
-
Editorials
- Bradenton Herald
- Daytona Beach News-Journal
- Florida Times-Union
- Florida Today
- Ft. Myers News-Press
- Gainesville Sun
- Lakeland Ledger
- Miami Herald
- Naples Daily News
- NWF Daily News
- Ocala Star-Banner
- Orlando Sentinel
- Palm Beach Post
- Pensacola News Journal
- Sarasota Herald-Tribune
- TCPalm
- Sun-Sentinel
- Tallahassee Democrat
- Tampa Bay Times
- Columnists
- Cartoons
-
Press Releases
- Sayfie Review
- FL Speaker of the House
- FL Agriculture Commissioner
- FL Senate President
- FL Governor
- US Senator Moody
- FL Attorney General
- US Senator Scott
- FL CFO
- Congressional Delegation ≻
- Matt Gaetz
- Neal Dunn
- Kat Cammack
- Aaron Bean
- John Rutherford
- Michael Waltz
- Cory Mills
- Bill Posey
- Darren Soto
- Maxwell Frost
- Daniel Webster
- Gus Bilirakis
- Anna Paulina Luna
- Kathy Castor
- Laurel Lee
- Vern Buchanan
- Greg Steube
- Scott Franklin
- Byron Donalds
- Sheila Cherfilus McCormick
- Brian Mast
- Lois Frankel
- Jared Moskowitz
- Frederica Wilson
- Debbie Wasserman Schultz
- Mario Diaz-Balart
- Maria Elvira Salazar
- Carlos Gimenez
- Political Links
-
News Links
- Drudge Report
- NewsMax.com
- AP Florida News
- ABC News' The Note
- NBC News' First Read
- Florida Channel
- Florida TV Stations
- Florida Radio Stations
- Capitol Update
- Florida Newspapers
- Florida Trend
- South Florida Business Journal
- Tampa Bay Business Journal
- Orlando Business Journal
- Jacksonville Business Journal
- News Service of Florida
- Politico Playbook
- Washington Post The Daily 202
-
Research
- Florida Fiscal Portal
- Search Florida Laws
- Search House Bills
- Search Senate Bills
- Search County, City Laws
- Search County Clerks' Records
- Cabinet Agendas, Transcripts
- Search Executive Orders
- Search Atty. General Opinions
- Search Supreme Court Docket
- Florida Supreme Court Rulings
- Search Florida Corporations
- Search Administrative Rules
- Proposed Administrative Rules
- View Advertised Contracts
- Refdesk.com
- Government Services Guide
- Electoral Vote Map
-
Reference
- Florida House
- Florida Senate
- Find Your Congressman
- Find Your State Legislator
- Find Your Local Officials
- Find Government Phone #'s
- Florida Agencies
- Florida Cities
- Florida Counties
- Florida Universities
- County Tax Collectors
- County Property Appraisers
- County Clerks of Court
- County Elections Supervisors
- MyFlorida.com
- OPPAGA
- Advertise With Us
Sun-Sentinel: A tour of depravity in the Everglades | Editorial
Sun-Sentinel: On America's birthday, how we crave courage | Editorial
Herald: Developers agreed to terms of Miami mega mall deal. Now they want to change it | Opinion
Sun-Sentinel: Dysfunction and denials in Delray Beach probe | Editorial
Herald: Don't worry about hurricanes at Alligator Alcatraz. The government has a plan | Opinion
Herald: DeSantis right to veto property tax study. But not for the reasons he may think | Opinion
Herald: The joke's on us as DeSantis, Trump make light of deporting peopleĀ | Opinion
Sun-Sentinel: Budget vetoes reveal a governor's vindictiveness | Editorial
Sun-Sentinel: Veto victims: Homeless, hunger, safety
Herald: Miami-Dade's immigrant past: from the Mariel Tent City to Alligator Alcatraz | Opinion
Democrats look to tie Trump to Scott
By BRANDON LARRABEE
THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA
PHILADELPHIA, July 28, 2016.......... In recent days, Gov. Rick Scott has taken to comparing his upstart bid for the governor's office to Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump's attempt to win Florida's 29 electoral votes.
Turns out, Democrats couldn't agree more.
At a final breakfast shared Thursday by Florida's delegates to the Democratic National Convention, some speakers tried to lash Trump to Scott and warn that the presidential candidate would pursue similar policies to the governor if elected to the White House.
"Make no mistake, Rick Scott and Donald Trump are cut from the same wing of the Republican Party: Not the conservative wing, but the con-man wing," North Florida Democratic Congresswoman Gwen Graham said.
Graham had her own reasons for using the speech to fire on Scott as well as Trump; the congresswoman is considering a bid for governor in 2018. She used her remarks to delegates to attack both men's records on the minimum wage, health care and the environment.
"We're the third-largest state in the nation. It's time for us to start acting like it," Graham said.
She was hardly alone during Thursday's breakfast, as speakers took one last shot at exciting the delegation before it heads back to Florida for the general election.
Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, who ran for president in 2004 and later became chairman of the Democratic National Committee, highlighted the news that Scott will serve as national chairman of Rebuilding America Now, a super PAC backing Trump.
"That's about right," Dean said. "Donald Trump is a Neanderthal nincompoop, and so is Rick Scott. They're perfectly well-matched. Donald Trump is a guy who's made a lot of money at everybody else's expenses and so is Rick Scott.”
It's not the first time Democrats have tried to use Scott, who won both of his races for governor in midterm elections, to motivate presidential electorates that tend to be more liberal. In 2012, the party occasionally tried to tie GOP nominee Mitt Romney to Scott; Romney narrowly lost Florida to President Barack Obama that November.
For Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, winning the state again in 2016 could serve as a knockout punch to Trump. Obama did not need Florida to clinch re-election four years ago; on the other hand, it is incredibly difficult for the GOP to win the White House without it.
"The pressure in some ways is maybe unfair, but the reality is it's going to be all up to you in very, very substantial ways," former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder told the delegates. "We win in Florida and I can almost guarantee that Hillary Clinton is going to be the next president of the United States. If we don't win in Florida, then things become a lot more problematic."
Democrats suggested they don't just want to win the state. They want to run up the score.
"We can't simply beat Donald Trump," California Congressman Mark Takano said. "We must defeat him so thoroughly and so overwhelmingly that no politician ever seeks to run on this type of campaign again."