A Quinnipiac Poll released today shows the governor’s job approval rating at 39 percent. As Whitney Ray tells us, the drop comes as the man hired to make Scott more likable prepares to leave.

In May of last year just 29 percent of Florida voters approved of the job Governor Rick Scott was doing. So Scott hired a new chief of staff, invited reporters over for donuts, ditched his executive suits and changed his official photo to a more causal picture.

Under the watchful eye of his new chief advisor Scott’s approval rating rose to 41 percent. But now it’s falling again.

A Quinnipiac Poll released Wednesday shows Scott’s rating dropping to 39 percent. Pollster Peter Brown says the governor needs more support from his own party.

“One of the reasons he’s having so many problems, is his Republican numbers are low,” said Brown.

Scott received a 71 percent job approval rating among Republican voters, but experts say a sitting governor should be able to get 80 or even 90 percent support within his own party. I caught up with Scott after the poll was released. He told me there is only one number he was concerned about.

“The only number I look at every month is our unemployment rate and as you know we are bucking the national trend. We’ve come down 2.5 percent in the last 17 months,” said Scott.

And if Florida’s unemployment rate improves Scott’s job approval will likely rise with it.

The man who helped bring Scott’s popularity to its highest point is stepping down amid questions about how he handled state contracts. Steve MacNamara’s last day as the governor’s chief of staff is July first.

Posted in State News | 2 Comments »

Lemieux Drops Out, Endorses Mack

June 20th, 2012 by flanews

Former US Senator George LeMieux has given up his fight for another term in Washington. LeMieux dropped out of the race this morning, sending this video message to his supporters and giving a lukewarm endorsement to his Republican Rival Connie Mack.

“In order to have the best chance to beat Bill Nelson and put the senate in Republican hands, today we will end our campaign. To continue would only hurt our chances in the fall and that is not something I will risk. Connie Mack will be our nominee. He has my support,” said LeMieux.

A Quinnipiac Poll on the race will be released tomorrow. The last poll showed LeMieux more than 30 points behind Mack.

“Obviously LeMieux wasn’t doing well. I can’t talk about tomorrow’s poll, but let’s talk about the last poll. LeMieux couldn’t get out of single digits in a Republican Primary. He was running badly behind Nelson in a matchup,” said Brown.

LeMieux trailed from the beginning and with Mack refusing to debate him, his campaign quickly ran out of ways to raise money and gain voter support. Governor Rick Scott was asked about LeMieux leaving the race. Scott wished the former senator well and gave some advice to the remaining candidates.

“I wish Sen. LeMieux success. I’m hopeful the individuals who are still in the race focus on jobs because it’s the biggest issue that we have,” said Scott.

Mack is expected to glide to victory in the Republican Primary in August and face a tough general election against sitting Democratic Senator Bill Nelson.

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Floridians Support Gov’s Voter Purge

June 20th, 2012 by flanews

Six out of 10 Floridians support Governor Rick Scott’s effort to prevent illegally registered voters from casting ballots.

A new Quinnipiac Poll asked Florida voters if they agreed with the governor’s campaign to purge the voter rolls. Scott says he’s surprised support isn’t even higher.

“I’ve not meet one person in the state who thinks that non-US Citizens should be voting in our elections. Nobody does. It’s my job to make sure that I do every thing I can to make sure only US Citizens vote in our races,” said Scott.

According to the poll 35 percent oppose Scott’s efforts. He’s also being sued by the federal government, the ACLU and a group of minority voters to stop the purge.

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Tuition Debate Ends Thursday

June 19th, 2012 by flanews

By Thursday Florida college students will know how much their tuition will increase. Most of Florida’s public universities are asking for a 15 percent tuition hike, the max. But as Whitney Ray tells us, Governor Rick Scott is hoping for a different outcome.

A battle born before the beginning of the 2012 legislative session is coming to a head. Governor Rick Scott told lawmakers to fund education and leave tuition alone.

“With level funding of the universities, they shouldn’t be increasing tuition,” said Scott when he unveiled his budget on December 7th, 2011.

Scott got most of what he wanted. Lawmakers passed a budget with no tuition increases, but at the same time, cut university spending by 300 million dollars, asking schools to use reserves to make up the different.

But what happened here was just round one. Scott signed the budget with no tuition increase, then vetoed a bill to allow UF and FSU to raise rates as much as they want.

Now, it’s the University System’s Board of Governors turn to decide whether or not to raise rates. Most schools are asking for the max allowed by state law, 15 percent. Chancellor Frank Brogan says good luck.

“Fifteen percent is going to be a though ask this year because of the ongoing 15 percent increases, but also knowing the recession is taking its toll on everyone and that includes students,” said Brogan.

“I know a lot of students that took semesters off, because they didn’t have money to pay for school and things like that,” said FSU Senior Jeremy Shaw.

Reporter: You’re afraid they will price students out of a college education?

Jodeci: Pretty much yes. That’s what it’s looking like. As long as we keep on this upward expediential trend people aren’t going to be able to go.

Even if schools raise tuition the max amount it will only make up for about a third of the state funding cut.

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Quinnipiac to Release Poll on Gov Popularity, SYG

June 19th, 2012 by flanews

Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute, will discuss results of a poll of Florida voters, asking their opinions about Gov. Rick Scott, his efforts to purge non-citizens from voter rolls and the state’s “Stand Your Ground” law, Wednesday, 10 am, Florida Press Center, 336 East College Avenue, Tallahassee.

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Birther Lawsuit Asks Obama’s Name Not Be on Florida’s Ballot

June 18th, 2012 by Mike Vasilinda

A Circuit Court judge in Tallahassee spent an hour this morning listening to arguments over Barack Obama’s birth certificate. Plaintiff and registered Democrat Michael Voeltz is asking that the President’s name be taken off the ballot because, as Mike Vasilinda tells us, he believes Barack Obama is not a US citizen.

Michael Voeltz was a registered voter with no party affiliation until last fall. Now he is a Democrat suing to keep Barrack Obama off Florida’s ballot.

Judge Terry Lewis listened skeptically to an hour’s worth of arguments Monday morning.

“What if it was artificial insemination and you don’t know who the father was?” Judge Lewis asked.

“Then you’re out of luck to be President,” the Plantiff’s lawyer replied.

The Obama Campaign and Florida’s Secretary of State are on the same side in the suit.

“We ask that Your Honor grant the motion to dismiss for failure to state a cause of action.”

They want it dismissed because they say Obama is simply a candidate yet to be nominated by his party.

“There has been no nomination to office, there has been no election to office, as a result of the presidential preference primary of January 31,” Obama Campaign attorney Mark Herron said.

But Attorney Larry Klayman calls that argument nothing more than a delaying tactic.

“What the defendants are doing is basically trying to push the issue down the road and create a fait accompli,” Klayman said. “It’s a shell game.”

The judge gave both sides a week to submit a proposed order. Voeltz says the suit is important to the future of the country.

“He was imprinted very early with anti-American attitudes, that were imprinted on him by, you know, a Communist mother, a Communist father, who was never a citizen of the United States,” Voeltz said.

Michael Voletz wouldn’t tell us what he does for a living, but he does say he isn’t wealthy. And when asked how he was paying for the lawsuit, told us “I don’t really think that’s any of your business.”

The Attorney seeking to disqualify the President from the Florida Ballot also told the judge today that he did not believe US Senator Marco Rubio should be allowed to run for President because Rubio’s parents were born in Cuba.

Posted in Elections, State News, Voting | 2 Comments »

Scott’s Lawsuit Record

June 18th, 2012 by flanews

Almost since the moment he took office, Governor Rick Scott has been caught up in litigation. His most recent suit is over efforts to prevent illegal voters from casting ballots. As Whitney Ray tells us, the governor has lost more lawsuits than he’s won, but many of those decisions are being appealed.

Shortly after taking office Governor Rick Scott derailed the train. Scott singlehandedly turned away 2.4 billion federal dollars for high speed rail. State lawmakers sued, but the Florida Supreme Court sided with Scott.

Scott’s win record stops there. Since beating the train, Scott’s lost a lawsuit over drug testing state workers, and a separate suit over drug testing welfare recipients.

When he tried to privatize state prisons, the Florida Police Benevolent Association sued and won. They also beat Scott in a court battle over state workers pension contributions.

“We certainly don’t want to continue to sue in order to prevent the governor and the legislature from committing ills against the taxpayers and you know that’s something the taxpayers ought to ask,” said Matt Puckett with the Florida Police Benevolent Association.

Making controversial decisions has made Scott a magnet for lawsuits, and so far he’s not fairing well in court. By our count Scott has one win, four losses and a tie.

The tie came over Florida’s new elections law. A federal judge upheld most of the new provisions, like shortening early voting, but a deadline requiring voter registration forms to be turned in 48 hours after they’re signed was recently thrown out.

But not all is lost yet. To the chagrin of the PBA Scott is appealing the pension and prison privatization decisions. And only time will tell what will happen with the governor’s voter purge lawsuits. Scott’s suing for access to a federal immigration database, and the feds are suing Scott to stop the purge.

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100K in Ethics Violations Fines Still Owed

June 18th, 2012 by flanews

The Florida Commission on Ethics is trying to collect more than $100,000.00 dollars in fines issued more than four years ago. City Council Members, Mayors and even a State Representative are on the list. Commissioners are asking state lawmakers from the authority to collect the money owed. Integrity Florida plans to push the issue during the 2013 legislative session.

Click Here for List

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Real Estate Sales Improving as Joblessness Falls

June 15th, 2012 by Mike Vasilinda

Florida’s unemployment rate dropped one tenth of a percent in May, marking the lowest it has been since December 2008. The downtick in the joblessness is having a positive effect on state tax collections, and real estate transactions are leading the way.

Click to Watch

Peter and Mary Ribaudo spent the last four years trying to sell their Bradenton home. They’d just about given up when out of the blue they got an offer.

” We were surprised when along came a buyer. Um, It seemed to come out of nowhere and we thought this is the time we might sell” says Peter.

Now the couple has made an offer on a home in Tallahassee. It wasn’t their first choice, but Mary says other homes they were considering were snapped up before they could make an offer.

“These houses are moving quickly, and and you’ve got more than one person, sometimes, on a house.”

The taxes from the sale of real estate is one of the brightest pictures in Florida. It’s seventeen million dollars over estimate in just May alone. One reason for the uptick is that banks are lending again. Since the beginning of the year, financial institutions have created 57 hundred new jobs. That accounts for one of every ten new jobs created in Florida since the first of the year.

John Sebree of the Florida Realators says the horizon looks promising. “And the fact that pending sales are up thirty five percent shows that people are back in the market, they’re ready” says Sebree.

And realtors like Steve Hourigas are counting on the trend continuing. “They are out there ready to buy…if they take too long, they may not be buying what they thought they were buying”.

One of every four homes being sold is being purchased by a foreign national.

While home sales are increasing, new construction remains one of the hardest hit areas in the state’s economy\, losing twenty two thousand jobs over the last year.

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Florida Commission on Ethics, Mostly Harmless

June 15th, 2012 by flanews

Elected officials in Florida owe more than 100-thousand dollars in ethics violation fines and they have no intention of paying them. The Florida Commission on Ethics has no way to collect the money, but as Whitney Ray tells us, they’re asking the legislature to give them more authority to police ethics violators.

They’ve been compared to a paper tiger, fierce looking, but no teeth. At best the Florida Commission on Ethics can force elected officials to hire a lawyer and do the walk of shame past TV cameras.

But when it comes to penalties they have no authority to actually make violators pay.

“So we have a law. We just don’t have an enforcement mechanism in the law,” said Commissioner Matthew Carlucci.

Right now Florida politicians owe more than 100-thousand dollars in ethics fines. The commissioners tried to collect the money using private collection agencies, but if a fine isn’t paid within four years, it’s no longer valid.

“I can’t believe that a sitting house member hasn’t paid his fine,” said Commissioner Morgan Bentley.

To make violators pay, commissioners put fine collection authority at the top of their 2013 legislative wish list.

Dan Krassner, the director of Integrity Florida supports the change along with a dozen more to give the commission teeth.

“Integrity Florida would like to see an elevation of the issue of self-initiation of investigation of putting state ethics law enforcement officers on the beat,” said Krassner.

But getting the agenda approved is just the first step. Getting the changes passed the legislature is a whole nother battle. Lawmakers haven’t approve any changes to the ethics commission in more than a decade.

One hold back to giving the commission more power is many lawmakers have faced ethics violations and given the choice between a paper tiger and the real thing, most choose paper.

Included in the list of proposed changes are increasing the maximum fine from 10-thousand to 25-thousand dollars and allowing the commission to launch its own investigations. Right now the commission can only investigate a claim if a complaint is filed.

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Florida Lags in Solar

June 14th, 2012 by flanews

Things aren’t looking too bright for the Sunshine State when it comes to solar energy. A new report ranks Florida 14th in the nation in new solar production, at a time when, as Whitney Ray tells us, the solar industry nationwide is booming.

Welcome to the Sunshine State, but don’t let the name fool you. There is a lot of sun, but when it comes to solar power, the state is lagging.

A new report shows the US solar industry grew by 85 percent during the first quarter of 2012. New Jersey is leading production with Florida down the list at number 14. Kim Ross with Rethink Energy Florida says the ranking is unacceptable.

“There’s really no better place to have solar than here in the State of Florida. The reason we don’t have it is because our current politicians are hooked in the old paradigm,” said Ross.

Supporters of alternative forms of energy say the state was headed in the right direction five years ago when if offered massive rebates to people who installed solar panels on their homes. The program was so popular the state couldn’t afford to pay the rebates so the program had to be nixed.

Now Florida has a new energy policy. The director of the state Office of Energy says Florida is exploring its alterative energy options and solar is just part of the equation.

“We’re not going to pick solar has the number one technology to solve our problems. It’s going to part of an overall diverse sort of menu of options that we want to give Floridians,” said Patrick Sheehan, the director of the state energy office.

Most of the states above Florida on the solar list have a renewable energy standard, but Florida lawmakers have balked at the idea… leaving the state with nothing to shoot for.

The Florida Commissioner of Agriculture oversees the Office of Energy. He’ll hold an energy summit in Orlando this August where solar energy is expected to be a hot topic.

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Scott Uses Own Story to Illustrate Legitimacy of Voter Purge

June 14th, 2012 by Mike Vasilinda

Governor Rick Scott, who is being sued by the Federal Government over his efforts to remove what he believes to be illegal voters from the rolls before this years elections, disclosed today that in 2006 he was told he couldn’t vote because he was deceased. As Mike Vasilinda tells us, Scott believes the mistake is proof that legitimate voters will always be able to have their votes counted.

Governor Rick Scott begins most mornings with a calls to talk radio shows. Thursday, he was defending his efforts to remove potential non citizens from the voter rolls, when he dropped this story about when he went to vote in 2006.

“They said I had passed away,” Scott said. “I said, here’s my drivers license, I’m here, I’m really alive. So they allowed me to vote provisionally, and then they went back and checked and saw actually I was alive.”

It was Florida’s Secretary of State using another agency’s database that told the Supervisor of Elections in Naples that Rick Scott was dead.

The Secretary of State sent information to Collier County that showed Richard E. Scott, born 12/1/1952, had died in January ‘06. But the Governor’s middle initial is ‘L”.

Collier County Deputy Elections Supervisor Tim Durham says it is the only time he has seen such a mistake.

“Very unusual set of circumstances,” Durham said. “The other Rick Scott has a different middle initial, he was also a Florida resident, with the exact same date of birth.”

Scott used the story to illustrate his point that voters who are eligible will indeed be able to cast a vote and have it counted, but the American Civil Liberties Unions says there is another lesson to be learned.

“What happened to him shows what is wrong about using inaccurate data to throw people off the voting rolls,” Howard Simon of the Florida ACLU said.

The Secretary of State’s office says it now no longer relies on the Department of Health database.

Posted in Civil Rights, Rick Scott, State News, Voting | No Comments »

Scott Spoofed, Stays Focused

June 13th, 2012 by flanews

Comedians looking for material are finding a boatload in Florida. National comedy programs and late night talk shows are mocking Governor Rick Scott and his policies. As Whitney Ray tells us, the latest came last night when Jon Stewart spent an entire segment of his show cracking jokes about Scott.

He’s been asked to pee in a cup, called Mr. Clean and compared to a villain from a popular kid’s movie

“He probably would be doing better if he wasn’t trying to kill Harry Potter,” said Stephen Colbert on his June 27th, 2011 Show.

Governor Rick Scott’s latest appearance on a national comedy show came Tuesday night, when comedian Jon Stewart began his program with this.

“Every now and again, a politician comes along that is just truly terrible and really deserving of more scorn than even we can dole out,” said Stewart on his June 11th, 2012 show.

Stewart went on to mock Scott’s efforts to remove illegal voters from the rolls.

“So a voter purge weighted against Hispanic voters, closing polls on a day when many African Americans vote. Nice Try Governor,” Stewart continued.

But it’s not just Stewart and Stephen Colbert mocking Scott. Jay Leno took a stab at the governor’s chief of staff last month and on a trip to Spain, Spanish comedians had a field day after Scott embarrassed their king.

The King had recently received bad press for an elephant hunting trip he took while the country’s economy tanked. He had put the scandal to rest until Scott’s visit.

But does the governor deserve the jokes, or are these cheap shots? The Chairman of the Florida Democrats says the attacks on Scott’s policies are valid.

“It’s funny to watch it, but the tragedy is, it’s not at all funny as a matter of policy for the state,” said Chairman Rod Smith.

A spokesman for the governor says Scott’s jobs agenda takes precedence over quote watching liberal-leaning comedy shows. As for jokes about Scott’s efforts to stop illegal voters from casting ballots, the governor’s spokesman Lane Wright said quote,

“So far, from that small sample, about 100 non citizens admitted they shouldn’t be on the rolls and have been removed. Of those 52 have actually voted in a past election. Over the past 10 years, five elections have been decided by less than 50 votes. So my question to anyone who disagrees would be, just how many non-citizen votes are you willing to ignore in our election process? How many illegal votes are you comfortable with,” asked Wright.

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