The Palm Beach Post

Jail guard fired after fraud accusation

Medical marijuana backer Morgan out as Democrat in governor race

- Miami Herald PERSONAL INJURY Ted Babbitt

A correction­s officer is

One of Florida’s most prolific Democratic donors, a bourbon-swilling, saltytongu­ed lawyer with his own slogan and medical marijuana as his pet cause, is out.

In a series of tweets Friday, John Morgan announced his flirtation with running for governor as a Democrat is over, as is his affiliatio­n with either political party.

“While it’s amazing to be leading the polls for Governor without being a candidate I can’t muster the enthusiasm to run for the nomination,” he wrote.

But Morgan said the tweets don’t mean he’s out of the race altogether. He said he plans to register as an independen­t and vote for “the lesser of two evils.” If he were to run, he said, he would run as an independen­t.

This likely isn’t great news for Florida’s Democratic Party, which has traditiona­lly counted on Morgan to open his wallet for its candidates. He’s been known to host fundraisin­g dinners for Hillary Clinton and charge thousands of dollars a plate.

Morgan said his disillusio­nment with the Democratic Party has been brewing. He bought a table at the State Democratic Conference this year, but left before it was over, he said.

“It was just blah, blah, blah,” he said. “Talking a lot but saying nothing.”

Morgan, 61, has publicly mulled a run for governor in a state where he has widespread name recognitio­n for his large legal firm — slogan: “Morgan & Morgan, for the people” — and his role in getting a medical marijuana initiative on the ballot twice.

The wealthy businessma­n, who also owns amusement parks, hotels, a software company and three thoroughbr­ed race horses, said he would largely selffinanc­e his campaign.

That’s how he pushed his previous political project — medical marijuana. Morgan poured millions of his own money into getting the measure on the ballot, where it failed the first time and overwhelmi­ngly succeeded the second time, in 2016. He’s also using his own money to sue the state for improperly implementi­ng the law, he said.

Morgan’s next amendment initiative is to raise Florida’s minimum wage. He said he hopes to have it on the ballot by 2020.

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