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As House probes $10M HOPE Florida contribution, DeSantis blasts leadership | National

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Steve Wilson | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-04-15 12:53:00

(The Center Square) – Health care giant Centene’s $10 million gift to nonprofit HOPE Florida has drawn a hearing from the House of Representatives criticized by Gov. Ron DeSantis.

The second-term Republican went on the offensive against the chamber. House members, led by Rep. Alex Andrade, R-Pensacola, are calling on the return of that money, which they say was used by DeSantis to fund two political groups opposed to a pair of unsuccessful ballot initiatives that would’ve codified recreational marijuana and abortion into the state constitution.

One of those groups was run by Attorney General James Uthmeier, who is running for a full term in 2026 after being appointed to replace new U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi. Proponents of the two ballot initiatives raised a combined $261 million. 

HOPE Florida is a state initiative launched in 2021 by Florida First Lady Casey DeSantis that works as a direct support organization with the state Department of Children and Family Services. It is intended to help struggling families become more self-sufficient and get off of direct assistance programs. 

The governor didn’t back down in his criticism of the Republican majority House. 

“You got a cabal of them in the leadership,” DeSantis said. “They are colluding with liberal media and the Democratic Party in Florida to try to manufacture smears against HOPE Florida, against me, against the first lady. To have Republicans in the Florida House leadership colluding with these people, when they’re doing that and they’re not cutting your property taxes, they’re not fixing the condo crisis, they’re not doing the things that voters want them to do, make no mistake about that. They are stabbing you in the back. They are refusing to do their jobs.”

The House Health Care Budget Subcommittee took up the issue at a hearing Tuesday morning, with members hitting HOPE Florida officials about the nonprofit’s lack of required financial statements, such as the required IRS Form 990.

HOPE Florida foundation President Joshua Hay told the committee that the group had made mistakes due to a lack of staffing and oversight, but was working to correct them. He also said he and the foundation’s general counsel, Jeff Aaron, saw nothing odd about the $10 million grant. 

Andrade asked Hay if the donation, which was used for political purposes, was an appropriate use of the grant. 

“Well, thankfully because of our Florida elections database we do know what that money was used on,” Andrade said during the hearing. “Do you believe that donating the money to the Republican Party of Florida, donating it to Governor DeSantis’s Florida Freedom Fund PAC or paying for legal services and advertising are proper uses of those funds out of Hope Florida Foundation’s account?”

Hay, who says the foundation has no staff and he serves on a volunteer basis, said it could potentially claw back the funds if they were used inappropriately, but he also said that he didn’t want to provide a “personal opinion.”

Hay says the foundation’s board will meet on Thursday in a public meeting online to discuss the needed changes, and within 10 days, release the foundation’s financial statements. 

“In recent weeks, the public reporting has made evident that mistakes were made,” Hay told the committee. “I have been gathering and reviewing all of the foundation’s bank statements. When complete, we will release this information to the public and to this subcommittee.”

After the hearing, Andrade told a gaggle of reporters he was “stunned, but it does sound as if Jeff Aaron is working to back date, backlog documents to cover up what they did.”

Andrade added that the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Florida might want to investigate.

Asked about Hay’s responses during the hearing, Andrade said, “My heart goes out to him. I don’t think he was fully informed, and I think he got bad advice from Jeff Aaron.”

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News from the South - Florida News Feed

South Florida Weather for Wednesday 4/30/2025 12PM

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www.youtube.com – CBS Miami – 2025-04-30 11:54:10

SUMMARY: South Florida’s weather for Wednesday, April 30, 2025, features breezy conditions, with highs in the low 80s and an east breeze of 10-18 mph, gusting to 25 mph. There’s a risk of rip currents, extended through Friday, making swimming dangerous. While the day remains mostly dry with a mix of sun and clouds, isolated showers are possible. By Friday, rain chances increase, with isolated showers. The weekend brings higher chances of afternoon thunderstorms, especially on Sunday, along with rising temperatures. A 20% chance of rain is expected on Saturday, and 40% on Sunday.

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NEXT Weather meteorologist Lissette Gonzalez says Wednesday afternoon will be seasonable and breezy with wind gust up to 20 mph.

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Florida House passes expansive state farm bill | Florida

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Steve Wilson | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-04-30 11:33:00

(The Center Square) – The Florida Legislature passed its farm bill this week that officials say could be the most expansive farm-related measure in the state’s history.

Senate Bill 700 was passed 88-27 in the House of Representatives on Tuesday and is now headed to Gov. Ron DeSantis for a likely signature. The Senate passed the 111-page measure 27-9 on April 16. 

SB700, which was sponsored by Sen. Keith Truenow, R-Tavares, would protect farmers from environmental, social, and governance-related bias from lenders, ban the addition of medicine such as fluoride from being added to the water supply, bolster the disaster recovery loan program for farmers and preventing the mislabeling of plant-based products as milk, meat, poultry or eggs.

The fluoride additive ban would not remove any chemical required for water purification. 

A similar regulation in Mississippi was changed in 2019 after a vegan food manufacturer, represented by the Institute for Justice, filed a lawsuit on First Amendment grounds. 

During debate, Rep. Anna Eskamani, D-Orlando, mentioned a legal challenge to the state’s law on laboratory-grown meat and possible legal challenges to the labeling part of the legislation. 

“Consumers aren’t confused, but if anything, the expansion of alternative meat, alternative protein products is based on demand and companies wouldn’t do it there wasn’t demand for it,” Eskamani said. “The changes in this bill, the goal is to hinder that demand by creating confusion.

“And so to trust the free market means to allow companies to advertise themselves and appeal to consumers based on quality and I think I can speak for some members that some of these alternative products aren’t very good. To insert ourselves between the consumer and the product by forcing them to not to use specific language is a step too far. It restricts free speech and it’s just unnecessary.”

Two amendments she tried to add on the bill to eliminate the labeling and fluoride components died on voice votes. 

Under SB700, local governments would be banned from zoning changes that would make it impossible for agricultural facilities to be placed on school property for 4-H and Future Farmers of America. 

The bill would also prohibit local governments from banning housing for legally verified farm workers on farms. It would also create a requirement for legal worker eligibility to prevent noncitizens from working on farms. 

The bill even stretches to Second Amendment issues, as it will streamline the state’s concealed carry permit process.

The measure would also forbid drones on state hunting lands or private shooting ranges for the purpose of harassment.

Charitable organizations would be prohibited from receiving foreign contributions from “countries of concern” such as Iran, Venezuela, China, Cuba, North Korea and Syria. 

“This legislation is a blueprint for protecting Floridians and our freedoms,” said Florida Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson in a release. “We are banning medicine – including fluoride – from Florida’s public water systems. We are keeping foreign countries of concern out of Florida’s charitable organizations.

“We are ensuring honesty in food labeling – milk comes from a cow, not an almond. We are upholding Second Amendment rights and cracking down on drone harassment of hunters.”

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Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Right

The content presents a description of the Florida Legislature’s farm bill (SB700), emphasizing provisions that align with conservative political values, such as the protection of farmers from ESG-related bias, the restriction on certain food labeling, and measures around the Second Amendment and foreign contributions to charitable organizations. The tone of the article highlights actions that may appeal to right-leaning audiences, especially those supportive of agricultural, conservative, and pro-Second Amendment policies. While the article reports on the legislative process and includes a variety of perspectives, including a Democratic representative’s opposition, the framing and tone lean toward presenting the bill’s provisions positively, suggesting a preference for conservative positions. The article provides factual details but could be perceived as highlighting the bill’s conservative aspects more than its potential drawbacks or opposing views.

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High court reinstates enforcement of Ohio’s ban on gender-affirming care for minors during appeal

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www.news4jax.com – Julie Carr Smyth, Associated Press – 2025-04-30 10:19:00

SUMMARY: The Ohio Supreme Court ruled 4-3 to reinstate enforcement of a law banning gender-affirming care for minors while an appeal is ongoing. The law also prohibits transgender women and girls from participating in female sports. This decision reversed a lower court ruling that had temporarily blocked the 2023 law. Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, a proponent of the law, argued it protects children, while Governor Mike DeWine vetoed the law, citing a thoughtful, pro-life approach. The law bans counseling, hormone therapy, and surgery for minors, with exceptions for existing treatments deemed risky to stop..

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