PROGRESS
FLORIDA IN THE NEWS
The BluVu: Week of November 2nd By Gayle Andrews The BluVu We're in the home stretch and the President is out front still working hard, Sandy has had an impact but tragedy brings out the American in all of us, and Florida Democratic Party executive director Scott Arceneaux gives Progress Florida’s Damien Filer his perspective on Election Day...all this and more as political reality comes your way!
FEATURED
STORIES
President Barack Obama rallies 23,000 supporters in Broward County By Sergio R. Bustos and Amy Sherman Miami Herald Related: Poll: Mitt Romney maintains lead over Obama, 51-45 Related: Dems extend lead over GOP to 133,000 pre-Election Day votes President Barack Obama revved up a partisan Democratic crowd of an estimated 23,000 people Sunday afternoon at the McArthur High School football stadium in Hollywood. For all the talk, presidential race may come down to ground game By Alex Leary and Adam C. Smith Tampa Bay Times Bill Sandman stood in fading daylight in a working class neighborhood of South Tampa and began his sales pitch. Democrats Sue to Extend Florida’s Early Voting By Lizette Alvarez New York Times In a state where legal action often goes hand in hand with presidential elections, the Florida Democratic Party filed a federal lawsuit early Sunday to force the state government to extend early voting hours in South Florida. Five things that could go wrong on Election Day in Florida By Michael Van Sickler Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau Balloting mishaps, confusion and alleged voter fraud won't mean much in the post-election analysis if Tuesday's presidential election isn't close and Florida doesn't matter. A Romney court would set back the clock Editorial Tampa Bay Times The presidential election will decide not just who leads the executive branch but who appoints federal judges. With four justices in their 70s, the next president likely will make at least one appointment to the nine-member U.S. Supreme Court, impacting the law for a generation.
EDITORIAL
CARTOON OF THE WEEK
By Andy Marlette Pensacola News Journal
FLORIDA
POLITICS
Palm Beach County accepting absentee ballots today; Democrats file suit over early voting By Scott Eyman, Dara Kam and Jane Musgrave Palm Beach Post Related: Scott wrong to not extend early voting Related: Justice Department to monitor elections in 23 states, including FL A day after a record-shattering 18,915 Palm Beach County voters stood in hours-long lines, believing it was their last chance to vote before Election Day, the unexpected happened Sunday: Supervisor of Elections Susan Bucher threw open the doors of her main office and allowed people to cast ballots Sunday and Monday. Orange County Early Voting Hours Extended Sunday Following Judge's Ruling By Gary Fineout and Beth Fouhy Associated Press Related: Florida Early Voting: Rick Scott Opposed To Extended Hours A judge extended early voting hours in one Florida county Sunday after Democrats sued to allow more time in a presidential battleground state where more than 4 million ballots have already been cast. A voting debacle in Doral causes chaos and confusion By Patricia Mazzei, Amy Sherman and Kathleen McGrory Miami Herald What began Sunday morning as an attempt by the Miami-Dade elections department to let more people early vote devolved into chaos and confusion only days before the nation decides its next president. Fla. Dems: 'Gov. Scott Ignoring The Facts Of Long Lines At Early Voting Sites' By Sascha Cordner WFSU Tallahassee Despite recording breaking turnout all across the state, there’ve also been several complaints about long lines and wait times of up to three hours at some Florida poll sites. Stand up to election bullies and vote By Monica Russo and Judith Browne Dianis Tallahassee Democrat Like clockwork, in the weeks leading up to Election Day, last-minute intimidation tactics are cropping up. Could Florida's new voting laws really change the election? By Chris Kromm Facing South Florida is the purest of swing states: According to poll-watching websites like FiveThirtyEight, President Barack Obama and Governor Mitt Romney are deadlocked, separated by a mere half-point spread in the polls. Parties rake in millions as they contest legislative dominance By Aaron Deslatte Orlando Sentinel Florida's largest companies, law firms and labor unions have poured a whopping $21.5 million over the last two months into the coffers of both state parties, helping fuel a struggle over Republicans' super-majority control of the state Legislature. Central Florida's early voting strong despite bomb scare By Arelis R. Hernández Orlando Sentinel A bomb scare may have delayed voters for more than four hours in Winter Park, but most Central Florida voters cast ballots without much trouble Saturday — the last day of early voting. Judge rules against allowing West Palm Beach woman to vote in person after dispute over signature By Jane Musgrave Palm Beach Post While questioning the wisdom of state law, Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Glenn Kelley Friday ruled that it does not allow someone to vote in person if their absentee ballot has been rejected. Hialeah ballot scandal figure: I didn’t know I was breaking the law By Enrique Flor and Melissa Sanchez Miami Herald Anamary Pedrosa, the young law school student involved in Hialeah’s absentee-ballot brokering scandal, swore to authorities that she was not aware of the Miami-Dade County ordinance forbidding the collection of absentee ballots by intermediaries — even though the measure was cosponsored by her own boss, County Commissioner Esteban Bovo. In Madison County, Florida's longest absentee-voter fraud case By Steve Bousquet Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau Florida's longest-running case of absentee voter fraud reads almost like a novel.
POLITICAL
RACES
Nelson secures lead in final stretch, despite Mack’s link to Romney By Mary Ellen Klas Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau Republican Mitt Romney’s coattails do not appear to be long enough to carry U.S. Rep. Connie Mack IV into the U.S. Senate, according to a new Miami Herald/El Nuevo Herald/Tampa Bay Times poll. Road to presidency almost always runs through Florida By William March Tampa Tribune Maybe we need to get clear on this: Barack Obama and Mitt Romney are running for president of the United States, not governor of Florida. President Clinton At FSU: Obama Believes 'We Need To Do This Together' By Jessica Palombo WFSU Tallahassee The Obama and Romney presidential campaigns are making their final Florida push before Tuesday’s election. Romney, Michelle Obama plan rallies in Central Florida Monday By Scott Powers and Susan Jacobson Orlando Sentinel Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney is squeezing in one last visit to Central Florida Monday, while First Lady Michelle Obama will rally support for her husband in south Orange County the same day. 10 reasons why Latinos will vote for Obama By Andres Oppenheimer Miami Herald It shouldn’t come as a big surprise that the latest polls show that a whopping 70 percent of Latino likely voters support President Barack Obama, while only 25 percent support Gov. Mitt Romney. Swing voters decide fate of presidential race in Fla. By Marc Caputo Miami Herald They are the swing voters of the ultimate swing state. First Coast is key to presidential candidates' winning Florida By Matt Dixon Florida Times-Union Sure, Florida is widely regarded as the nation’s biggest swing state. Third parties attract few votes, can have big impact By Anthony Man South Florida Sun Sentinel Given up on Barack Obama? Scared of Mitt Romney? GOP outspending Democrats in 2012 campaign's final days By James Call Florida Current Campaign finance reports submitted Friday indicates a committee affiliated with Florida Senate President-designate Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, and his expected successor Senator Any Gardiner, R-Orlando, has more than $500,000 to help candidates in the 2012 campaign’s final weekend. Handicapping the U.S. House races By William Douglas McClatchy News Service In an election year full of uncertainty, one thing seems fairly sure: Republicans will retain firm control of the House of Representatives. America’s Most Disgusting Political Ad: Florida Republican Group Links Elementary School Teacher To Jerry Sandusky By Josh Israel Think Progress In a stunning smear, a GOP group chaired by a prominent Republican strategist and funded by the state Republican leadership, has sent a mailing to Florida voters accusing an elementary school teacher running for state legislature of enabling child molestation because she is in a teacher’s union.
BALLOT
INITIATIVES
Florida voters won’t be fooled again — or will we? By Carl Hiaasen Miami Herald There are so many bad constitutional amendments on Florida’s ballot that it’s hard to know where to start. Tuesday’s ballot questions long, complicated By David Rogers Palm Beach Daily News Brace yourself. If you haven’t cast your vote yet, it may take a while. Big spenders: a look at who is financing the constitutional amendments By Casey Frank Miami Herald When people look at the Florida ballot, their eyes glaze over as they come to the constitutional amendments. That’s understandable. The ballot is laughably long.
ENVIRONMENT
AND ENERGY
Fla. regulators reviewing power companies' rates Associated Press Sarasota Herald-Tribune State regulators are conducting a three-day hearing on annual rate adjustments for Florida's five investor-owned power companies. Environmental groups pushing for greater sea turtle protection along beaches By Eric Staats Naples Daily News A renewed push for habitat protections for Florida's sea turtles is putting the ancient creatures on a crash course with fishermen and beach restoration advocates.
EDUCATION
No schools taking up new school prayer law yet By Kathleen Haughney Orlando Sentinel Last spring, conservative lawmakers railed against the lack of religion in public school and promised that if a school board wanted to set up rules allowing student-led school prayer, it could do it. Alternative Broward diploma program raises concerns By Scott Travis and Megan O'Matz South Florida Sun Sentinel Many of Broward County's struggling high school seniors have been called into their guidance counselors in recent weeks and strongly encouraged — some even say forced — to withdraw and finish their education through an online program. Pinellas schools panel recommends taking the sweets out of fundraisers By Curtis Krueger Tampa Bay Times When parents and kids want to raise money for schools, they often sell the fattening but popular treats that have raked in money for years: chocolate bars, M&Ms and tubs of delicious cookie dough.
JOBS,
BUDGET, AND ECONOMY
Here Are The Jobs: 32 Months, 5.4 MILLION Jobs The Progress Report Think Progress Beating expectations, the final jobs report before the election showed that the economy created 184,000 private sector jobs last month. Bondi, lawmakers agree on foreclosure settlement spending By Gray Rohrer Florida Current The bulk of $300 million in state money that is part of a multistate foreclosure fraud settlement with five of the nation’s largest banks will not be spent until next year. Wake-up call Editorial Gainesville Sun Because of Hurricane Sandy, a lot of infrastructure — highways, bridges, seaports, airports — will have to be rebuilt, repaired or renovated in the hard-hit Northeastern U.S.
HEALTH
AND SENIORS
Future of Medicaid hangs on election By Lloyd Dunkelberger Ocala Star-Banner The outcome of the presidential race will have a profound effect on the health care of millions of Floridians — but not because of the candidates' differences over Medicare. Medicare's home health care rules to focus more on prevention By Stephen Nohlgren Tampa Bay Times Larry Tilson, 52, figures he's doing pretty well for a guy with Lou Gehrig's disease. $34M in doctor bonuses pays off Staff Report Health News Florida Humana Gold Plus took a big leap in Medicare's quality ratings in just one year by paying bonuses to groups of doctors who produced results, the company said. Florida's failure to protect children Editorial Tampa Bay Times Florida's systemic failure to protect children in unlicensed group homes from abuse has finally caught the attention of state leaders.
JUSTICE
AND THE COURTS
Make sure to keep Florida Supreme Court justices on the bench Editorial Palm Beach Post Three of the most important votes to cast on Tuesday are YES, YES and YES to retain R. Fred Lewis, Barbara J. Pariente and Peggy A. Quince as justices of the Florida Supreme Court. |
Monday, November 5, 2012
Daily News Clips for November 5, 2012
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Friday, November 2, 2012
Daily News Clips for November 2, 2012
FEATURED
STORIES
Gov. Rick Scott not likely to extend early voting hours
By Patricia Mazzei and Steve Bousquet
Tampa Bay Times
Citing long lines, a former Miami Beach state senator, the Florida Democratic Party and the League of Women Voters of Florida urged Gov. Rick Scott on Thursday to extend early voting.
First lady stumps for President Obama in Miami
By Diana Moskovitz
Miami Herald
With her husband tied up much of the week managing the response to Superstorm Sandy, first lady Michelle Obama arrived in Florida on Thursday to speak to his supporters in Jacksonville, Daytona Beach, and Miami.
With tight presidential race down to the wire, ground-gamers prod potential voters
By Dara Kam and John Kennedy
Palm Beach Post
A frenzy of phone calls, social media posts and house-to-house door-knocking is consuming the presidential race’s final days, as the data-rich campaigns of Barack Obama and Mitt Romney lock into a desperate fight to push voters to the polls in swing state Florida.
Romney Closing Youth Vote Gap
By Whitney Ray
Capitol News Service
Record turnout among youth voters in 2008 was one of several factors helping Barack Obama win the White House. President Obama is expected to win the youth vote again, but as Whitney Ray tells us, Mitt Romney is closing the gap.
Campaigns lawyered up for election overtime chance
By Curt Anderson and Stephen Braun
Associated Press
Legions of lawyers are ready to enter the fray in case Election Day turns on a legal challenge.
Proposed Medicaid cuts sends shudder through nursing home industry
By Matt Dixon
Florida Times-Union
Medicaid rate cuts of $429 million are being floated as part of a budget cutting exercise required by Gov. Rick Scott.
BEST
OF THE BLOGS
OFA Has Turned the Tables on the GOP Historical Absentee Advantage
By Kartik Krishnaiyer
The Political Hurricane
”Absentee Ballots are like a late reporting Republican Precinct” said one prominent Democratic Party official to me in 2002.
The Staged Events & You Can Help Sandy Victims
By Benjamin J. Kirby
The Spencerian
I've been in the communications business a long time. I have been involved in campaigns and elections for a long time, too.
Broward Is Second Florida County to Address Wage Theft
By Kenneth Quinnell
AFL-CIO Now
This week, Broward County—one of the most populous counties in South Florida—became the second county in the state to pass a local wage theft ordinance, joining Miami-Dade County.
Biden thrills big Ocala crowd
By Bruce Seaman
Daily Marion
Reflecting the theme of the Obama/Biden re-election campaign, the Vice President rocked an estimated 2,500 fired-up supporters at Tuscawilla Park in Ocala on a postcard perfect weather day.
Fran's Story - NO On 6
By Jon Rector
SOG City Oracle
A Florida woman named Fran recounts the tragedy she experienced involving her pregnancy, and how Amendment 6 could impact women like her if passed.
FLORIDA
POLITICS
Long lines at the polls? Blame your lawmakers
Editorial
Orlando Sentinel
Monster storm Sandy has created epic traffic jams in New York City, where mass transit systems that normally carry millions of people a day have been crippled or closed.
Across Florida, state candidates sidestep fundraising limits
By Jason Garcia
Orlando Sentinel
For two decades, Florida has barred candidates for local or state office from accepting more than $500 from a single donor per election.
Scott's approval rating steps up 1 point
Staff Report
Florida Current
With the state's jobless rate improving and the release of a new education plan, Gov. Rick Scott notched a 1-point gain in his favorability rating among Floridians in a new poll that asked about his job performance.
Black tie, blue jeans; Gov. Rick Scott, Republican hopefuls attend BBQ fundraiser
By Morgan Watkins
Gainesville Sun
Gov. Rick Scott, U.S. Senate candidate Connie Mack and other politicians rolled into Alachua County Thursday evening for a night of barbecue, blue jeans and Budweiser with local Republicans.
St. Petersburg taxpayers only on the hook for $29,000 in RNC expenses, mayor says
By Mark Puente
Tampa Bay Times
Taxpayers will not be stuck paying $580,000 in expenses for the Republican National Convention, Mayor Bill Foster said Thursday.
Ethics panel dismisses complaint against Gary Siplin
By Jason Garcia
Orlando Sentinel
The Florida Commission on Ethics has dismissed a complaint against outgoing state Sen. Gary Siplin, D-Orlando, prompted by a taxpayer-funded newsletter Siplin sent out this summer promoting his wife — and then-Senate candidate — Victoria Siplin.
Small-business group triggers counter-demonstration
By Bob Shaw
Orlando Sentinel
They’ll be greeted by folks from Organize Now and the Community Business Association of Central Florida, who’ll counter that NFIB is a Republican front that it says got $3.7 million from Karl Rove’s Crossroads GPS and endorses almost exclusively Republican candidates.
POLITICAL
RACES
Bloomberg Endorses Obama, Citing Climate Change
By Raymond Hernandez
New York Times
In a surprise announcement, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said Thursday that Hurricane Sandy had reshaped his thinking about the presidential campaign and that as a result he was endorsing President Obama.
Disaster politics: Benghazi, Hurricane Sandy and the battle between Obama and Romney
By Marc Caputo
Miami Herald
Blown away by Hurricane Sandy: News of the Sept. 11 attacks in Benghazi, Libya.
Bill Clinton hits the campaign trail for Obama Friday in Lake Worth
By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
For the second time in a week, President Bill Clinton on Friday drums up Florida support for President Obama, kicking off a five-city sweep with an appearance at Palm Beach State College in Lake Worth, part of a last push to get voters to the polls before early voting ends Saturday.
Hillsborough County: Florida's true presidential bellwether
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
America's biggest battleground state has 67 counties but only one with an uncanny knack for picking presidents.
2 Swing States That Swing on Felon Disenfranchisement
By James Ridgeway
Mother Jones
A new infographic from the Prison Policy Initiative (cropped version below) does a nice job of illustrating the massive vote-suppression tactic we wrote about previously—one that could hand two crucial states to Mitt Romney.
The audacity of mendacity
By Daniel Ruth
Tampa Bay Times
From the mouth of a political apparatchik a smidgen of truth was actually uttered.
Nelson defends federal government's role in helping people
By Scott Powers
Orlando Sentinel
When it comes to considering the federal government's role in American's lives, U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson suggested Thursday that people just ask New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.
From road signs to TV ads, West-Murphy race unmatched in its vigor
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
From seven-figure TV ad buys to cheap roadside signs, the attacks have been unrelenting in the nationally watched congressional race between Republican U.S. Rep. Allen West and Democratic challenger Patrick Murphy.
Women voters may be deciding factor in Southerland, Lawson race
By Arek Sarkissian II
Tallahassee Democrat
Democratic 2nd Congressional District candidate Al Lawson said during a Wednesday morning roundtable that votes from women will be one of the deciding factors in the race against GOP incumbent Steve Southerland.
Webster vs. Demings: Close, sane … refreshing
By Scott Maxwell
Orlando Sentinel
One of my favorite races this election season is the one between Republican Dan Webster and Democrat Val Demings.
BALLOT
INITIATIVES
Amendments on social policy, tax breaks stir opposition
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
There are 11 amendments on the ballot for Florida voters this year, most of them a variety-pack of tax breaks for different groups: veterans, first responders, snow birds, low-income seniors.
Real Estate Agents Give Big to Amendment 4 Sponsor
Staff Report
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
Florida real estate agents are not only shelling out big money for a campaign pushing Amendment 4 — they are also giving big money to its sponsor, state Rep. Chris Dorworth.
Say no to amendments that don't belong on ballot anyway
By Sue Carlton
Tampa Bay Times
It is fair to call Mark Sharpe a political wonk, a Tweeter, Facebooker and talker of politics local, state and national.
ENVIRONMENT
AND ENERGY
Some say Hurricane Sandy should refocus nation, Florida on climate change
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
Hurricane Sandy delivered only a glancing blow to Florida before walloping the mid-Atlantic states and New England.
Facing Thursday deadline, attorneys are telling clients to opt out of oil spill settlement
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
In advance of a Thursday deadline, Lawyers said they were assisting hundreds of seafood workers and coastal property owners to opt out of a federal court settlement involving the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
LGBT
'Stunning transformation'
By Ruth Marcus
Florida Today
Sometimes in politics, you have to listen for what’s not being said to understand where things really stand. In the 2012 presidential campaign, the telling — and comforting — silence involves same-sex marriage and gay rights.
EDUCATION
Schools task force looking at tax increases
By James Call
Florida Current
A task force looking at construction needs of public schools is finalizing a proposal for a half mill property tax increase with the money split between traditional schools and charter schools.
'Hold the line on tuition,' Florida Gov. Scott tells community colleges
By Tia Mitchell
Tampa Bay Times
Repeating what has become one of his mantras, Gov. Rick Scott told state community college leaders that he continues to oppose tuition increases.
JOBS,
BUDGET, AND ECONOMY
October jobs report likely to show modest hiring in U.S.
Staff Report
Naples Daily News
The October employment report the government will release Friday will likely solidify the picture of the U.S. job market that's emerged this year: Companies are hiring steadily but cautiously.
More South Floridians file for bankruptcy
By Donna Gehrke-White
South Florida Sun Sentinel
South Florida experienced a sharp increase in personal bankruptcies in October, a sign that banks are resuming efforts to foreclose on delinquent mortgages, local attorneys say.
HEALTH
AND SENIORS
Number of Uninsured Kids Down But Florida Still Falls Short For Coverage
By Lynn Hatter
WFSU Tallahassee
A new report from Georgetown University says when it comes to reducing the number of children without health insurance, Florida has a long way to go.
Humana leads in ratings race
By Carol Gentry
Health News Florida
Twenty years ago, Humana’s Gold Plus Plan was a mess.
CIVIL
RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES
Crime down statewide in first half of 2012, FDLE stats show
By Howard Altman
Tampa Tribune
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement today unveiled its statewide crime statistics for the first half of this year, showing crime rates dropping locally and throughout Florida.
JUSTICE
AND THE COURTS
Campaign for justices is on track to spend $5.5 million
By Mary Ellen Klas
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Related: Protect judicial independence, vote 'yes' on justices
When the Republican Party of Florida launched its "grass roots" offensive against the three justices of the Florida Supreme Court, it unleashed a sleeping giant.
Former lawmaker says take election out of judge selection
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Current
For ethical, legal and tactical reasons, running for the Florida Supreme Court is unlike trying to get any other statewide elected office.
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Thursday, November 1, 2012
Daily News Clips for November 1, 2012
FEATURED
STORIES
Noticeably absent from Mitt Romney's Florida campaign: Gov. Rick Scott
By Steve Bousquet
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Related: Romney dials back criticism during three-city Florida swing
Related: Biden calls for post-election unity, rails on Romney at Sarasota rally
Mitt Romney needs to win Florida, and to do that, it's obvious he does not need Gov. Rick Scott at his side.
Nearly 3 million Floridians have already voted, reports say
By Lloyd Dunkelberger
Gainesville Sun
In a historic surge of pre-election voting, nearly one of every three Florida voters expected to participate this year has already cast a ballot for the 2012 election.
"Nightmare:" Long lines, mail-ballot glitches mark South Florida early voting
By Patricia Mazzei and Marc Caputo
Miami Herald
From Miami Haitians to a Harvard student from Broward, voting early in South Florida — be it by mail or in person — is proving troublesome.
Dems Closing Gap in Absentee Voting
By Whitney Ray
Capitol News Service
Republicans have traditionally dominated absentee voting, but this election season Democrats are closing the gap.
As Election Day nears, groups brace for a showdown at the polls
By Michael Van Sickler
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
It won't just be voters heading to the polls this week in Florida and other swing states, but thousands of lawyers and volunteers scrutinizing how ballots are handed out, scanned and stored inside precincts.
Political ad war in Florida is breaking records
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
Fueled by cash from outside political groups, the arms race over political advertising has reached a crescendo in Florida, where more than $133 million has poured into the state since April to finance a record-breaking barrage of television ads.
FLORIDA
POLITICS
Florida elections officials to return to Palm Beach County ‘seeking answers’ to latest absentee ballot printing error
By Jane Musgrave
Palm Beach Post
Related: Delays in Palm Beach County voters receiving absentee ballots likely due to bar code issue
A day after Palm Beach County Elections Supervisor Susan Bucher acknowledged a new and different ballot printing error, Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner on Tuesday said he will again dispatch top state officials to monitor her operation.
Absentee voting is easy -- but ballots often tossed out
By Kathleen Haughney
Orlando Sentinel
Related: Nearly a quarter of Central Florida voters already have cast ballots
More than ever, Florida residents are turning to absentee ballots, but those voters are also the most at risk to have their vote thrown out by Nov. 6.
West Palm Beach woman sues elections supervisor to challenge signature rule for absentee ballots, be allowed to vote
By Jane Musgrave
Palm Beach Post
Well-known Palm Beach County abortion rights activist Mona Reis on Friday will get to ask a judge to let her vote in person after the election canvassing board last week rejected her absentee ballot because the three officials didn’t believe the signature on it was hers.
Florida GOP memo: Democrats are 'cleaning our clock'
By Evan Axelbank
WPTV West Palm Beach
A memo obtained by NewsChannel 5's Evan Axelbank, from an adviser to a Florida GOP campaign, says that the Democratic turnout effort is "cleaning our clock."
Sure, Florida is big in the electoral college, but not as big as it deserves to be
By Frank Cerabino
Palm Beach Post
You probably think your vote counts more because you live in Florida.
POLITICAL
RACES
From in-person visits to social media, campaigns go all-out to sway voters in tight presidential race
By Dara Kam and John Kennedy
Palm Beach Post
A frenzy of phone calls, social media posts and house-to-house door-knocking is consuming the presidential race’s final days, as the data-rich campaigns of Barack Obama and Mitt Romney lock into a desperate fight to push voters to the polls in swing state Florida.
Biden rips GOP ticket as undependable opportunists
By Bill Thompson
Ocala Star-Banner
Vice President Joe Biden visited Ocala on Wednesday, blasting his Republican rivals Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan as pliable pitchmen who in the final days of the election have softened their rhetoric in order the capture the White House but not their desire to undermine America's middle class.
Obama campaign to roll through Miami with Stevie Wonder, Marc Anthony, first lady
Staff Report
Miami Herald
A few celebrities are scheduled to join First Lady Michelle Obama on Thursday as she makes campaign stops in Jacksonville, Daytona Beach and Miami.
Obama Super PAC "connects the dots" between Rick Scott Medicare fraud and Mitt Romney
By Marc Caputo
Miami Herald
Priorities USA announced it would run a "Connect the Dots" ad in Florida linking the type of fraud that occurred in 1997 at HCA under now-Gov Rick Scott and a company connected years ago to Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.
Mitt Romney says Obama's Chrysler deal undermined U.S. workers: Pants on Fire!
By Jon Greenberg
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald PolitiFact
With Ohio’s 18 electoral votes very much in play, the Mitt Romney campaign aims to blunt one of Barack Obama’s key advantages in that state -- his rescue of the auto industry.
Florida: Seniors vs. youth vote
Staff Report
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
A Quinnipiac-ABC News-New York Times poll out today has some interesting insights about the presidential race in Florida.
Q poll: Nelson’s lead over Mack at 13 points
By William March
Tampa Tribune
A new Quinnipiac University poll shows Sen. Bill Nelson with a 13-point lead over Congressman Connie Mack IV in Florida’s U.S. Senate race.
Eleven Dirty Ways To Swing an Election
By Adam Serwer
Mother Jones
America has come a long way from the days of Jim Crow segregation, but our voting system is far from perfect, and even today there are organizations committed to preventing legitimate voters from excercising the franchise.
Election Extortion
By Rick Outzen
Florida Voices
Four years ago, companies were banned from telling their employees how to vote.
BALLOT
INITIATIVES
Confusing ballot amendments
By Deirdre Macnab
Seminole Voice
Florida is gearing up for one of our country’s most important elections, and the phones at our League of Women Voters office in Tallahassee are ringing off the hook.
Amendment 6 threatens state's women
By Kathy Schmitz
Orlando Sentinel
A no vote on Amendment 6 is critical to preserving religious freedom, women's rights and the right to privacy. This misleading amendment is a danger to Florida's women.
Amendment 8 backers look to rescind 19th century provision
By Victoria Macchi
Naples Daily News
Twelve lines on next week's ballot require Floridians to decide whether a 137-year-old ban on religious funding will be scrubbed out of the state constitution.
ENVIRONMENT
AND ENERGY
'Johnny Appleseed Of Coral' Invites Tourists To Volunteer While Enjoying The Florida Keys
By Jessica Palombo
WFSU Tallahassee
For years, scientists have been sounding the alarm that the world’s coral reefs are dying and disappearing rapidly.
What we don't know
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
For White Springs Mayor Helen B. Miller, Florida's water problems hit home more than two decades ago, when White Sulphur Springs dried up.
LGBT
Gay foster child allegedly mocked, harassed, ignored
By Carol Marbin Miller
Miami Herald
When leaders of a religious school became suspicious that one of their charges was gay, he was confronted and told to fess up: Is it true or is it false?
EDUCATION
Florida state senator wants to add spots to early learning programs
By Margie Menzel
News Service of Florida
Sen. Bill Montford said today he's considering trying to get the Legislature to earmark money for more slots in school readiness programs statewide.
Conservative education reform group calls Rick Scott's plan "tame"
By Jeff Solochek
Tampa Bay Times
Florida Gov. Rick Scott has received lots of attention, much of it positive, for his education plans for the coming year.
School district needs to spend $12 million on computers for new tests, officials say
By Jason Schultz
Palm Beach Post
The Palm Beach County School District will have to spend far more money on new student computers to meet state requirements over the next three than it expects to have available, officials said Wednesday.
JOBS,
BUDGET, AND ECONOMY
DCF to propose $21 million in new initiatives
By James Call
Florida Current
Sharpen your knives or hatchets: It’s that time when state government does its budget-cutting exercise.
Finance, insurance agencies seek more money in budget request
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
State agencies responsible for regulating the finance and insurance industries are asking for more money in the 2013-2014 fiscal year to replace services that have been cut in recent years because of the recession.
Claims from Sandy in the U.S. Northeast could boost insurance rates in Florida, some worry
By Doreen Hemlock
South Florida Sun Sentinel
A surge of insurance claims from Superstorm Sandy in the Northeast could boost rates in Florida, some insurance professionals fear.
Privatize FEMA? Wash that idea away
Editorial
Palm Beach Post
The list of people unqualified to offer advice on Hurricane Sandy starts with this name: Michael Brown.
HEALTH
AND SENIORS
How The Health Law Might Be Changed By The Next President
By Mary Agnes Carey
Kaiser Health News
On the presidential campaign trail, Republican Mitt Romney has repeatedly called for repeal of the 2010 health law and President Barack Obama has vowed to implement it.
How Rick Scott And Rick Perry Could Cost Hospitals Billions
By Bruce Japsen
Forbes
The nation’s state and local public hospitals may face an increase of more than $50 billion in the costs of uncompensated care by 2019 if states decide against participating in an expansion of the Medicaid health insurance program for the poor.
Flavored Tobacco and Teens
By Mike Vasilinda
Capitol News Service
On a day when trick- or- treaters and candy reign supreme, Tobacco Free Florida is warning parents to pay attention to candy flavored cigars and snuff, which it says are being marketed to teens.
CIVIL
RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES
Arguments set in challenge to FL drug testing law
By Kate Brumback
Associated Press
A federal appeals court in Atlanta is set to hear arguments in a legal challenge to a Florida law requiring welfare applicants to pass a drug test.
JUSTICE
AND THE COURTS
FDOC Asks Fla. Legislature For Money Back From Failed Prison Privatization Plan
By Sascha Cordner
WFSU Tallahassee
The Florida Department of Corrections is hoping the Florida Legislature will give them back about $11 million that was taken out of its budget when lawmakers planned to privatize about 30 prisons in South Florida.
Prosecutors, public defenders plead for more state funding
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Current
Florida prosecutors and public defenders can't keep over-worked young lawyers very long without at least a break-even pay raise to offset the state's 3 percent pension deduction, lawyers told state budget planners at a public hearing Wednesday.
Lawyers fuel huge campaign to retain 3 justices
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
The three Florida Supreme Court justices had angered lawmakers and voters, embarrassed the high court and faced uncertain futures.
Readers Poll: GOP's retention decision a bad call
Staff Report
Florida Current
One of the more hotly debated questions on Florida's ballot this election has been whether voters should let Peggy Quince, Barbara Pariente and R. Fred Lewis keep their jobs as Florida Supreme Court justices.
Outspoken Fla. judge accused of ethics violations
By Bill Kaczor
Associated Press
A state investigative panel is questioning the impartiality of an outspoken Palm Beach County judge who frequently criticizes what he sees as racial bias in state laws, prosecutors and law enforcement.
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