I moderated a post-Session panel today for the Tampa Chamber of Commerce
I was surprised to hear lawmakers flat-out say they view this new Compact as an "expansion" of gambling in Florida.
This raises at least two possible scenarios given that Fla. voters just amended the Constitution to limit gambling expansion.
1. The lawmakers are against the Compact because they view it as expansion and they want to uphold the will of people.
Or...
2. Lawmakers agree that the Compact is expansion but they will, like legislators before them, put the will of the people to the side, and vote for the Compact.
The panel also reinforced what I am hearing about where the House stands on the Compact and that is, 'the House has made no promises' re: support for Compact and that the Speaker has made it clear this is a 'jump ball' vote and members are free to vote as they want.
Not that House members aren't always free to vote as they want.
But I think there is trouble in the House for the Compact.
How do House members running in competitive primaries for the Senate OR are fearful of being drawn into a re-election primary explains to conservative voters they voted for sports betting controlled by the Tribe?
Then again, this trouble may not be trouble.
Did anyone notice that a lobbyist who was signed to work against Compact quickly de-registered from new client? That's the Gov Office and Sen Prez putting the smack down.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Alright, let's go down a rabbit hole and talk about what's happened to @Debbie_Mayfield and how it plays into the simmering tensions between @GovRonDeSantis and the Florida Legislature.
For starters, we have to put aside the merits of the Division of Elections' claim that Mayfield was not qualified for the ballot because of term limits.
What I am interested in is, well, everyone in The Process sees the Mayfield disqualification as a @RonDeSantis play.
/2
The thinking is that the Governor's Office coordinated with Cory Byrd's Department of State to disqualify @Debbie_Mayfield when its job has always been viewed as "ministerial" (that word is being used a lot in Tally today).
If Mayfield was not qualified, it's up to her electoral opponents to make the case before a judge and have her thrown off the ballot.
The @NYTimes reporting by @ShaneGoldmacher & @maggieNYT in which its confirmed the campaign is filtering memes, etc. to influencer surrogates is just more evidence that @RonDeSantis is “too online.”
Also raises serious questions about who is in charge of comms.
If you were wondering why @RonDeSantisFL may have asked @AdamLaxalt to direct the @NvrBackDown24 super PAC, it may be, in part, because of what this poll out of Kentucky shows…
My sources in Kentucky (yes I’ve actually worked Kentucky GOP politics!) tell me they would not be surprised if @KellyCraftKY finishes third in the Bluegrass State’s gubernatorial primary.
Putting politics aside for a moment, and with Memorial Day Weekend approaching, can we talk about a developing trend that must be stamped out — and that is man-floating, the act in which a bro lays on his float and camps out at the stairs of the pool.
Man-floating is the manspreading of Summer 2023 and it must end.
How the hell are we supposed to get into the pool without going through this guy, like he’s the bouncer at some club?
Of course, I see the ladies doing this, often in packs, but they can usually be tip-toed around.
But the man-floaters, who also often run in packs, are a menace to the pool scene.
My current solution is to high-step into the pool, kicking water on them.
The more I think about it the more I am convinced there is the same existential threat posed to @RonDeSantisFL by the @Disney lawsuit as there was to Fox & Tucker Carlson by the Dominion action.