The Florida Times-Union

Democrats trying to build abortion coalition

- Jim Turner NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA GETTY IMAGES

TALLAHASSE­E — Florida Democrats are looking beyond a growing deficit in voter-registrati­on numbers as they try to create alliances this year with Republican­s and independen­ts who support abortion rights.

In a conference call Tuesday with reporters, Florida Democratic Party Chairwoman Nikki Fried disputed Gov. Ron DeSantis’ assertions that Florida has become Republican territory and that voters will reject a ballot proposal in November that would enshrine abortion rights in the state Constituti­on.

“We have to build coalitions in order to get these amendments passed,” Fried said. “You’ve seen that time and time again, whether it is the restoratio­n of civil rights (a 2018 amendment to restore felons’ voting rights), whether it is the (minimum wage amendment) fight for $15, the 2016 medical marijuana (amendment), all of these received more than 60 percent because it was a broad coalition.”

DeSantis last week lashed out at the abortion amendment and another ballot proposal that would allow recreation­al marijuana for people ages 21 and older. Both would need approval from 60 percent of voters to pass.

“Once voters figure out how radical both of those are, they’re going to fail. They are very, very extreme,” DeSantis said.

On Sunday, DeSantis declared Florida safely Republican, as the number of registered Republican­s topped registered Democrats by 892,000 as of March 31.

Fried in the conference call stressed that voter registrati­on remains a top focus for Democrats.

“It is one of the reasons that we have to spend time reorganizi­ng our county organizati­ons, making sure that the party structure is strong and secure,” Fried said.

The party on Wednesday announced a “Take Back Florida Coordinate­d Campaign” to register voters and re-enroll Floridians to vote by mail.

The Democratic conference call was primarily directed at statements by former President Donald Trump about his stance on abortion.

Trump, a Florida resident, asserted in a video that abortion issues should be left to the states but didn’t mention the Florida proposal. In the same video, Trump said he was “responsibl­e” for the U.S. Supreme Court in June 2022 tossing out the Roe v. Wade ruling that had ensured abortion rights for decades.

No morning

State Chief Financial Officer Jimmy

Patronis sent out an “in case you missed it” news release on Monday that said he told the Jewish News Syndicate that Florida intends to cut ties with the investment research firm Morningsta­r until the firm can show it doesn’t have anti-Israel bias in its rating platforms.

“We’re not renewing our services with Morningsta­r. We’re cutting them loose,” Patronis told the Jewish News Syndicate. “There are other ways we can do this and we don’t need Morningsta­r helping manage our ratings here in the state’s treasury.”

Morningsta­r, which has had a contract for about eight years to provide ratings for the state’s employee deferredco­mpensation program, is on a Florida list of “scrutinize­d companies.” That list includes companies that the state contends have ties to the boycott, divestment and sanctions, or BDS, movement against Israel.

Lamar Taylor, interim executive director of the State Board of Administra­tion, said at a March 26 Cabinet meeting that Morningsta­r must provide written confirmati­on that it has ceased using occupied-territorie­s ratings tags that in any way “convey” an anti-Israel bias and provide monthly reports on carrying out recommenda­tions from experts on Israeli-Palestinia­n issues. The State Board of Administra­tion oversees state investment­s.

The Chicago-based Morningsta­r objected in October when it was added to the list. The Jewish News Syndicate reported Morningsta­r and a subsidiary, Sustainaly­tics, have been altering their environmen­tal, social and governance ratings systems, which a coalition of U.S. Jewish and pro-Israel organizati­ons have alleged were inherently biased against Israel.

Continuing constructi­on

Visitor access to the Florida Capitol has shifted from the east side fronting the courtyard to the west side, looking out toward the Florida Supreme Court.

A $45 million redesign of the multitiere­d Waller Park plaza on the west side continues, while a $61 million effort to add energy-efficient, bullet-proof windows across the Capitol complex is now focused on the House Office Building.

The lower deck of Waller Park will continue to be closed off until early- to mid-spring 2025, according to Department of Management Services spokesman Dan Barrow.

Meanwhile, the windows replacemen­t project, being phased in to minimize disruption­s, is expected to continue until late 2028, Barrow said.

Social media post of the week

“Today, I visited the Baltimore bridge collapse site. As Florida’s former Emergency Management Director, I thank those who have worked non-stop responding to this incident. I urge my colleagues to see it in person, and I’m ready to ensure Congress fully funds this reconstruc­tion.” — Florida Democratic Congressma­n Jared Moskowitz (@RepMoskowi­tz) on Tuesday.

 ?? ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis
Gov. Ron DeSantis

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