Kimberly Leonard's must-read briefing on what's hot, crazy or shady about politics in the Sunshine State
Nov 20, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Kimberly Leonard

FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell holds her hand up during a hearing.

Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell appearing on Capitol Hill on Tuesday. She testified before two House committees. | Angelina Katsanis/POLITICO

Good morning and welcome to Wednesday.

FEMA Administrator DEANNE CRISWELL spent most of Tuesday getting grilled by House members in two different committees about a former employee who told relief workers in Lake Placid, Florida, to skip homes displaying pro-Trump signs or flags.

The hearings ranged in topics, from the climate crisis to President-elect DONALD TRUMP’s history with disaster relief and whether a portion of FEMA’s funding should continue to go to unauthorized immigrants. Yet, key information also emerged about the Lake Placid incident, first reported by the conservative news site The Daily Wire, with lawmakers pledging to take action.

Here are some top takeaways for disaster-heavy Florida: 

New information emerged. On Monday night, the ex-crew lead, MARN’I WASHINGTON, told CNN that some FEMA workers felt unsafe approaching certain homes, which often tended to advertise Trump support.

FEMA typically goes door to door after a disaster to help people sign up for assistance because they often lack electricity or cell service. But it’s against FEMA policy to skip anyone because of their political beliefs, or even to proactively avoid homes in general, Criswell said. She testified that she learned Nov. 7 that homes had been skipped and her team showed her photographic evidence about it on Nov. 9, and she fired Washington immediately.

FEMA officers have now visited all 20 houses that got skipped to let them know they might qualify for aid, and the agency did an anti-discrimination refresher training for staff. Criswell said she hadn’t seen any evidence that discrimination was more widespread, but there’s still an ongoing investigation by the inspector general to make sure.

False information proliferated. The hostility some people may have had toward relief workers appears to be tied to misunderstandings about how FEMA operates and what help is available. After the hurricanes, then-candidate Trump falsely said FEMA was diverting money from disaster relief to immigration.

Criswell said responders faced harassment that she blamed on “misinformation about FEMA’s work spread through social media.” FEMA has a web page to dispel false rumors, but in past disasters it mostly warned about criminals who try to defraud disaster victims.

After Hurricanes Helene and Milton, false information was “at a scale that I had never seen before,” Criswell testified. She said she mostly worried it might cause people not to sign up for assistance.

“Misinformation was a real distraction — unnecessary,” agreed Rep. KATHY CASTOR (D-Fla.), who testified about her district getting pummeled by hurricanes. “A lot of time was spent combating that false information rather than encouraging people to sign up,” she said.

Plenty of FEMA roadblocks exist. Representatives from both parties — and Criswell — acknowledged that applying for aid was overly complicated and noted that FEMA’s call center got backed up. Rep. BYRON DONALDS (R-Fla.) said constituents often asked his congressional office for help after their applications were rejected. He urged Criswell to “clean this process up.”

“The No. 1 thing that hurts FEMA’s reputation is the fact that so many citizens are denied when they apply the first time they come through the FEMA portal,” he said.

Rep. JARED MOSKOWITZ (D-Fla.) said the Department of Homeland Security, of which FEMA is a sub-agency, had become too large and should split off its disaster agency so it could report directly to the White House. (Moskowitz has experience with this, having managed Florida’s emergency response agency under Gov. RON DESANTIS’ first couple of years in office.)

Lawmakers discussed ways to improve FEMA. Criswell said she wanted to see passage of the bipartisan Disaster Survivor Fairness Act, which would make it easier for people to seek assistance and help build more resiliency, as well as the Management Cost Modernization Act, which would allow states to transfer leftover disaster funding to recovering or preparing for future storms.

Lawmakers also discussed creating a universal application process for assistance. Now, some homeowners go through FEMA while others are told to apply through the Small Business Administration, or even through other agencies when dealing with farming or fishing needs. It all depends on families’ financial circumstances and whether they have property insurance to begin with — but it’s all overwhelming to anyone who’s lost their homes to a storm.

Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget that Playbook should look at? Get in touch at: kleonard@politico.com.

 

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... DATELINE TALLAHASSEE ...

Florida State Rep. Daniel Perez is seen during a joint session of the Florida State Legislature.

Florida state Rep. Daniel Perez applauds during a joint session of the Florida Legislature at the State Capitol in Tallahassee, Florida, on Jan. 9, 2024. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

ORGANIZING SESSION REDUX — “Florida has new legislative leaders. Is a split with Ron DeSantis next?” by POLITICO’s Gary Fineout. “New leaders. New speeches. And maybe some signs of a Florida Legislature shifting away from Gov. Ron DeSantis’ near total dominance.

“The Republican-controlled Legislature on Tuesday installed Daniel Perez as House speaker and Ben Albritton as Senate president, a move that kicks off a new era where the GOP remains in firm control — but also where DeSantis is about to enter his lame-duck period, finishing out his final two years in office following an unsuccessful run for president.

“Perez and Albritton didn’t directly criticize or challenge the sitting governor. But after years of a GOP legislature that catered to DeSantis’ every whim, they subtly signaled lawmakers would assert more independence this go-around.

“They made it clear, for example, that they had no plans to rush into a special session before the end of the year to consider changes to a condominium law that they passed in the aftermath of the Surfside disaster in 2021, where 98 people were killed. DeSantis had called on legislators to act by the end of the year.”

TECH UPDATE — “Federal lawsuit could shield companies from Florida’s social media restrictions — for now,” reports POLITICO’s Andrew Atterbury. “Florida’s high-profile law restricting social media access for children goes into effect Jan. 1, but major tech firms might get an early reprieve. State Attorney General Ashley Moody this week agreed to delay enforcing the law for companies that are involved in a federal lawsuit challenging Florida’s policies prohibiting children younger than 14 from using many platforms and demands parental approval for those 15 and 16 years-old. That means, at the very least, many social media firms can avoid punishment until late February, and possibly longer as the case plays out.”

REJECTION RECORD — About half of insurance claims filed with Citizens Property Insurance were denied or didn’t meet a policyholder’s deductible, reports Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times. State Farm and Allstate didn’t pay out claims 46 percent of the time.

— Mower writes: “Florida’s state-run insurer paid homeowners’ claims less often than any other insurer in the state last year … according to an analysis by a Palm Beach Gardens-based ratings agency.”

PENINSULA AND BEYOND

Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado holds up tally sheets during a protest against the reelection of President Nicolás Maduro one month after the disputed presidential vote which she says the opposition won by a landslide, in Caracas, Venezuela, Aug. 28, 2024.

Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado holds up tally sheets during a protest against the reelection of President Nicolás Maduro one month after the disputed presidential vote which she says the opposition won by a landslide, in Caracas, Venezuela, on Aug. 28, 2024. | Ariana Cubillos/AP

‘IRON LADY’ — Venezuela opposition leader MARÍA CORINA MACHADO is in hiding, making calls internationally to push for EDMUNDO GONZÁLEZ to take the presidency in January, reports The New York Times’ Julie Turkewitz.

— According to Turkewitz: “Machado argued that Venezuela now offers something extremely tempting to President-elect Donald Trump: ‘an enormous foreign policy victory in the very, very short term.’ In her view, [President Nicolás] Maduro is now so weak — rejected by his own people, suffering fractures within his party — that a renewed pressure campaign by Trump and his allies could in fact push the Venezuelan autocrat to negotiate his own exit.”

— In the interview, Machado praised Trump for choosing Sen. MARCO RUBIO as secretary of state and Rep. MIKE WALTZ as national security adviser and said Trump could reverse the easing of sanctions that happened under President JOE BIDEN or pursue criminal charges against Maduro allies.

— On Monday the House approved the Bolivar Act to block federal agencies from doing business with anyone who has commercial agreements with Maduro’s regime. And Secretary of State ANTHONY BLINKEN on Tuesday recognized Gonzalez as the president-elect.

CAMPAIGN MODE

State Rep. Michelle Salzman (R-Pensacola) goes for a photo with Rep. Wyman Duggan (R-Jacksonville) prior to a joint session for Gov. Ron DeSantis' State of the State speech at the State Capitol in Tallahassee, Florida, on March 7, 2023.

State Rep. Michelle Salzman (R-Pensacola) goes for a photo with Rep. Wyman Duggan (R-Jacksonville) prior to a joint session for Gov. Ron DeSantis' State of the State speech at the State Capitol in Tallahassee, Florida, on March 7, 2023. | Phil Sears/AP

IT’S OFFICIAL — State Rep. MICHELLE SALZMAN filed on Tuesday to run for FL-01, the seat vacated by former Rep. MATT GAETZ.

Not long after, Florida Chief Financial Officer JIMMY PATRONIS said he was “strongly considering” doing the same. “We’ve got a historic opportunity to fight the swamp, end lawfare and return power back into the hands of Americans,” he wrote on X.

Gov. RON DESANTIS would need to pick a CFO replacement should Patronis decide to run. That’s another dynamic that gets interesting: State Sen. JOE GRUTERS (R-Sarasota) is already running for the job of CFO — and has the Trump endorsement. But Gruters has famously clashed with the governor in the past. So, if DeSantis picks someone for the post, then that person would be able to run against Gruters as an incumbent.

State Sen. BLAISE INGOGLIA told POLITICO's Gary Fineout that he has been "seriously considering" running for chief financial officer in two years, even though Gruters had already been endorsed by Trump.

ON THE SENATE FRONT — Republican National Committee Co-chair LARA TRUMP has backing from another high-profile MAGA figure for the Senate seat being vacated by MARCO RUBIO. Former Florida Attorney General PAM BONDI told A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics that she believed Trump was “extremely qualified” and a “proven leader.”

 

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TRUMPLANDIA AND THE SWAMP

HIGH-STAKES VOTE — The House Ethics Committee is meeting today to decide whether they’ll make a report public about their investigation into former Rep. MATT GAETZ.

Per POLITICO: “The panel is evenly divided between Republicans and Democrats, and it only requires a majority vote in the private meeting to release the report. A tie would defer to the party that controls the House — meaning if all Republicans voted against releasing it, the report would not be published.”

CAUGHT OUR EYE — DigiBuild CEO ROBERT SALVADOR, a part-time Floridian and Gov. RON DESANTIS donor, is applying to work at the Department of Government Efficiency, the commission being led by ELON MUSK and VIVEK RAMASWAMY, reports Matt Stieb of New York Magazine. His company uses AI to help companies save money on construction materials.

DATELINE D.C.

Rep. MAXWELL FROST (D-Fla.) was elected Tuesday as one of the co-chairs of House Democrats’ policy and communications arm, per POLITICO’s Nicholas Wu.

BAKER DETENTION CENTER — “Citing inhumane conditions, [Democratic Rep.] Maxwell Frost seeks closure of Florida detention facility,” reports the Florida Phoenix’s Mitch Perry. “The center, a county jail near Jacksonville, operates in part as a federal immigration detention facility.”

IN JAIL — “Man accused of putting Moskowitz on hit list had drawings of Broward schools, weapons stockpile, prosecutors say,” reports the South Florida Sun Sentinel’s Shira Moolten. “A man accused of putting Congressman Jared Moskowitz on a ‘hit list’ had a clipboard full of ominous writings that included detailed drawings of local schools and parks in west Broward labeled with racial slurs and an entry that said ‘stalk Jewish parks,’ prosecutors say. Those are only a few of the 42 separate items found in the apartment of John Lapinski Jr., 41, ahead of his arrest earlier this month. Also found were dozens of weapons including an AR-15, thousands of rounds of ammunition and a Ghillie suit used to camouflage military snipers, prosecutors say.”

TRANSITION TIME

Concordia co-founder and CEO MATTHEW SWIFT has launched the public relations and advisory firm Montfort Group, which is headquartered in Palm Beach with a presence in Washington and New York. It’ll work across energy, defense, private equity, finance and media sectors. Swift was also recently named chair of the board of trustees for the Palm Beach Chamber of Commerce.

ODDS, ENDS AND FLORIDA MEN

Sen. TED CRUZ (R-Texas) was spotted on a flight to West Palm Beach.

— A new Harry Potter ride at Universal Orlando Resort is set at the British Ministry of Magic, The Associated Press reports.

BIRTHDAY: Anthony Pedicini, founder of Strategic Image Management.

 

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Kimberly Leonard @leonardkl

 

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