Florida
Winner and Loser of the Week in Florida politics — Week of 3.2.25

The Process can’t seem to get enough of musical chairs in recent months, and we got another edition this week.
This time, it was former state Rep. Bob Rommel deciding to take a gig with the America First Policy Institute (AFPI) as the Florida State Chapter’s Executive Director.
That’s notable as it takes Rommel out of the running for the Senate District 28 contest to replace former Senate President Kathleen Passidomo.
Rommel has raised big stacks of cash in anticipation of a run. But his path was complicated when Passidomo endorsed state Rep. Lauren Melo as her preferred successor.
Still, Rommel had enough cash to mount a serious run and at least force Melo to spend significantly to secure the GOP nomination next year.
Instead, Rommel decided against the move — and against running for Congress to replace U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds as he mounts a run for Governor — and took a gig working with Donalds’ wife, Erika, at AFPI.
That gives Rommel a cushy job and clears the path for Passidomo’s preferred successor. The difference between this and a normal game of musical chairs? It seems that all the major players here are winners.
Now, it’s onto our weekly game of winners and losers.
Winners
Honorable mention: BayCare St. Anthony’s. A point of personal privilege to start our winner’s list. We want to give credit to BayCare St. Anthony’s for taking extra good care of our publisher, Peter Schorsch.

Peter went in for a hip replacement surgery this week that was a full success. And that’s thanks to the wonderful team at St. Anthony’s that was able to keep Peter in one piece.
“I cannot express how grateful I am for my wife and her unending love, concern, and patience. (Of course she got us custom T-shirts for the surgery because what would a day in the family’s life be without the right gear?),” he shared following the surgery.
“Nor can I properly express the appropriate level of gratitude I have for the doctors, nurses, PTs, and the rest of the @BayCare St. Anthony’s team for their incredible level of professionalism. Even the security guard and valets are pros! Always grateful to God, who watches over us, and to the Beloved Virgin Mary, who has protected and nurtured me so many times in my life.”
Also a shout-out also to BayCare lobbyist Jason Rodriguez for providing service outside his normal line of work and checking in on Peter during his stay.
We are a small team here at Florida Politics, and needless to say we can’t do what we do without Peter. We were all awaiting the good news as Peter’s procedure was underway, and it was a huge relief to know that everything went smoothly thanks to the St. Anthony’s A-team.
Now, the recovery begins.
Almost (but not quite) the biggest winner: JD Vance. We don’t make it a habit of spotlighting politicians without a strong connection to Florida. But Vance gets a surprise spot on this list thanks to a pull putting him 14 points ahead of Gov. Ron DeSantis in a 2028 Presidential Primary poll … of just Florida voters.
DeSantis getting creamed in his home state is not a strong sign for his future presidential prospects.
Now of course, it’s way too early to take away anything set in stone from these polls. And the survey came from the Donald Trump-aligned Fabrizio Lee & Associates, which certainly has an interest in propping up Trump’s Vice President — and possibly shivving on-and-off political rival DeSantis.
But other surveys of the contest nationwide have also put Vance well ahead of DeSantis.
So when this latest poll put Vance ahead of DeSantis 47% to 33% in Florida, it definitely caught our attention.
And if DeSantis goes from losing big to Trump in 2024 to seeing his wife lose the Governor’s race in 2026 (again, way too early to know what will happen there), then we have to think polls like this will make DeSantis think twice to opening himself up to a third straight electoral embarrassment. And that would make it all the more likely Vance is the GOP’s heir apparent.
The biggest winner: James Uthmeier. Uthmeier makes his first appearance atop this list from his strong stance against reprobate brothers Andrew and Tristan Tate.
We made our feelings known on these two tools last week. This week, Uthmeier confirmed the existence of a state investigation into the brothers’ conduct to see if they potentially broke any laws in Florida.
“Many of these victims are coming forward, some of them minors. People can spin or defend however they want, but in Florida, this type of behavior is viewed as atrocious. We’re not going to accept it,” Uthmeier said.
“They chose to come here and set their feet down in this state, and we’re going to pursue every tool we have within our legal authority to hold them accountable.”
Now, the Tates and others tried to twist this thing into some sort of political attack on the DeSantis administration and tried to wedge it in as another piece of the proxy war between DeSantis and Trump, the latter of whom Andrew Tate vehemently supports.
Except, that narrative got blown to smithereens when Donalds, who is Trump’s choice in the 2026 race for Governor, backed Uthmeier’s move.
“I think those allegations have to be fully investigated, and that we go from there,” Donalds said.
“The key thing is, we don’t tolerate the trafficking of women or, frankly, the abuse of women. We do not tolerate that. So if the Attorney General finds cause under Florida law to investigate that, then I wish him the best, and I support whatever he’s going to do on that matter.”
So yeah, it seems like no one wants these guys in our state. And look, if the Tates really committed no crimes, as they claim, then no formal charges will be filed. But given their history, it’s prudent for Uthmeier to make sure they are clean. Credit to Uthmeier for leading the charge here and setting a precedent for his tenure as Attorney General.
Losers
Dishonorable mention: Ileana Garcia. Garcia got plenty of attention late last year when she filed a bill banning weather modification, feeding into concerns from conspiracy theorists about “chemtrails.”
After moderating her language about the bill a bit, Garcia got support last month from her first Senate panel — and from one of Trump’s ex-wives, Marla Maples.
But as of this week, the future of Garcia’s bill is very much in the air.
That’s because the Senate Appropriations Committee on Agriculture, Environment, and General Government decided to temporarily postpone the measure.
It’s as yet unclear where this is a true “temporary” postponement or a more permanent one. But it may be a sign Garcia’s legislation isn’t going to fly this Session.
Almost (but not quite) the biggest loser: DeSantis, Joseph Ladapo. Speaking of scientifically questionable choices by government officials, the Governor and his loyal Surgeon General went full anti-vaxxer this week at a presser pushing to make mandatory the state’s ban against mRNA vaccine mandates.
Ladapo mocked pushes to have people take the measles vaccine amid a Texas measles outbreak that is the worst in decades.
“These are the same people that tell you that boys can be girls, that men can be women, that an experimental vaccine the children do not need is actually something that’s critical to their health, that you need one or two or three masks depending on what time point in the pandemic you look, right?” Ladapo said of medical professionals recommending the vaccine.
DeSantis added his 2 cents about the annual flu vaccine, which he said “doesn’t exactly have a stellar record with efficacy.”
Now if DeSantis stopped there, he’s not technically wrong in a vacuum. Because these vaccines must be made in advance of knowing exactly what strain of the flu will hit in a given season, yeah, some years the vaccine is more effective than others. That’s true.
But DeSantis wasn’t speaking in a vacuum here given the topic of the press conference and Ladapo’s remarks. And even more importantly, he didn’t stop there.
“And the question is, okay, well, why is this stuff being pushed on the society? Well, because people make money off of it. I mean, that’s why it’s being pushed. I think we all know that,” DeSantis continued.
That twists this from something that could possibly be read as a factual description of the vaccines’ effectiveness into another way to spin a web of conspiracy theories to further undermine public confidence in medical experts.
It’s not out of character for DeSantis, unfortunately. Arguably his biggest move to undercut public faith in health experts was appointing Ladapo as Surgeon General in the first place.
The biggest loser: Insurance companies. This is now back-to-back weeks of insurance companies landing in this spot, as the writing continues to be on the wall that state officials may finally be using their power to crack down on these entities.
Last week, it was due to reports that insurance companies declared losses by shifting money into affiliate companies all while crying poverty as they jacked up rates and begged for government assistance.
This week, House Speaker Daniel Perez announced a committee would conduct a probe into those reports, including “issuing subpoenas, putting witnesses under oath and hiring outside experts.”
If there is an effective criticism of the Republican Party, it’s that there has too often been an instinct to look the other way regarding corporate power at the expense of the little guy.
But here, the pain Floridians are suffering as home insurance rates skyrocketed in recent years is too serious to ignore. Credit to Perez for showing signals that something significant may happen to help consumers desperate for a life raft.
The proof will be in whatever passes this Session. But so far, this is a good start.
Post Views: 0

Florida
Florida dog mom Kim Spencer pries open raging gator’s mouth to save her pooch: ‘We just got lucky’

A fearless Florida woman jumped on top of an alligator and pried its jaws open to save her beloved dog from being attacked during their nightly stroll.
Kim Spencer and her pooch, Kona, were on an evening walk in Tampa, Fla. when a 6-and-a-half-foot alligator emerged from a nearby lake and started heading their way, according to FOX 13.
Spencer tried to pull Kona away, but the ferocious predator was too fast and quickly caught up to them.
“I saw the eyes. I saw it turning itself around towards us, and I started pulling Kona away, saying, ‘Let’s go.’ But she’s a really strong dog,” Spencer told the outlet.
“She’s facing it, it’s facing her, and it suddenly jumped at her and got her.”
Kona’s entire head and right shoulder were inside the swamp beast’s mouth when the pet parent “stopped thinking” and risked her life to save her four-legged friend.
“[I] jumped on it, straddled it, as ladylike as that is, and was trying to pry its jaws open,” Spencer added.
The scuffle didn’t last long as Spencer pried the gator’s jaws wide enough to free her furry friend.
“We just got lucky because it ran,” Spencer said. “Just as quickly as it ran after us it went right back in the water and I got up and we were out of there.”
Both survived without significant injuries, but they did get wounded during the incident and both received stitches for their wounds.
The married dog owner has bandages on both hands while her precious pup has to wear a cone.
“We’re empty nesters, she’s my baby, so I wasn’t ready to take on that mindset that she’s an animal versus a human,” Spencer said.
Spencer said she and Kona — who she rescued 8 years ago — had been walking in the Westwood Lakes neighborhood when the gator launched its attack, according to Bay News 9.
Last September in Fort Myers – around 120 miles south of Tampa – an angry seven-foot, three-inch alligator attacked 84-year-old Dolores Boppel while she was on a walk with her dog near a pond.
The pooch was unharmed, but the dangerous animal took a “chunk” out of her leg and sent Boppel to the hospital.
In 2022, Eric Merda was swimming in Myakka City, Fla., when a gator took off his arm and left him stranded for three days in a swamp.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission estimated that the state has 1.3 million alligators “of every size” and reported 11 alligator bites in 2024 and 23 in 2023, one of which was fatal.
A majority of the bites from the swamp creatures result in “major” injuries.
Alligators “prefer to go after prey they can overpower easily” and are naturally scared of humans but “may lose that fear when people feed them,” the commission claimed.
Florida
A trans woman was arrested at the Florida Capitol for using the women’s restroom

Florida police recently arrested a transgender woman for using the women’s restroom in the state Capitol in Tallahassee, in what is believed to be the first such arrest in a state with an anti-trans bathroom ban.
Marcy Rheintgen, a 20-year-old college student and Illinois resident, was arrested March 19 on a trespassing charge after she used a women’s restroom in a protest against Florida’s law barring people from using bathrooms that don’t align with their assigned sex at birth in government-owned or -leased buildings.
According to The Associated Press, Rheintgen had sent letters to every Florida state lawmaker to inform them that she planned to use a restroom at the statehouse that corresponded with her gender identity. She included a photo of herself for identification, the Tampa Bay Times reported.
“I know that you know in your heart that this law is wrong and unjust. I know that you know in your heart that transgender people are human too, and that you can’t arrest us away,” she wrote. “I know that you know that I have dignity. That’s why I know that you won’t arrest me.”
Jon Davidson, a senior staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, told the AP that Rheintgen’s arrest is the first of its kind that ACLU’s attorneys are aware of in any state with a bathroom ban.
Rheintgen, who the AP reported had been visiting her grandparents, was freed on pretrial release the day after her arrest, according to the Miami Herald. If convicted on the misdemeanor trespassing charge, she could face up to 60 days in jail.
Rheintgen told the AP that she wanted to show “the absurdity of this law in practice.”
“If I’m a criminal, it’s going to be so hard for me to live a normal life, all because I washed my hands,” she said, adding that she was “horrified and scared” over what might happen next.
Nadine Smith, the executive director of Equality Florida, an LGBTQ civil rights organization, said in a statement that Rheintgen’s arrest was not about safety, but “about cruelty, humiliation, and the deliberate erosion of human dignity.”
“Transgender people have been using restrooms aligned with their gender for generations without incident,” Smith wrote. “What’s changed is not their presence — it’s a wave of laws designed to intimidate them out of public life.”
Florida is one of more than a dozen states with a bathroom ban, though Utah is the only other state to criminalize the act. In recent years, GOP lawmakers across the country have passed legislation to crack down on trans rights and strip protections — a pattern that the Trump administration has mirrored on the federal level as well.
Florida
Florida condo market in “uncharted territory”

Condo prices are plummeting across Florida as homeowners flood the market with new inventory in a last-ditch attempt to escape rising fees on their units, according to new Redfin data.
Eight out of the 10 U.S. metropolitan areas with the highest share of condos sold below their original list price in February were in the Sunshine State, a report showed, with Miami topping the list. A staggering 92.5 percent of condo owners in the South Florida city fetched less than they were hoping for when selling their units.
Why It Matters
Rising homeowners insurance costs and homeowner association (HOA) fees across the country have slowed down the condo market at the national level. In February, 68.4 percent of U.S. condos sold for less than their original asking price, up from 63.3 percent a year earlier.
The situation is particularly severe in Florida, where a new building safety law requiring regular inspections and reserve funds for repairs on aging condos three or more stories tall is bringing up fees beyond what many can afford.
What To Know
Redfin analyzed 52 metros that had at least 100 condo sales in February and found that Miami had the highest share of homes sold below the original list price, at 92.5 percent. Condos in the city sold for 8.7 percent less than their original asking prices.
Six other Florida cities followed: Fort Lauderdale (92.1 percent), West Palm Beach (91.1 percent), Cape Coral (90.4 percent), Jacksonville (89.8 percent), North Port (87 percent) and Tampa (86.7 percent).
Dallas, Texas, had the eighth-highest share of condos selling for less than their original asking price, at 85.7 percent. It was followed by Orlando, Florida, at 84.8 percent and Houston, Texas, at 84.3 percent.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
In almost all the Florida cities listed in the top 10, with the exception of Miami and Jacksonville, the median original list price of a home had dropped in February compared to a year earlier.
In Miami, the median original list price in February was $450,000, up 7.9 percent year over year. In Fort Lauderdale, it was $257,000, down 3 percent year over year. In West Palm Beach, it was $290,000, down 4.1 percent. In Cape Coral, it was $339,000, down 5.7 percent. In North Port, it was $341,997, down 11.2 percent. In Tampa, it was $249,000, down 6 percent. In Orlando, it was $238,710, down 0.5 percent.
In Jacksonville, the median original list price of a condo was $287,900, up 3.2 percent from February 2024.
In Fort Lauderdale, condos sold for an average 11.3 percent less in February than a year earlier; in West Palm Beach, for 12.3 percent less; in Cape Coral, for 10.3 percent less; in Jacksonville, for 8.3 percent less; in North Port, for 9.4 percent less; in Tampa, for 10 percent less; and in Orlando, for 9.2 percent less.
What People Are Saying
Tim Harper, a Redfin Premier real estate agent in the Orlando metro area, said in a statement: “The Florida condo market is in uncharted territory. We’re seeing a massive influx of condo inventory because a lot of senior citizens on fixed incomes can no longer afford their monthly payments, and a lot of other condo owners just want to move because they’re tired of dealing with rising HOA fees and special assessments.”
Alison Williams, a Redfin Premier agent from Sacramento, California, said: “Oh condos. Poor condos. HOA dues are just going up and up and up, primarily because insurance costs for homeowners associations are going up. When you buy a $400,000 condo, it often means paying a $500 monthly HOA fee, so for many people, it’s not really that affordable anymore. Some buyers are looking to small single-family homes instead because there’s no HOA.”
Asad Khan, a Redfin senior economist, said: “The good news if you’re a prospective condo buyer is that sale prices are now falling in some areas, and sellers are offering up concessions, meaning you might be able to get a good deal. If you’ve been priced out of owning a condo, know that rents are hovering below their pandemic highs thanks to an apartment building boom, so renters may also find success asking for concessions.”
What Happens Next
While the U.S. condo market is slowing down across the country because of growing inventory, elevated prices and stubbornly high mortgage rates are dampening demand, meaning Florida is facing something of a crisis.
Many of the units for sale on the market are struggling to find interested buyers, and inventory piling up on the market is forcing sellers to considerably slash prices. The crisis building in Florida threatens to destroy the state’s reputation as a haven for retirees and snowbirds.
-
News1 week ago
Trump Is Trying to Gain More Power Over Elections. Is His Effort Legal?
-
Politics1 week ago
Texas DOGE bill passes Senate to streamline state regulations
-
News1 week ago
Federal judge who drew Trump's anger picks up new case against administration
-
World1 week ago
US Army says vehicle of four missing soldiers found in Lithuania
-
News1 week ago
LeShon Johnson, Ex-N.F.L. Running Back, Ran Major Dogfighting Kennel, U.S. Says
-
Sports1 week ago
Straight Outta L.A.: Ice Cube's new BIG3 team is the Riot and 'here to shake things up'
-
Technology1 week ago
Some Kindles now let you double-tap anywhere to turn the page
-
Lifestyle1 week ago
Tiny Love Stories: ‘I Asked Him Back to My Place’