Rick Scott Hammers Florida GOP's D'Souza Invite

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herman

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Apr 30, 2018, 9:56:48 PM4/30/18
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Way to get young voters to support your party....NOT


Gov. Rick Scott joined some prominent Florida Republicans on Monday in slamming a decision by the state party to invite Dinesh D’Souza, who mocked survivors of a Florida school shooting, to speak at a gathering of its top activists.

The Republican Party of Florida announced that D’Souza would be among the featured speakers at its Sunshine Summit, a June event designed to showcase the party’s strength and grass-roots support headed into the 2018 midterms.

D’Souza was widely criticized in February for a series of tweets mocking survivors of the school shooting at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that left 17 dead. Many of the survivors lobbied state lawmakers for a state assault weapon ban in the aftermath of the shooting. Their efforts helped spur passage gun reform legislation, but not a ban.

Just after the vote that ended hopes of a ban, D’Souza tweeted out a picture of disappointed students in the House gallery with the caption “adults 1, kids 0." In a separate tweet, he said it was their worst disappointment since “their parents told them to get another job.” He later apologized.

“His comments were disgusting and unacceptable,” Ryan Patmintra, a Scott spokesman, told POLITICO. “The governor has spent a lot of time with the Parkland victims and their families and will always stand with them.”

The Republican Party of Florida’s decision to invite D’Souza to the party's biggest summer event is likely to pose political problems for any Republican facing a tough general-election fight — which includes Scott in his race against three-term incumbent Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson. Along with the Parkland comments, in 2014 D’Souza pleaded guilty to a felony count stemming from his use of straw donors to contribute $20,000 to a Republican Senate candidate.

Scott and Blaise Ingoglia, chairman of the Republican Party of Florida and also a state representative from Spring Hill, have never been close. Scott removed his political operation from the party in 2015 after the election of Ingoglia, who was running against Scott’s hand-picked chair candidate.

Other speakers announced Monday include Dan Bongino, a former Secret Service agent and staple on conservative talk radio, and Republican National Committee spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany. In a news release, Ingoglia called all three “leading and highly influential voices.”

A number of voices in the Florida GOP establishment — a group that has generally excluded Ingoglia — weighed in.

One GOP consultant mocked Ingoglia’s use of his Twitter handle, @GovGoneWild: “Instead of using #GovGoneWild, he should change his handle to BlaiseScrewsGOP.”

Incoming Florida Senate President Bill Galvano was also unhappy with the invite. As the next presiding officer, Galvano is charged with coordinating Senate Republican races, which this year include some tough races with Democrats.

“You know how important the Parkland response was this session,” he said. “It was very valuable to have the voices from the young people heard. It’s concerning that these comments were made. So I am not sure that makes for a very welcoming speaker.”

Like Scott, Republican Senate campaigns pulled out of the party apparatus when Ingoglia was elected.

Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam, who is the GOP front-runner in the governor’s race, joined other prominent Republicans in blasting D’Souza on the day he was announced as a headliner.

“What Dinesh D’Souza said was extremely insensitive and offensive to a community who had just lost their friends, fellow students and teachers in a horrific massacre by a troubled individual,” said Amanda Bevis, Putnam's campaign spokeswoman.

Rep. Ron DeSantis, who is also in the GOP gubernatorial primary, did not return requests seeking comment. Republican Rep. Carlos Curbelo, who faces a tough reelection fight, said the party should “rescind” the invite.

After his announcement started to receive some pushback, Ingoglia did not waiver from his decision.

He said the campaign finance charges against D’Souza amounted to him being “targeted by the Obama administration,” and said the tweet was “clearly a mistake in which he apologized.”



Lobo

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Apr 30, 2018, 10:41:02 PM4/30/18
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That's amazing! Rick Scott is usually in toe to toe competition with Maine's Paul LePage for the title of Worst Governor In America. It's hard to believe he actually did something decent.

herman

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Apr 30, 2018, 11:15:36 PM4/30/18
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Right after Puerto Rico was devastated by Maria, Scott made a point of inviting and welcoming refugees from that island.  

I've always thought it was a smart move on his part. given the number of Puerto Rican voters in Florida.  (That helping hurricane refugees would likely go over well with Puerto Rican voters in Florida and other states seems to be an obvious fact other Republican politicians don't want to accept, much the less act on.)

It looks as if Scott is serious about winning Nelson's Senate seat.  So serious, he's given thought to the changing demographics - and the necessity, if not now then in the very near future - of appealing to Puerto Ricans and young voters.

Lobo

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Apr 30, 2018, 11:53:34 PM4/30/18
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A politician's gotta do what a politician's gotta do... but it's hard to forget that Scott was the governor who came up with the idea of censoring words and phrases like "global warming" and "climate change" from all state publications and communications.

He also:

Drug testing for welfare recipients[edit]

In June 2011, Scott signed a bill requiring those seeking welfare under the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Familiesprogram to submit to drug screenings. Applicants who fail a drug test may name another person to receive benefits for their children.[79]

In an interview with CNN host Don Lemon, Scott said, "Studies show that people that are on welfare are higher users of drugs than people not on welfare" and "the bottom line is, if they're not using drugs, it's not an issue". PolitiFact said this comment was "half true". Government researchers in 1999–2000 reported "that 9.6 percent of people in families receiving some type of government assistance reported recent drug use, compared to 6.8 percent among people in families receiving no government assistance at all."[80]

Preliminary figures from Florida's program showed that 2.5% of applicants tested positive for drugs, with 2% declining to take the test, while the Justice Department estimated that around 6% of Americans use drugs overall.[81] The law was declared unconstitutional, with the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit upholding that ruling in December 2014.[82]The Scott administration declined to appeal the decision to the US Supreme Court.

Medicaid expansion[edit]

Scott has taken a number of positions on Medicaid expansion. For much of his first term as governor, Scott was against Medicaid expansion in Florida, saying it was too costly. In 2013, he came out in support of Medicaid expansion, before again opposing it in 2015.[83]

Climate change[edit]

Scott denies the scientific consensus on anthropogenic climate change, saying "I'm not a scientist".[84][85] The quote or paraphrases thereof became talking points for some Republican political candidates in the 2014 election campaigns.[86] The political blog Daily Kos proposed a new category for Scott, "climate-change mutism", for "those unable to express an opinion."[87][88][89]

When questioned by the press on March 9, 2015 in Hialeah, Florida, Scott did not indicate whether or not he believes global warming is a problem or whether Florida's Department of Environmental Protection has made or is making preparations for its potential consequences.[90][91]

In March 2015, accusations were made that his administration had instructed Department of Environmental Protection officials to avoid the terms "climate change" or "global warming" in any official communications. Scott denied the claims that his administration had banned the terms.[92][93][94][95]

Redistricting amendments[edit]

In the 2010 elections, Florida voters passed constitutional amendments banning gerrymandering of congressional and legislative districts.[96]

In February 2011, Governor Scott withdrew a request to the United States Department of Justice to approve these amendments, which, according to The Miami Herald, might delay the implementation of the redistricting plan because the Voting Rights Act requires preclearance of state laws likely to affect minority representation. Scott said he wanted to make sure that redistricting is carried properly.[97] Several advocacy groups sued Scott in federal court to compel the governor to resubmit the acts to the Justice Department.[98]


Voting rights[edit]

Scott frequently sought to restrict voting rights as Florida Governor, with numerous courts ruling against him in voting rights cases.[117] Scott has signed into law bills that created barriers to registering new voters, limited early voting, ended early voting on the Sunday before Election Day (known as "souls to the polls" in African-American churches), and restricted the ability of ex-felons to restore their voting rights. In 2012, Scott attempted to purge non-citizens from voter rolls just prior to the election; a court stopped Scott from doing so, and it was revealed that legitimate voters were on the voter rolls. The Tampa Bay Times noted that under Scott's tenure, Florida had the longest voting lines of any state in the 2012 election.[117] After harsh criticism, Scott expanded early voting hours, and allowed early voting on the Sunday before Election Day.[117]

In 2016, Scott refused to extend registration deadlines after ordering evacuations due to Hurricane Matthew; courts ultimately extended the deadline. Scott signed legislation into law which rejected mail ballots where signatures on the ballet envelope did not match signatures in files; in 2016 a court struck down the law. In 2014, Scott blocked a request by the city of Gainesville to use a facility at the University of Florida as a site for early voting. In 2013, Scott ordered Pinellas County to close down sites where voters could submit mail ballots. In 2012, a court ruled that Scott could not place heavy fines on groups that registered voters but failed to submit the registrations within 48 hours. In 2018, courts ruled that Scott had to create a new process to restore felons' voting rights.[117]

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He was pressured to resign as chief executive of Columbia/HCA in 1997, amid a controversy over the company's business and Medicare billing practices. During his tenure as chief executive, he oversaw the company while it defrauded Medicare, Medicaid and other federal programs. The Department of Justice ultimately fined the company in what was at the time the largest health care fraud settlement in US history.[5]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Scott

herman

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May 1, 2018, 12:00:24 AM5/1/18
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All that, plus he's too chummy with trump.

I'm as cynical about Scott's newfound concern for Puerto Ricans and young/teen voters as I am re Kasich's portrayal of himself as the "reasonable" alternative to trump.  Kasich remains firmly committed to forcing on Ohio the most restrictive anti-abortion laws gropers can dream up, and, although, he speaks somewhat movingly about the plight of Buckeye opioid addicts, so far as I know, he's not adding state funding for treatment to the mix.  (His most pro-active program seems to be an on-the-cheap version of "Just Say No".)
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