As Ron DeSantis & other Tallahassee Republicans spend taxpayer money fighting citizen-led referendums to overturn a state abortion ban (Amendment 4) and legalize marijuana (Amendment 3), they keep blurring the line between public governing and partisan campaigning.
For example:
When three state agencies in Tallahassee booked airtime for a joint TV commercial attacking Amendment 4, disclosure records show they used a buyer named Whitney Eversole.
On the ad buy for the state agencies, Eversole is listed representing a firm called FiDi Media.
But other concurrent records show Eversole also works with a firm called FlexPoint Media.
FlexPoint Media is the same firm being used by both the Republican Party of Florida, which is running ads against Amendment 3 and Amendment 4, and Keep Florida Clean, which is running ads against Amendment 3.
At the same time, DeSantis has his chief of staff –James Uthmeier – who draws a $202,000-a-year salary from Florida taxpayers – chairing two political committees raising money against the amendments: Keep Florida Clean and Florida Freedom Fund
Last month, DeSantis used a state office to hold a strategy call with anti-abortion activists working against Amendment 4.
One of the people DeSantis had speak on that call is the leader of a firm called The Liberty Counsel.
The Liberty Counsel is simultaneously working as a consultant to one of the political groups campaigning against Amendment 4 ("Florida Voters Against Extremism"):
And earlier this summer, Florida House Speaker Paul Renner (R-Palm Coast) gave a $75-an-hour part-time job to an anti-abortion analyst from the conservative Heritage Foundation. That's the far-right think tank in Washington behind Project 2025.
Putting this Heritage Foundation analyst on the public payroll allowed Renner to install her on a state panel that wrote an economic statement for Amendment 4 that will be printed on the ballot alongside the amendment.
She then helped write an economic statement that was so speculative and misleading that Florida’s chief economist refused to sign off on it.
The Heritage Foundation was also one of the right-wing groups that lobbied DeSantis, Renner and other Florida Republicans to pass the state’s near-total abortion ban in the first place.
In other words, the Heritage Foundation lobbied for Florida’s abortion ban.
And then the Heritage Foundation got to help write a misleading ballot summary for an amendment that would overturn that ban.
So…Ron DeSantis just ordered $15.5 million in taxpayer-funded advertising.
It comes as his administration campaigns against a referendum to repeal a statewide abortion ban – and amid rumors it may launch a public campaign against a referendum to legalize recreational marijuana.
The purchase orders were all made last week through four different state agencies: The Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA), the Department of Children & Families (DCF), the Department of Education (DOE) and the Department of Health (DOE).
All are with Strategic Digital Services (SDS), a Tallahassee-based marketing firm that ACHA has engaged to promote a website that the agency is using to attack Amendment 4, the citizen-led constitutional amendment that would overturn a near-total ban on abortion in Florida.
New: A few months before Florida’s public healthcare agency launched an ad campaign to stop Florida voters from overturning the state’s near-total abortion ban, state lawmakers in Tallahassee quietly gave the agency $1 million in taxpayer money to spend on “marketing.”
(1/12)
Lawmakers slipped the money into the state budget under a misleading line item that gave no hint of how it could be used.
(2/12)
They did so at the request of Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration, where anti-abortion senior officials are scurrying to stop Amendment 4 — a proposed constitutional amendment on the ballot this fall that would undo a statewide abortion ban.
The Supreme Court of Florida appears ready to impose a fetal personhood law on the state – via a ruling that'd classify zygotes, embryos and fetuses as people under the state constitution.
I say that because 6 of the court’s 7 justices just signaled support for fetal rights...🧵
To explain: As anyone who follows Florida politics knows, the state Supreme Court issued two seismic rulings on abortion this week.
The first decision – which came on a 6-1 vote – ruled that women and pregnant people in Florida no longer have a constitutional right to abortion via a privacy clause that was added to the state constitution in 1980.
Florida lawmakers may be growing skeptical of Ron DeSantis' attempt to turn New College of Florida into an explicitly conservative institution (and an easy landing spot for DeSantis administration allies in need of high-paying jobs)....
Yesterday evening, lawmakers negotiating a final state budget proposed giving an extra $382 million to fund operations at Florida's 12 public universities.
Each university would get some of that extra operations cash – including New College, which would get $15 million.
But the other 11 schools would all get permanent funding boosts (aka "recurring" revenue).
New College's extra cash would be for one year only ("non-recurring")
In a last-minute maneuver, the Florida Senate wants to stop cities and counties from imposing any kind of restrictions on gas-powered leaf blowers for at least the next year.
Senate budget negotiators just proposed adding the issue to a budget-related bill:
The Senate also wants to add $100,000 to the budget to pay for a study comparing the life cycles of gas-powered leaf blowers vs. electric/battery-powered ones:
The lead Senate negotiator on this particular part of the state budget is Republican Sen. Jason Brodeur (R-Sanford), whose district includes the city of Winter Park...which has been discussing a ban on gas-powered leaf blowers.
Ron DeSantis has come back to Florida...and state lawmakers are poised to give him essentially unlimited military power.
The bill makes a bunch of changes around the "Florida State Guard," the governor-controlled militia that lawmakers resurrected in 2022 at DeSantis' request.
But it does two big things, in particular.
First, the bill would allow the governor to active the state guard for literally any reason at all.