Winter Park mother and son celebrate EpiPen training bill becoming law
The Winter Park mom who spearheaded a bill to train school staffers to treat severe allergic reactions was thrilled when Gov. Ron DeSantis signed it into law Wednesday — and so was her 8-year-old son, her motivation to activism.
'He was super ecstatic,' said Sherry Isler of her son, Lincoln. 'We're still on cloud nine. It's very surreal to us. We've been so hopeful, and we worked so hard with so many people to create this bill. So, yeah, I'm still crying intermittently throughout the day.'
The bill, sponsored by Orlando Democrats Rita Harris in the state House and Carlos Guillermo Smith in the Senate, is aimed at the peril of anaphylactic shock, a potentially fatal reaction to foods or other allergens that can be treated simply and effectively by injections of epinephrine through a device called an EpiPen, assuming the devices are available and someone knows how to use them.
Lincoln is allergic to dairy, peas, chickpeas and lentils. His mother started her crusade when she learned there was staff on Lincoln's campus available to administer in EpiPen in an emergency during the school day — but that might not be true if her son attended an after-school program.
Under the new law, Florida schools must train employees and contract staff working with pre-kindergarten-to-eighth-grade students to recognize the signs of anaphylactic shock and use EpiPens. They also must have a trained person available at all times when the students are on campus or participating in school activities, including extracurricular events, athletics, school dances, and contracted before-school or after-school programs.
The bill passed unanimously in both chambers. DeSantis' signature means it will become law July 1.
'We know that this law is going to save lives as a result,' Smith said.
'It's a real common sense kind of bill,' said Harris, adding that Republican state Rep. Jessica Baker of Jacksonville was the co-sponsor. 'She said, 'I have a constituent in my district who has a child who has severe food allergies, and she wants to see this bill passed. How can I help you?''
Isler originally reached out to Harris in 2023, after she asked the third-party vendor that ran Lincoln's before- and after-school programs at Aloma Elementary School about their allergic reaction policy and received some unwelcome news.
'I was told, 'Oh no, we don't do EpiPens here. We would just call 911,' and I panicked,' she said. 'I told them that would be too late, he would be dead by the time an ambulance arrived, because his reaction is his airway, his throat would close up. And she just told me that she was sorry.'
Marsha Robbins, then the director of programs for that vendor, Dramatic Education, later claimed there was a miscommunication and that all of her staff were trained. But Isler heard from another parent in Orange County who had been told that after-school staff could not give details about how EpiPens would be stored or administered.
About two students in every classroom are likely to have food allergies, Isler said. Children have died of anaphylaxis in schools in Nebraska in 2022 and at after-school events in California and Jacksonville in 2023.
Orange County Public Schools updated their third-party contracts in 2023 to ensure that at least two staff members are trained to use EpiPens.
A similar bill filed by Wilson and then-state Sen. Linda Stewart failed to move forward in the 2024 legislative session, due to what Wilson said were concerns about what it would mean for high schools. This year, the bill only applied to K-8 schools.
'We changed it a little bit,' Harris said. 'And I think also Ms. Isler going up to Tallahassee and talking to the committee chairs and explaining why this is needed, and bringing her son with her, really helped.'
Both Lincoln and his sister Liberty, now 6, spoke before a Senate committee last spring, just after the new bill was filed.
Even with the bill signed, 'we still have more work to do,' Smith said. 'Our hope is to expand this to 12th grade after we have seen a smooth implementation of the law.'
Isler said she also hopes to one day include high schools as part of mandatory EpiPen training.
'That was my original goal,' Isler said. 'My understanding was that there were some stakeholders who saw some potential difficulties with the bill as it is, in regards to liability, and that high school has a lot of more before- and after-school activities. And they believe that high schoolers should be able to carry and administer their own EpiPens.'
But she worries most high school students may not realize they would now be on their own.
'Students in K through 8 will have these protections and safety net,' Isler said. 'And then who's going to tell them when they get to high school that all of a sudden it's not there?'
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Newsweek
23 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Donald Trump Is Losing Support With Hispanics
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. President Donald Trump is losing support among Hispanic and Latino voters, according to polling. Since at least the 1960s, Hispanic voters in the U.S. have generally supported Democratic candidates. For example, according to Pew Research Center, about 71 percent of Hispanic voters supported Barack Obama in 2012, and 66 percent backed Hillary Clinton in 2016. In 2020, 63 percent chose Joe Biden, according to AP VoteCast. In 2024, however, Trump made significant gains. His support among Hispanic voters rose to 43 percent—an 8-point increase from 2020 and the highest level for a Republican presidential candidate since such data has been tracked. Meanwhile, 55 percent supported Kamala Harris, narrowing the Democratic advantage. Yet recent polling suggests Trump's momentum is fading. Newsweek's analysis of major surveys since April shows his approval among Hispanic and Latino voters has dropped to 40 percent, with 56 percent disapproving—down from March averages of 43 percent approval and 54 percent disapproval. YouGov's data mirrors this trend, showing Trump's net approval plummeting from -12 in January to -32 in May. President Donald Trump speaks during the 157th National Memorial Day Observance at Arlington on May 26 in Arlington, Virginia. President Donald Trump speaks during the 157th National Memorial Day Observance at Arlington on May 26 in Arlington, Virginia. Jacquelyn Martin/AP While a few surveys show scattered signs of support, the overwhelming majority of polls conducted from late March to mid-May show Trump underperforming with Hispanic and Latino voters. Echelon Insights, which polled from May 8 to May 12, found Trump's approval at 32 percent and disapproval at 67 percent, marking a sharp drop from his earlier approval rating of 42 percent and disapproval of 56 percent. The Marist/NPR/PBS poll from late April also recorded a similar downward trend, with Trump's approval slipping from 44 percent to 32 percent. Fox News polling from mid-April showed Trump's approval dipping slightly from 44 percent to 41 percent, while McLaughlin found a more substantial drop, from 44 percent to 36 percent. Pew Research Center also reported a stark fall in Trump's favorability, with approval plummeting from 35 percent to 27 percent, and disapproval rising from 62 percent to 72 percent. But some other polls have shown Trump's approval rating increasing among Hispanic voters. For instance, the Civiqs poll conducted from May 17 to May 20 shows a notably higher approval rating of 57 percent among Hispanics, an increase from 42 percent earlier in the year. Likewise, Insider Advantage/Trafalgar's mid-May poll reports a 59 percent approval rating, up from 39 percent in April. However, these results contrast with the broader majority of polling data, which has shown that Trump's ratings remain below 40 percent, while disapproval consistently climbs above 50 or even 60 percent. This decline isn't a sudden collapse but a slow erosion of trust and confidence—particularly among a demographic Trump courted heavily in 2024. Experts point to dissatisfaction with his handling of the economy as a key driver of this shift. It comes after Trump introduced his "Liberation Day" tariffs on April 2. The policy move rattled markets, prompting a sharp sell-off before an eventual recovery. It also saw Trump's overall approval ratings take a hit. And his approval marks among Hispanic voters have not been exempt. The latest YouGov/Economist poll shows that only 32 percent of Hispanic voters approve of Trump's performance on the economy, which is down from 40 percent at the end of March, before he introduced the tariffs. And on the issue of inflation, only 28 percent of Hispanic voters said they approve of Trump's performance, down from 39 percent. Similarly, Fox News shows that Trump's approval rating on the economy among Hispanic voters is down to 37 percent, from 43 percent in March. On inflation, Trump's approval rating was down 10 percentage points, to 30. Meanwhile, 80 percent of Hispanics polled said they think it is extremely or very likely that the U.S. economy will plunge into recession this year. Clarissa Martínez De Castro, vice president of the Latino Vote Initiative, told Newsweek that "Latino voters are frustrated that their economic priorities are being ignored and that a key promise made by President Trump during the election is not being kept." As a result, "Sixty percent of Latino voters believe the country is headed in the wrong direction, and 70 percent hold President Trump and his administration responsible," she said, citing an April UnidosUS poll. Poll Date Approve Disapprove Civiqs May 17-20 57 43 YouGov/Economist May 23-26 31 61 HarrisX May 14-15 39 52 Echelon Insights May 8-12 32 67 Quantus May 18-20 40 53 YouGov April 25-May 2 33 61 Insider Advantage/Trafalgar May 17-19 59 40 ActiVote April 1-April 30 55 43 Lord Ashcroft Politics April 9-30 40 58 Navigator Research May 15-18 41 55 Emerson College April 25-28 41 44 YouGov/Yahoo May 22-27 26 63 Decision Desk/News Nation April 23-27 40 60 YouGov/CBS April 23-25 40 60 NYT/Sienna April 21-24 36 59 Marist/NPR/PBS April 21-23 32 57 YouGov/Times April 21-23 32 64 Ipsos/ABC/Post April 18-22 32 63 Fox News April 18-21 41 59 McLaughlin April 16-19 36 64 Remington March 15-April 18 55 45 AtlasIntel April 10-14 49 51 Pew April 7-13 27 72 University of Massachusetts/YouGov April 4-9 37 59 Cygnal April 1-3 46 51 Marquette May 5-15 37 63 Janet Murguía, president and CEO of UnidosUS, emphasized that economic discontent played a significant role in Trump's earlier gains but is now undermining his support. "Over half of Hispanic voters feel the economy is worse now than a year ago, and nearly as many believe it will be worse a year from now," she said. "Economic discontent was the most potent driver of increased Latino support for Trump in 2024." Martínez De Castro added, "For many Latinos, inflation, wages, and housing affordability remain top concerns. Sixty percent believe the President and Republicans are not focusing enough on lowering prices, and over half think the economy has worsened and will continue to decline under Trump's policies. The president owns the economy now, and Hispanic voters are not seeing the quick turnaround he promised." Immigration has further dented Trump's standing among Hispanic voters. His aggressive policies, including expanded ICE enforcement and National Guard involvement, have targeted not just criminals but also long-residing undocumented immigrants without criminal records. From his inauguration on January 20 through February, over 40 percent of deportees had no criminal history. Pew Research Center polling shows that only about one-third of Americans support mass deportations, with most preferring to prioritize violent criminals and showing far less support for deporting those with family ties or brought to the U.S. as children. President Donald Trump is losing support among Hispanic and Latino voters, according to polling. President Donald Trump is losing support among Hispanic and Latino voters, according to polling. Photo-illustration by Newsweek/Getty/Canva This sentiment is also shared by Hispanic voters, Martínez De Castro said. She warned: "Eight in ten Hispanic voters support deporting dangerous criminals, but President Trump and congressional Republicans should not target long-residing undocumented immigrants without criminal records. Latino voters want policies that are firm, fair, and free of cruelty, but that is not what they are witnessing in their communities." Frankie Miranda, president and CEO of the Hispanic Federation, echoed these concerns, saying Trump's policies have "vilified our communities and disregarded people's rights." He highlighted the rise in hate crimes, family separations, and the targeting of law-abiding immigrants as consequences of the administration's approach. "Many immigrants who worked hard to secure legal protections, such as TPS and work permits, are having those protections stripped away," he said. Recent polls have shown a broader trend of voters becoming increasingly dissatisfied with Trump's performance on the economy and immigration, which were previously his strongest. His "Liberation Day" tariffs on April 2 rattled markets, prompting a sharp sell-off before an eventual recovery. But public sentiment did not rebound as quickly as the Dow. Polls throughout April showed sliding approval ratings. The president has also seen kinks in the rollout of his aggressive immigration agenda, which has attracted legal scrutiny. One high-profile case involves Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was deported from Maryland in what the Department of Justice called an "administrative error." The Trump administration labeled Garcia a member of MS-13, now designated a terrorist group, but his family and lawyers deny any connection. Trump's mass deportation plan seeks to remove millions of undocumented immigrants through expanded ICE enforcement and National Guard involvement, focusing not only on criminals but also on many without criminal records. Early in his presidency, ICE arrested over 32,000 people, nearly half with no criminal history, and by February, over 40 percent of deportees had no criminal record. Despite this aggressive approach, public support is limited. An April Pew Research Center poll found only about one-third of Americans support deporting all undocumented immigrants, with most favoring deportation primarily for violent criminals and much less support for deporting those with family ties or who came to the U.S. as children. And such sentiment also exists among Hispanic voters. Martínez De Castro highlighted that while economic concerns helped Trump gain Hispanic support in 2024, the optimism has quickly faded. "Sixty percent of Latino voters believe the country is headed in the wrong direction, and 70 percent of them hold President Trump and his administration responsible," she told Newsweek, citing an April UnidosUS poll. "Latino voters are frustrated that their economic priorities are being ignored and that a key promise made by President Trump during the election is not being kept. Economic discontent was the most potent driver in the 2024 election, helping President Trump increase support among Latinos. But over half of Hispanic voters feel the economy is worse now than a year ago and nearly as many believe it will be worse a year from now," Janet Murguía, president and CEO of UnidosUS, said at the time. Martínez De Castro added that for many Latinos, economic issues like inflation, wages and housing affordability remain top priorities, yet "60 percent believe the President and Republicans are not focusing enough on lowering prices," and over half think the economy has worsened and will continue to decline under Trump's policies. Martínez De Castro noted bluntly, "The president owns the economy now, and Hispanic voters are not seeing the quick turnaround the President promised." Miranda also criticized the administration for "actively dismantling the asylum system for some of the most vulnerable and deserving applicants escaping violence and persecution from Latin America," while simultaneously easing restrictions for others. He warned that "Such action is only serving to alienate the Latino community from the Trump administration and driving people who want to care for loved ones into the shadows."


Politico
27 minutes ago
- Politico
Senate says SALT isn't settled
IN TODAY'S EDITION:— Senate GOP eyes slashing the SALT deal…— … and zeroing out CFPB funding— Tuberville raises alarm over SNAP cuts Pity Speaker Mike Johnson this morning. Not only does he have to deal with Elon Musk trying to sabotage the 'big, beautiful bill,' Johnson is now staring down Senate tax writers who are doubling down on threats to scale back his carefully negotiated deal to raise the state-and-local-tax deduction cap. Senate Finance Republicans left the White House on Wednesday without decisions on key tax provisions in the bill. But two things are clear: Senators want to make President Donald Trump's business tax incentives permanent, not just extend them for five years as the House did. And to help pay the roughly half-trillion-dollar price, they're ready to carve up the House's deal to quadruple the SALT deduction limit. SALT Republicans don't have the same leverage in the Senate that they do in the House — because they simply don't exist in the other chamber. 'There's not a single [Republican] senator from New York or New Jersey or California,' said Finance Chair Mike Crapo. That means there's not much appetite 'to do $353 billion for states that, basically, the other states subsidize.' But Senate Republicans are keenly aware of the House's precarious math problem. If they send a package back to the House with significant SALT changes, it could derail the timeline for Trump's biggest legislative priority. 'We are sensitive to the fact that, you know, the speaker has pretty narrow margins, and there's only so much that he can do to keep his coalition together,' Sen. Todd Young told reporters. 'At the same time it wouldn't surprise people that the Senate would like to improve on their handiwork.' Where's Trump? The president on Wednesday didn't directly tell lawmakers not to meddle with the House's SALT deal. But he, too, is playing the numbers game. 'He said, 'You do this, do we lose three votes here? If you do that, do you lose three votes here?'' Sen. Ron Johnson told reporters after the meeting. Senate Majority Leader John Thune also conceded the difficult calculus on SALT, telling reporters 'we understand that it's about 51 and 218' and 'we will work with our House counterparts and the White House' to move the megabill. There's been a breakthrough elsewhere, though: With Commerce preparing to release its draft bill today, Sen. Mike Rounds told Lisa Wednesday that he's satisfied a planned spectrum auction will protect national security, with specific frequencies used by the military shielded through 2034. One potential wrinkle: Rounds later suggested to our John Hendel that the deal that was still being finalized Wednesday could look to free up other frequencies 'that the business community is going to be concerned with.' GOOD THURSDAY MORNING. Tonight is Game 1 of the NBA Finals between the Indiana Pacers and the Oklahoma City Thunder, and Sens. Todd Young and James Lankford have made a classic friendly wager on the championship: The loser has to wear the winning team's jersey. Before tipoff, follow our live Capitol Hill coverage on the Inside Congress blog at And send us the answer to our burning question of the day: Should we swap our Celsius for Horse electrolytes like Rep. Mike Collins? Email us your thoughts: lkashinsky@ mmccarthy@ and bleonard@ THE SKED The House is in session and voting on a bill that would move Small Business Administration offices out of so-called sanctuary cities at 3 p.m. — Intel will have closed hearings on the president's fiscal 2026 budget requests for the military services at 9 a.m., for Cyber Command and U.S. Special Operations Command at 10:15 a.m. and for FBI and DHS at 11 a.m. — Armed Services will have a hearing on the Air Force's fiscal 2026 posture with testimony from Air Force Secretary Troy Meink and Space Force Chief of Space Operations Gen. B. Chance Saltzman at 10 a.m. — Financial Services will have a hearing on data privacy in financial systems at 10 a.m. — Judiciary will have a hearing on foreign influence on Americans' data at 10 a.m. — Oversight will have a hearing on using AI in the federal government at 10 a.m. — Small Business will have a hearing on private equity at 10 a.m. — Education and Workforce will have a hearing on the Labor Department's policies and priorities with testimony from Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer at 10:15 a.m. — Appropriations will begin marking up the Military Construction-VA appropriations bill at 10 a.m. and the Agriculture-FDA appropriations bill at 10:30 a.m. The committee will have a hearing on the president's fiscal 2026 budget request for the Commerce Department, with Secretary Howard Lutnick testifying at 11 a.m. The Senate is in session and voting on James O'Neill's nomination to be deputy secretary of HHS and to end debate on John Eisenberg's nomination to be an assistant attorney general at 11:30 a.m. The Senate will then vote on Eisenberg's nomination and to end debate on Brett Shumate's nomination to be an assistant attorney general at 1:45 p.m. — Homeland Security will have a hearing on five nominations, including Sean Cairncross to be the national cyber director and Robert Law to be an under secretary at DHS at 9:30 a.m. — Armed Services will have a hearing on the Army's fiscal 2026 posture with testimony from Secretary Daniel Driscoll at 9:30 a.m. — HELP will have a hearing on the nominations of Penny Schwinn and Kimberly Richey to be deputy and assistant secretaries at the Education Department and of Daniel Aronowitz and David Keeling to be assistant secretaries at the Labor Department at 10 a.m. — Judiciary will vote on multiple nominations including David Waterman to be U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Iowa at 10:15 a.m. — Foreign Relations will vote on multiple bills at 10:30 a.m., including a resolution condemning Hamas for its 2023 attack on Israel and another requiring the State Department to report to Congress a strategy for U.S. security assistance to Mexico. The rest of the week: The House will vote on a bill that would require proof of citizenship to apply for SBA loans. The Senate is out on Friday. THE LEADERSHIP SUITE Johnson meets with his cardinals about funding totals The speaker plans to meet today with top GOP appropriators about what funding totals to use in drafting the dozen government funding bills they'll write this summer, our Jennifer Scholtes writes in. There are less than four months left until the new fiscal year begins in October, and House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole wants to push all those measures through his committee before August recess. But how high to go on funding totals is still a push-and-pull with GOP leaders. The goal of today's confab: 'To see if we can find some additional savings,' Cole told reporters. Already, Cole's committee is forging ahead with markups today on two of the 12 bills, even before GOP leaders and his dozen subcommittee chairs — 'the cardinals' — have settled on numbers for the full slate. Schumer throws up a judicial roadblock Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer shot down the quick confirmation of a top Justice Department nominee Wednesday as part of a blockade tied to the Trump administration's acceptance of a Qatari plane to use as Air Force One, our Jordain Carney writes in. Judiciary Chair Chuck Grassley tried to get unanimous consent to confirm one of his former staffers, Patrick Davis, to be the assistant attorney general overseeing legislative affairs. Schumer objected, citing his blanket holds that remain in place 'because the attorney general refuses to answer fundamental questions about Donald Trump seeking a luxury plane.' POLICY RUNDOWN SCOOP: GOP WANTS TO ZERO OUT CFPB FUNDING — Senate Banking Republicans will propose provisions that would change the pay scale for Federal Reserve employees and zero out funding the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as part of the Senate version of the GOP megabill, according to a committee staff memo obtained by our Jasper Goodman. Banking Republicans are scheduled to meet this morning to discuss the proposal. The panel is required to find $1 billion in cuts over the next 10 years as part of the party-line tax-and-spending package. If approved, the proposal would need to be reconciled with the House's plan, which did not include Fed pay scale changes or as drastic a cut to the CFPB. SCOOP: TUBERVILLE'S SNAP CONCERNS — Sen. Tommy Tuberville, a frontrunner to become Alabama's governor, is raising the alarm over a controversial House GOP plan to help pay for the Trump megabill by pushing billions in federal food aid costs to states, our Meredith Lee Hill reports. 'Everybody that's going to be in state government is going to be concerned about it,' Tuberville told Meredith. 'I don't know whether we can afford it or not.' At least two dozen other GOP senators have quietly raised concerns about how their states, including those run by fellow Republicans, could be hit by the policy change. FIRST IN INSIDE CONGRESS: CLEAN-ENERGY GROUP TARGETS GOP SENS — Protect Our Jobs, a pro-clean-energy group, is running $1 million in television and digital ads warning key Senate Republicans against following the House's plan to in some cases sunset — and in other places eviscerate — the green tax credits created by the Biden-era climate law. 'These politicians promised to bring down our monthly costs. But cutting America's energy production will only make our costs go up,' the narrator says in the ad, which began running Monday on 'Fox & Friends' and in the D.C. area, and will on Friday move into Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, North Carolina and Utah. Sens. Jerry Moran of Kansas, John Curtis of Utah and Thom Tillis of North Carolina have all urged GOP leadership not to follow through with a full-scale repeal of the credits, warning it could harm investments back home. Tillis, who faces a potentially difficult reelection fight in his purple state, expressed some cautious optimism Wednesday that Senate Republicans want to find a 'glide path' for businesses that already have projects in motion using the credits, but didn't elaborate. TARIFFS TEST GOP PATIENCE — Sen. John Kennedy grilled Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick at a hearing Wednesday, signaling some Republican patience with the White House's negotiating strategy may be starting to wear thin, our Daniel Desrochers and Doug Palmer report. Kennedy asked Lutnick if the administration would take a zero-for-zero trade deal with Vietnam, one of many trading partners facing major tariff hikes in July. Lutnick said 'absolutely not,' because he said Vietnam is being used as a pathway for China to send products to America. 'Why are you negotiating trade deals then?' a visibly frustrated Kennedy replied. Lutnick could face the fire again today: the Commerce secretary is testifying in front of House Appropriations at 11 a.m. MAJOR OPIOID CRISIS BILL PASSES HOUSE — The GOP-led House voted 366-57 to reauthorize landmark legislation to prevent and treat illicit opioid use Wednesday. The overwhelmingly bipartisan vote comes despite frustration from leading Democrats over the Trump administration's cuts for addiction treatment. The bill, led by Energy and Commerce Chair Brett Guthrie, would reauthorize billions of dollars in funding for tackling the opioid crisis, which killed nearly 50,000 Americans last year, according to federal estimates. Congress passed the original bill in 2018 with near-unanimous House approval, and Trump signed it into law. The legislation expired nearly two years ago, but Congress has continued funding its programs. Best of POLITICO Pro and E&E: POLITICO PRO SPACE: Your insider's guide to the politics behind the new space race. From battles over sending astronauts to Mars to the ways space companies are vying to influence regulators, this weekly newsletter decodes the personalities, policy and power shaping the final frontier. Get sharp analysis, scoops and reporting from across the newsroom — including insights from our teams in Florida, California and Brussels. Try the newsletter free for a limited time starting tomorrow before it becomes exclusive to POLITICO Pro subscribers. Find out more. TUNNEL TALK NEW USCP CHIEF — The next chief of the U.S. Capitol Police will be Michael Sullivan, a former interim chief of the Phoenix Police Department, our Nicholas Wu, Chris Marquette and Katherine Tully-McManus report. Before serving in Phoenix, Sullivan was deputy commissioner of compliance and deputy commissioner of operations at the Baltimore Police Department, according to his LinkedIn profile. He was also a deputy chief at the Louisville Metro Police Department, where he spent more than two decades as an officer. THE BEST OF THE REST Bill Gates comes to Utah to help Sen. Curtis in his efforts to preserve clean energy, from Cami Mondeaux at Deseret News After Muscling Their Bill Through the House, Some Republicans Have Regrets, from Michael Gold at the New York Times Republicans Are Trying to Stop — And Even Sabotage — Bill Huizenga's Potential Senate Bid, from Reese Gorman at NOTUS CAPITOL HILL INFLUENCE AUTOMOBILE ALLIANCE DIVIDED — A split among automakers over Republicans' megabill is hobbling their powerful lobbying group as the Senate considers major rollbacks to electric vehicle and manufacturing tax credits, four people familiar with the dynamics tell our James Bikales. The Alliance for Automotive Innovation, which represents major automakers and suppliers, has yet to take a public stance because its members can't reach consensus on changes to a key tax credit claimed by automakers for producing EV batteries. The trade group had strongly defended the credits in Democrats' climate law last year, and in recent months warned that rolling them back would threaten U.S. competitiveness and national security. SMUCKER AIDE JOINS MINDSET — Kate Bonner has left the Hill to return to K Street as a principal at Mindset. Bonner spent the past five years working as chief of staff and senior adviser to Rep. Lloyd Smucker, a member of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee and vice chair of the House Budget Committee, POLITICO Influence scooped. Before joining Smucker's office, she was a director of federal government relations and external affairs at Citigroup and spent nearly a decade with the National Federation of Independent Business. Bonner told PI that she will be registering to lobby with an expected focus on tax and trade issues as well as financial services and energy. JOB BOARD Stu Sandler is now Sen. Rick Scott's chief of staff. He previously served as the National Republican Senatorial Committee's political director and executive director of the Michigan Republican Party. Eden Alem is now deputy comms director for the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Dems. She previously was national press secretary at Climate Power. Hana Tadesse is now VP of comms for the Seattle FIFA World Cup 26 local organizing committee. She previously was comms director for Rep. Kim Schrier. HAPPY BIRTHDAY Rep. Chrissy Houlahan … Jack Smith … Megan Beyer … Jeff Rapp of Sen. Lisa Blunt Rochester's office … Jordan Dickinson of Target … Mary Kirchner of Sen. Roger Marshall's office … Todd Zubatkin … Kara Hauck … Everytown's Kate Brescia (3-0) … Daniella Landau of Penn Avenue Partners … Socko Strategies' James Cecil Kemmer … Rob Kelly TRIVIA WEDNESDAY'S ANSWER: Jacob Murphy correctly answered that Theodore Roosevelt said the quote 'When they call the roll in the Senate, the senators do not know whether to answer 'present' or 'not guilty.'' TODAY'S QUESTION, from Jacob: On August 1, 1946, President Harry Truman signed the Fulbright Scholarship Program into law. Which country was the first to sign a Fulbright agreement with the U.S.? The first person to correctly guess gets a mention in the next edition of Inside Congress. Send your answers to insidecongress@


Hamilton Spectator
an hour ago
- Hamilton Spectator
David Jolly, a Trump critic and former GOP congressman, to run for Florida governor as a Democrat
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — A former Republican congressman and vocal critic of Donald Trump says he wants to become governor in the president's adopted home state of Florida, and that he's running as a Democrat. David Jolly formally announced his bid Thursday, becoming the latest party convert hoping to wrest back control of what had been the country's premier swing state that in recent years has made a hard shift to the right . Under state law, term-limited Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis can't run for reelection in 2026. Even as Florida serves as a place for the Trump administration to poach staff and test policies , Jolly says he's confident that issues such as affordability, funding public schools, and strengthening campaign finance and ethics laws will resonate with all voters in 2026. He predicts elections next year will herald nationwide change. 'I actually think Republicans in Tallahassee have gone too far in dividing us. I think we should get politicians out of the classrooms, out of the doctor's offices,' Jolly said. 'I think enough people in Florida, even some Republicans, now understand that. That the culture wars have gone too far,' he said. Jolly was first elected to his Tampa Bay-area congressional seat during a 2014 special election, and was reelected for one full term. The attorney and former lobbyist underwent a political evolution that spurred him to leave the Republican Party in 2018 to become an independent and then a registered Democrat. And he has built a national profile for himself as an anti-Trump political commentator on MSNBC. Jolly said he has considered himself 'part of the Democratic coalition' for five or so years, and believes in what he sees as the party's 'fundamental values' — that government can help people, that the economy should be 'fair' to all, and that immigrants should be celebrated. 'I struggled to exercise those values in the Republican Party,' Jolly said, continuing: 'The actual registration as a Democrat wasn't a pivot. It was a kind of a formality.' Jolly has broken from his old party on immigration, as Florida lawmakers race to help Trump fulfill his promise of mass deportations . Jolly skewered Republicans who he said have 'conflated immigration and crime,' which he described as wrong and immoral. 'If you were born here or if you immigrated here, or if you're a Tallahassee politician who steals Medicaid money, we're going to be tough on crime,' Jolly added, referring to a probe into the use of Medicaid settlement funds by a charity associated with first lady Casey DeSantis. Jolly's gubernatorial run as a Democrat draws comparisons to the failed bid of former Republican congressman-turned-independent-turned-Democrat Charlie Crist, who lost to DeSantis in 2022 by 19 points. It was Crist, running as a Democrat, who ousted Jolly from his congressional seat in 2016. Jolly joined the Florida Democratic Party at what is arguably one of its most vulnerable points in years. Florida currently has no Democrats elected to statewide office, and there are now 1.2 million more registered Republicans than Democrats, according to the state's active voter rolls. The GOP has made significant inroads in formerly Democratic strongholds in the state, such as Miami-Dade County . The day that Jolly announced his new affiliation, the-then top Democrat in the Florida Senate, Jason Pizzo, revealed he was leaving the party, declaring that 'the Democratic Party in Florida is dead.' Pizzo, a former prosecutor, has said he'll launch his own run for governor as a candidate with no party affiliation. On the Republican side , Jolly will face Trump-backed Rep. Byron Donalds , who is also a frequent presence on cable news as a surrogate for the president . Among the other names floated as potential GOP candidates are former Rep. Matt Gaetz and Casey DeSantis . ___ Kate Payne is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .