Florida
Florida had it’s mini-Trump era. And we’re still here!| Column
It feels like the Blitz, doesn’t it?
For the 49.5% of the country that voted the way I did in November, there hasn’t even been a chance to yell “Incoming!” before the next bombshell. Since the election, with Donald Trump back in his Oval Office bombardier’s seat, the stress has been nonstop.
Wielding his Sharpie, Trump has rained down explosive executive orders, caused massive firings and ordered new cannonades daily — sometimes hourly — to remake and disrupt the federal government. He’s started tariff wars he had to retreat from immediately. He’s demanded tribute from media owners. His billionaire buddies are running amok. He’s unleashed waves of ever-more bizarro disruptors for federal agencies, adding to his Cabinet of Curiosities. The Senate Republican majority truckles, then buckles.
Many people on my side of the divide have sworn off reading, watching or listening to politics at all — for their emotional health, most say. That included me, some of the time. I think our side will shake it off after the first few months, tune back in and start to fight back, even in brightest-red Florida. But there’s a certain defeatist instinct we’ll have to shake off. The feeling that resistance is futile, just give the Borg their day.
It won’t be easy for us here in Florida to pretend we don’t hear the sounds of jungle mayhem up in Washington — the backbiting and the blood-letting, not just against prey but among the predators themselves. For one thing, the variety of feral Florida wildlife rounded up to serve in Trump’s administration has been impressive.
His chief of staff, Susie Wiles, is from Jacksonville. New Secretary of State Marco Rubio took the first plane to Panama to nick back the canal. The amazing Department of Justice nomination of Floridian Matt Gaetz was swapped out for the almost-as-amazing Floridian Pam Bondi. Tampa-born, Florida’s former attorney general — 2020 election denier, anti-Obamacare, anti-gay-marriage, Fox News host — was confirmed as chief law enforcement officer. Of the United States.
If a new pandemic wiped out just Floridians — and Fox hosts — there would be slim pickings left for Trump. Well, no need to worry about combating a new pandemic. There’d be no vaccines here anyway.
But in truth, Florida’s already been a Petri dish for the Trump crowd.
I should start by saying I’m happy in my adopted state. I live in a purple area of Tampa and have overwhelmingly pleasant encounters. I’m an older guy living among younger neighbors, a moderate liberal among many conservatives. One of the TV monitors in my gym shows Fox, the other CNN. (No MSNBC. That would be too much.)
Speaking for myself, I think that’s a healthy way to live. It keeps me in touch with how others think. Liberals need to do more of that. I supported Joe Biden, pre-debate. I became a Dude for Harris. But when Harris turned down the three-hour chat with podcaster Joe Rogan, I said publicly, “That’s it for us.”
Spend your days with Hayes
Subscribe to our free Stephinitely newsletter
Columnist Stephanie Hayes will share thoughts, feelings and funny business with you every Monday.
You’re all signed up!
Want more of our free, weekly newsletters in your inbox? Let’s get started.
Explore all your options
• • •
Since moving to Florida, one engaging pastime has been writing about Gov. Ron DeSantis. For six years, I’ve watched with a gimlet eye as he’s wielded his political machete up and down the state, building a career out of whacking the woke. If you’re partial to MAGA, there’s been a lot to like about DeSantis. It’s been a dry run for what’s happening nationally now.
DeSantis railed against indoctrination in schools, fired prosecutors, banned reporters, took over colleges, denounced pronouns, encouraged snitches, cowed corporations, hired scary-mad health chiefs, and extirpated DEI way earlier than Trump. He even ginned up his own state police force to protect against rigged elections that never were.
(Whenever I get going on DeSantis, I always, always say, in fairness: DeSantis was also ahead in a crucially important way: He kept the schools open during the pandemic. I thanked him, and my kids and grandkids thanked him. If only he weren’t such a putz about everything else.)
But here’s something unexpected. The DeSantis tide has suddenly turned in Florida. Not in political hue, because things aren’t turning more blue. But checks and balances have been spotted in the wild. For years, especially since he romped to re-election, DeSantis dominated the state Legislature like Kim Jong Un in Pyongyang. Everybody clapped, chest medallions rattled. But a group of leading legislators in Tallahassee finally had enough.
A diminished and term-limited DeSantis is now the target of political buckshot from his once-supine state Legislature. The fellas have finally gone lame-duck hunting. Before anyone cheers, let me add quickly it’s at least in part a squabble about who can bash unauthorized migrants the best.
When the scrap broke out, DeSantis posted that he was the baddest immigrant wrangler of them all, and Daddy Trump loved him best again. To prove it, he sent off posts while playing golf with Trump himself, at his course in Palm Beach! I’m speculating now, but if either golfer had glanced into the rough at the dudes irrigating the Trump course, they might have jump-started deportations then and there. But that would have left them with a tough lie.
• • •
Immigration, in my unpopular opinion, is the new Big Lie. Or not so new, considering this all started with migrant-baiting Trump on the escalator. I know, it’s the issue. It’s high on everybody’s list of urgent concerns, even some on our side. But I call it bogus. Yes, it’s a big mess. It’s unfair to those who waited in line, an unfair burden on some localities, and asylum laws need reforming.
But an urgent foreign menace it’s not. In this vast land, immigrants not living here legally take few desirable American jobs. They’re far more law-abiding than citizens. Fentanyl is smuggled in via legal border crossings. The data show that immigrants eventually contribute more than they take. U.S. birth rates are dropping; we need the population. We need sane, expanded legal immigration rules. Ronald Reagan, official GOP saint, offered conditional amnesty to 2.6 million unauthorized immigrants in 1986.
Yet the hypocrisy, notably here in Florida, is head-snapping. Everyone in or out of power knows there’s no way a million immigrants will be expelled from this state alone. They’re the sinew of a dozen industries, from agriculture to construction to food service to hospitality to personal care.
This state, especially this state, would be crippled if immigrants actually left. Never mind eggs. Oranges would cost five bucks apiece. Mansion lawns in Siesta Key would turn brown. You’d get even more outrageous “suggested tip” options on those electronic fast-food tablets. Retirees would spike each others’ oxygen tanks to hire away health aides. Of course, the bosses of these Florida industries will keep their workforces, with a wink and a nod.
• • •
For a long while, the nods — and the curtsies — were directed only toward DeSantis. No longer. Now, attention must be paid to the awakened towheads of Tallahassee. Some small balance has been restored, if only to disagree on how best to chase down desperate people. The personal stories that will be told in the months to come, the family lives shattered, may move at least some hearts.
But no, the pushback didn’t change the state of our soul, or the soul of our state. The pursuit, and ratting out, of perceived enemies continue to be official policy in Florida, as in the new Washington. But down here, there’s been a pause, if not a turn; a glint, for those of us who can’t see the light.
DeSantis has been a bully. As we know from popular culture, (a bit less reliably from history), bullies eventually get payback. It will take time. But if it happens up there as it happened down here, eventually some Washington Republicans will push back. If Florida is any guide, this degree of Trump strongman excess will inspire pushback. A poodle, or even a senator, will break its leash if it jerked around for too long.
Especially if they see weakness ahead.
Resistance is flickering in the first few weeks. The editorial curmudgeons at the Wall Street Journal have already called the Trump tariffs harebrained schemes, the “dumbest” moves ever. In our known universe, Republican presidents don’t run against the editorial page of the WSJ on crucial matters of business and profit. Like most bullies, Trump backed down from the tariffs when confronted.
Who and what else will Trump have trampled on in three months? In six? In a year? Judges, governors, state officials are already pushing back. In blue states, governors are being imaginative about “Trump-proofing” their states. Threatened federal workers are dodging and feinting. Some media wobble, more are standing strong. (The tech platforms, alas, are all in with Trump.)
Might we have to wait as long as the 2026 midterms when Trump becomes a lame duck himself? When the second half is underway, the end is in sight, when his primary threats no longer pack punch? Maybe. But it will probably come faster than that.
This is the Trump who launched a thousand failed or bankrupt businesses — from Trump steaks to Trump Mortgages to Trump Fragrances to Trump Shuttle to Trump Casinos to Trump University. He has a blazingly fast burn rate. Today, it’s Greenland, Panama, Gaza Riviera. You get the idea. Like his tariff wars, Trump gets ideas, launches them, then can’t hold focus. The ideas crash and burn, and it’s best not to be drawn in.
And so the hope is …? Here, in the practice lap DeSantis drove for Trump, we saw power shift a bit, but at normal, almost seasonal speed. Resistance to DeSantis broke out — Hark! Another branch of government! — just as DeSantis reached the two-year mark of his second term. Not that there was a change of heart on either side. But there was a shift in gravity. At least a seed’s worth.
Everything has a season, said both Ecclesiastes and folk singer Pete Seeger. A time to plant, a time to reap. There’s a lot of mad, vindictive reaping going on, and we don’t have the tools to stop much of it. But fret less. Excess thrives on distress. Another folk original, James Carville, says, Let Trump punch himself out. Bide your time. And as you wait, organize, gather seed, do something useful for yourself or someone else.
No hard predictions here. I got enough wrong in the last election. DeSantis, like Trump, is resilient. But bullies overstep. DeSantis overstepped. And Trump always, always oversteps.
Guest columnist Barry Golson covers the Tampa Bay senior scene. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, Playboy, Forbes and AARP. He is the author of “Gringos in Paradise” (Scribner). Contact him at gbarrygolson@gmail.com.
Florida
Five Florida Panthers Named to Rosters for 2026 IIHF World Championship | Florida Panthers
SUNRISE, Fla. – Five Florida Panthers players and five staff members will represent their home countries at the upcoming 2026 IIHF World Championship, taking place May 15 through May 31 in Zurich and Fribourg, Switzerland. Games will be broadcast on NHL Network in the United States.
Marek Alscher, 22, will represent Czechia at the IIHF World Championship for the first time. He previously played for his home country at the 2024 IIHF U20 World Junior Championship, skating in seven games to help the Czechs capture the bronze medal over Finland. Alscher made his NHL debut with the Panthers in 2025-26, notching three assists over four games played. He also skated in 52 American Hockey League (AHL) games with Florida’s affiliate, the Charlotte Checkers, recording 11 points (3-8-11).
Aleksander Barkov, 30, missed the 2026 Winter Olympic Games due to injury but had been named to Finland’s preliminary roster in June of 2025. He previously earned a bronze medal at the 2014 Winter Olympic Games alongside current Panthers assistant coach Tuomo Ruutu, and earned a silver medal representing his home country at the 2016 IIHF Men’s World Championship. At the 2025 NHL 4 Nations Face-Off, Barkov served as captain of Finland.
Anton Lundell, 24, will be participating in his second IIHF World Championship after earning a silver medal with Finland in 2021, where he posted seven points (4-3-7) in 10 games as a 19-year-old. He helped Finland capture the bronze medal at the 2026 Winter Olympic Games this season and previously earned gold at the 2019 IIHF U20 WJC and 2018 IIHF U18 WJC, as well as a bronze medal at the 2021 U20 WJC.
Sandis Vilmanis, 22, will represent Latvia at the IIHF World Championship for the first time in his career. He played for Latvia at the 2026 Winter Olympic Games in February as well as at the 2022, 2023 and 2024 IIHF U20 World Junior Championships, serving as an alternate captain in 2024 where he produced four points (2-2-4) over five games. Vilmanis made his NHL debut with the Panthers in 2025-26, logging five points (3-2-5) in 19 games with Florida while compiling 38 points (17-21-38) in 48 American Hockey League (AHL) contests with the Panthers affiliate, the Charlotte Checkers.
Matthew Tkachuk, 28, will attempt to become the first American to join the Triple Gold Club (Stanley Cup, World Championship Gold Medal and Olympic Gold Medal), as well as the first player in NHL history to win all three parts of the Triple Gold Club within a 12-month span. This will be Tkachuk’s first time participating in the IIHF World Championship.
In addition to his 2026 Olympic gold medal, Tkachuk also earned gold representing the United States at the 2015 IIHF U18 World Junior Championship and the 2014 U17 World Hockey Challenge, as well as a bronze medal at the 2016 IIHF U20 WJC. He served as alternate captain for the U.S. at the 2026 Olympics and 2025 4 Nations Face-Off.
Florida will have four staff members representing the United States. Panthers Assistant General Manager Brett Peterson is serving as General Manager for the second time after holding the position in 2024. Panthers Head Equipment Manager Teddy Richards will serve as equipment manager and Florida’s Head Athletic Trainer Dave DiNapoli will work as athletic trainer. Panthers President of Hockey Operations & General Manager Bill Zito will serve on the Advisory Group.
Panthers Assistant General Manager Gregory Campbell will assist with evaluating and selecting players for Canada.
Panthers fans can stay up to date on all the Cats’ representatives at the 2026 IIHF World Championships at FloridaPanthers.com/WorldChampionship.
2026-27 Florida Panthers Territory Memberships are available now! Click here to learn more. For all the latest in Panthers news, concerts and events at Amerant Bank Arena & FTL War Memorial, sign up for ’93 Society newsletter and receive information straight to your inbox. Visit FloridaPanthers.com or SeatGeek.com for all ticketing needs.
Florida
Lake O had 81 algal blooms in 2 years near Florida slaughterhouse site
A Martin County slaughterhouse near Lake Okeechobee could increase toxic algal blooms in the C-44 Canal, St. Lucie River and Indian River Lagoon.
There have been 81 algal blooms in the past two years within 2 miles of a proposed slaughterhouse in western Martin County, according to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection Algal Bloom Dashboard.
The slaughterhouse will increase pollution and bring more potentially toxic algal blooms to Lake Okeechobee, whose waters sometimes are released into the C-44 Canal and flow into the St. Lucie River and Indian River Lagoon in Stuart, opponents say.
Chancey Bay Ranch owner Tuny Mizrachi has proposed building a 56,784-square-foot slaughterhouse on 26 acres of his 2,046-acre-property at 8401 SW Connors Highway, abutting Lake O.
5 ways a slaughterhouse can increase Lake Okeechobee pollution
The Guardians of Martin County have raised at least five concerns with the Martin County Commission:
- Meat processing facilities, though necessary, have the potential to be noisy nuisances and significant sources of disease and pollution for air and water.
- The facility would be a new source of pollution in a watershed that’s designated as “impaired” because of elevated concentrations of nitrogen and phosphorus.
- The facility would be a potential new source of pollutants near one of Martin County’s lowest income and most ethnically diverse communities.
- There’s no evidence the facility has a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit, or plans to follow effluent limitation guidelines or conduct water-quality monitoring.
- The South Florida Water Management District has permitted the facility to withdraw 6.7 million gallons of water per year for 20 years from Florida’s surficial aquifer, despite it being subject to varying levels of saltwater intrusion, especially in Martin County. The SFWMD has designated all of Martin County a Water Resource Caution Area.
Blood, feces, oil, grease, ammonia and antibiotic residue from the proposed slaughterhouse would contribute to harmful algal blooms, including toxic cyanobacteria, Martin County Administrator Don Donaldson wrote to the DEP and SFWMD.
Tim O’Hara is TCPalm’s environment reporter. Contact him at tim.ohara@tcpalm.com.
Florida
Florida Lotto $23.5 million prize on May 13. Winning numbers tonight
Will a $2 Florida Lotto ticket make someone a millionaire this week? As they say in the lottery business, “it could happen to you.”
After one lucky ticket from a BJ’s Wholesale Club Liquors in Clermont, Florida, matched all six numbers in the Wednesday, Feb. 4, Florida Lotto drawing for $21.5 million, the jackpot reset.
The 27th rollover occurred after no one matched all six numbers in the Saturday, May 9, Florida Lotto drawing. That means the grand prize increased to $23.5 million for Wednesday, May 13.
Check this story after 11:15 p.m. ET tonight to see the winning numbers for the Florida Lotto drawing on Wednesday, May 13.
In case you’re wondering, Saturday’s winning numbers were 39-21-20-34-6-52. Double Play numbers were 17-1-41-29-22-43.
Below is what to know about lottery odds, how long to claim the cash option if you bought a ticket in Florida, and what happens to unclaimed prize money, according to the Florida Lottery.
Winning Florida Lotto numbers for Wednesday, May 13, 2026?
Florida Lotto drawings are at 11:15 p.m. ET every Wednesday and Saturday, including holidays.
Check this story after 11:15 p.m. ET tonight to see the winning numbers for the Florida Lotto drawing on Wednesday, May 13.
How do you play the Florida Lotto?
According to Florida Lottery game rules, Florida Lotto players pick 6 numbers between 1 and 53 or select a Quick Pick ticket. There are prizes for matching three to six numbers. Players who match two of 6 winning Florida Lotto numbers get a free ticket.
The Florida Lottery site states game add-ons include Double Play for $1, a bonus drawing where players could win up to $250,000 using the same numbers (Double Play drawings are held immediately after Florida Lotto drawings). Another Florida Lotto game add-on is EZmatch for $1 per play. If players match any EZmatch number to their Florida Lotto numbers, they instantly win that prize.
Tickets start at $2. Good luck!
When was the last Florida Lotto won? How long has the jackpot rolled over?
The Florida Lotto jackpot was last won on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. BJ’s Wholesale Club Liquors on South Highway 27 in Clermont, Florida, sold the winning Quick Pick ticket worth $21.5 million.
The new lottery jackpot reset at $1 million for the drawing on Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026. Below is a recap of lottery drawings for the latest streak.
- Wednesday, May 13: $23.5 million
- Saturday, May 9: $22.25 million
- Wednesday, May 6: $21.25 million
- Saturday, May 2: $20.25 million
- Wednesday, April 29: $19 million
- Saturday, April 25: $18 million
- Wednesday, April 22: $17 million
- Saturday, April 18: $16 million
- Wednesday, April 15, Tax Day: $15.25 million
- Saturday, April 11: $14.50 million
- Wednesday, April 8: $13.75 million
- Saturday, April 4: $12.75 million
- Wednesday, April 1, or April Fool’s Day: $12 million
- Saturday, March 28: $11.25 million
- Wednesday, March 25: $10.25 million
- Saturday, March 21: $9.25 million
- Wednesday, March 18: $8.25 million
- Saturday, March 14, Pi Day: $7.50 million
- Wednesday, March 11: $7 million
- Saturday, March 7: $6.75 million
- Wednesday, March 4: $6 million
- Saturday, Feb. 28: $5 million
- Wednesday, Feb. 25: $4 million
- Saturday, Feb. 21: $3.25 million
- Wednesday, Feb. 18: $2.50 million
- Saturday, Feb. 14, or Valentine’s Day: $1.75 million
- Wednesday, Feb. 11: $1.25 million
- Saturday, Feb. 7: $1 million
When is the next Florida Lotto drawing? What are the odds, chances of winning Florida Lotto lottery?
Florida Lotto drawings are held at 11:15 p.m. ET on Wednesdays and Saturdays, including holidays. According to floridalottery.com, players have a 1 in 22,957,480 chance to match all six numbers whether the jackpot is $1 million or $36 million. Prizes range from $2 to the grand prize jackpot, which varies.
The next Florida Lotto drawing will be on Saturday, May 16.
How long do you have to cash in a Florida Lottery ticket?
Prizes for Florida Lottery must be claimed within 180 days (six months) from the date of the drawing. To claim a single-payment cash option, a winner has within the first 60 days after the applicable draw date to claim it.
Does the Florida Lottery reveal lottery winners? Can you stay anonymous if you win lottery in Florida?
According to Florida Lottery’s website, winners cannot remain anonymous: “Florida law mandates that the Florida Lottery provide records containing information such as the winner’s name, city of residence; game won, date won, and amount won to any third party who requests the information.”
However, the site states, the “names of lottery winners claiming prizes of $250,000 or greater will be temporarily exempt from public disclosure for 90 days from the date the prize is claimed, unless otherwise waived by the winner.”
Does Walmart sell lottery tickets? Where to buy lottery tickets in Florida
In Florida, most gas stations and some grocery stores sell lottery tickets. It’s harder to find a gas station that doesn’t sell Powerball, Mega Millions, Florida Lottery and scratch-off tickets than it is to find one that does.
Publix also sells lottery tickets and is known for selling many winning tickets. A lesser-known location is Walmart. Whether the Walmart location closest to you sells lottery tickets depends on your state and the store. Many Walmart locations in Florida have self-service lottery ticket vending machines or sell lottery tickets at the customer service desk.
You can use the “Where to Play” search tool on the Florida Lottery website to find a grocery store or gas station near you that sells lottery tickets.
(This story will be updated to include new information.)
Lianna Norman and Jennifer Sangalang are trending reporters for the USA TODAY NETWORK-Florida, covering pop culture, lotteries, rocket launches, Florida wildlife, breaking news and more. You can get all of Florida’s best content directly in your inbox each weekday by signing up for the free newsletter, Florida TODAY, at https://floridatoday.com/newsletters.
-
Kentucky6 minutes agoFormer Kentucky education commissioner to leave California superintendent job
-
Louisiana12 minutes agoOil donors cling to Cassidy in Louisiana primary
-
Maine18 minutes agoA Maine couple known for restoring cabins on TV is opening an inn of their own – The Boston Globe
-
Maryland24 minutes agoProminent immigrant rights group endorses Ferguson to remain as Senate president
-
Michigan30 minutes agoMichigan State roster reset: All eyes on Jeremy Fears Jr.’s return
-
Massachusetts36 minutes agoHacky sack is suddenly cool again – The Boston Globe
-
Minnesota42 minutes ago
Support from DC for Michele Tafoya’s Senate run splits Minnesota GOP
-
Mississippi48 minutes agoYour Mississippi forecast for Friday, May 15 – SuperTalk Mississippi