Tag Archives: Rick Scott

Wednesday Blog Roundup – 3-20-2013

Gun Reform Package Loses One Major Provision, Another In Danger…

Not Happening
Assault Weapons Ban won’t be in the Senate gun bill .

Crist-mentum
Now Dem Charlie Crist is ahead of current Republican Gov. Rick Scott by 12 points , ..

Sens: We’re Moving Too Fast!
Republican Senators struggle to come up with reasons to slow momentum for immigratio..

Are Paul Ryan’s 15 Minutes Over?
A new Rasmussen poll finds Rep. Paul Ryan’s (R-WI) approval rating has plummeted sinc..

“Marriage defender” Bill O’Reilly is divorced
Divorced “marriage defender” O’Reilly says gay marriage could lead men to marry goats..

Obama Arrives in Israel for Two-Day Trip
President Obama landed on Wednesday to begin a highly symbolic two-day visit to Israe..

OOPS: Rand Paul Makes Case Against The Pro-Life Agenda
Last week, Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) introduced “The Life at Conception Act,”..

Dear Michele Bachmann: 70 percent does not equal 6 percent
Math-challenged. Yes, Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann is still at it, still being a..

Sanford advances to runoff, Colbert Busch wins Democratic nomination i..
Former governor Mark Sanford took a step closer to returning to elected office Tuesd..

NYPD Spent 1 Million Hours In Ten Years On Marijuana Arrests, Analysis..
New York Police Department officers have spent 1 million hours making 440,000 mariju..

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GOP Florida Lt Gov Jennifer Carroll Resigns Amid Racketeering Probe

jennifer carroll

I’m not too surprised.  After all, former Lt. Governor Jennifer Carroll was Governor Rick Scott’s number two.  Scott has been involved in a scandal or two prior to his election to office, was accused of Medicaid fraud through a hospital he was financially attached to.

This entire saga conjures up”birds of a feather” metaphors…

PoliticusUSA

Florida Republican Lt. Governor Jennifer Carroll resigned abruptly Tuesday amid a gambling scandal and racketeering probe into Allied Veterans, a firm for which she once did public relations work. Her resignation comes two days after Florida Law Enforcement officers interviewed Carroll about her work with Allied Veterans of the World, and top officials with the organization were arrested and charged with racketeering.

Carroll’s resignation was first reported by The Florida Times-Union:

Rick Scott tapped Carroll, a Navy veteran, to be his running mate during a 2010 news conference outside Jacksonville Naval Air Station. Allied Veterans is accused of money laundering, using money from a nonprofit for personal gain and misrepresenting the amount donated to charities. Authorities say the group donated just 2 percent of its $290 million in proceeds to charities over about five years. They also say the former president received more than $1.5 million and the national commander got $250,000 from the organization. A firm Carroll owned, 3N & JC, did consulting work for Allied Veterans, and she starred in a commercial for the nonprofit in 2010. …

In 2011, the Times-Union reported that Carroll used falsified documents to make her firm eligible for a Jacksonville program that offers grants to minority-owned companies. Her firm was located in Clay County, but relied, in part, on falsified lease documents to appear based in Jacksonville, which was a program requirement. Additionally, former Carroll aide Carletha Cole was arrested after being charged with giving a reporter a recording of a secret conversation between her and Carroll’s chief-of-staff. The case has brought a lot of unwanted attention to the Scott administration. In court filings, Cole has accused Carroll of having an inappropriate relationship with another female staff member.

Knowledge of how to defraud the government that Republicans claim to hate so much may be a résumé requirement in the Scott administration.

The Miami Herald explained the investigation into Allied Veterans:

Investigators said that Allied Veterans tried to scheme and defraud the public and governmental agencies by misrepresenting how much of its proceeds were donated to charities affiliated with Veterans Administration.

Carroll was nominated by Gov. Jeb Bush to run Florida’s Department of Veterans Affairs and served as one of the national chairpersons for Mitt Romney’s “Black Leadership Council”.

She served in the Florida House of Representatives from 2003-2010, and during that time was paid by Allied Veterans for her consulting work. She also proposed legislation to legalize the gambling games Allied Veterans was running in Florida Internet cafes, but later withdrew the bill claiming her staffer had “erroneously” proposed it.

Read her resignation letter here.

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Florida Governor Inflates Cost Of Medicaid Expansion By 2,500% To Avoid Implementing Obamacare

Florida Gov. Rick Scott (R)

Didn’t Gov. Rick Scott get enough of defrauding the Feds with Medicare embellishments in the past?

Think Progress

Internal email messages uncovered by Health News Florida reveal that Gov. Rick Scott (R-FL) is knowingly citing inaccurate cost estimates to justify his refusal to expand Florida’s Medicaid program. Though the governor’s office is fully aware that the numbers are wrong, Scott continues to use them anyway, the documents show.

Florida, which has one of the highest rates of uninsurance in the nation, could extend health coverage to about one million low-income residents by accepting Obamacare’s optional Medicaid expansion. But the governor — an ardent Obamacare opponent — has repeatedly said that expanding Medicaid would just be too expensive, claiming it would cost the state $26 billion over the next 10 years.

As Health News Florida reports, however, that figure from Florida’s Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) is inflated because it doesn’t take into account the full amount that the federal government will reimburse states for choosing to expand Medicaid. A more accurate analysis found that expansion would cost the state around $1 billion:

But those numbers are based on a flawed report, state budget analysts say. A series of e-mails obtained by Health News Florida shows the analysts warned Scott’s office the numbers were wrong weeks ago, but he is still using them. [...]

The Act says the federal government will pay the lion’s share of the cost for new Medicaid eligibles if a state agrees to expand its program — a decision the Supreme Court left up to the states. The federal contribution for the new eligibles would be 100 percent between 2014 and 2016, then would taper after that to 90 percent by 2020 and stay there.

But the AHCA report assumes the federal match for the new patients would be much lower, about 58 percent. It came up with that by averaging the match amount over the past 20 years. The report doesn’t say why the authors made that assumption. [...]

As Health News Florida reported on Dec. 21, the AHCA estimates were huge in comparison to a study released by the Urban Institute and Kaiser Family Foundation, two neutral research groups that specialize in Medicaid studies. Their study estimated that if Florida agreed to expand Medicaid, about 1 million uninsured people would gain coverage at a 10-year cost to the state of around $1 billion.

According to the email chain that Health News Florida obtained, state officials began calling the AHCA’s $26 billion cost estimate into question as early as December 20. One member of the House Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee even pointed out that, since the health reform law specifies that the federal government will help fund Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion, it would actually break Florida state law to expand Medicaid without using thefederal dollars mandated for that purpose.

Nevertheless, Scott has continued to repeat his false claim that Florida can’t afford to provide its low-income residents with the health coverage they need. Scott met with U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius on Monday to express his concerns about what expanding Medicaid would mean for his state’s bottom line. “Growing government, it’s never free,” Scott explained to reporters. “It always costs money.” Just not as much money as Scott says it does.

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Filed under U.S. Politics

Friday Blog Roundup 12-21-12

Does A Speaker Survive This?

Does A Speaker Survive This?
The likely truth is that John Boehner never had the votes to cut a deal with Preside..

Obama Approval Hits Highest Since 2009
A new Gallup poll shows President Obama’s approval rating at 56%, his highest mark on..

Video: Obama’s gun-violence task force gets to work
President Obama’s gun-violence task force is already at work. Vice President Biden me..

Video: Obama slow to appoint second term cabinet
Rachel Maddow compares the relatively long time President Obama is waiting to appoin..

Fox News Accuses Hillary Clinton Of Faking Concussion
Fox News figures accused Secretary of State Hillary Clinton of faking an illness whe..

Pennsylvania GOP Revives Plan To Rig The Electoral College
Two Pennsylvania state representatives are bringing back an ill-conceived 2011 plan ..

Video: House GOP abandons Boehner; conservatives in disarray
Jared Bernstein, senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, talks ..

Soledad O’Brien takes down himbo Gov. Rick Scott (R-FL) over guns
SOLEDAD: “Okay, I think, with all due respect, you’re not going to answer my question..

Jonathan Bernstein: Enjoy the Republicans’ debacle, but don’t read too..
There was nothing but embarrassment for Speaker John Boehner and House Republicans t..

FISA Warrantless Wiretapping Bill Poised For Renewal Despite Unanswere..
With Senate poised to act as early as Thursday night to renew the foreign surveillan..

 

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Michigan Governor Snyder Slammed For Sneaking Through Anti-Union Rules

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder will surely feel the blow-back from his unethical actions last week…

Alan Colmes’ Liberaland

The Detroit Free Press, which had endorsed Rick Snyder for governor, went after him for pushing through a right-to-work law, calling it a “failure of leadership” and a betrayal of voters.

For two years, we supported Snyder as he took painful steps to restore Michigan’s fiscal stability and confront a crisis in which plunging tax revenues and mounting obligations to retired workers threatened to cripple the state’s cities and school districts.

We criticized the governor for signing legislation that burdened a woman’s right to choose, condoned discrimination against gays, and beggared colleges and universities to pay for business tax cuts.

But we also indulged many compromises Snyder maintained were necessary to advance his pro-growth agenda. And when ideologues on the right and left mounted campaigns designed to hamstring state government by limiting its authority to raise revenues, regulate labor relations, and fund critically needed infrastructure, we joined the governor in opposing them.

In short, we trusted Snyder’s judgment.

That trust has now been betrayed — for us, and for the hundreds of thousand of independents who voted for Snyder with the conviction that they were electing someone more independent, and more visionary, than partisan apparatchiks like Wisconsin’s Scott Walker or Florida’s Rick Scott.

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Florida GOP: Yup, Those Lines Were About Voter Suppression

That’s exactly why people came out to vote and waited on those long lines, to counteract what was clearly voter suppression tactics…

Think Progress

Floridians endured election chaos and marathon voting lines this year, largely thanks to reduced early voting hoursvoter purges, and voter registration restrictions pushed by Republican legislators. In an exclusive report by the Palm Beach Post, several prominent Florida Republicans are now admitting that these election law changes were geared toward suppressing minority and Democratic votes.

Former governor Charlie Crist (R-FL) and former GOP chairman Jim Greer (R-FL), as well as several current GOP members, told the Post that Republican consultants pushed the new measures as a way to suppress Democratic voters. Crist expanded early voting hours in 2008 despite party pressure, but Gov. Rick Scott (R-FL) targeted early voting almost immediately when he took office in 2011. Scott’s administration claimed the new laws were meant to curb in-person voter fraud, despite the fact that an individual in Florida is more likely to be struck by lightning than commit voter fraud.

Current party members and consultants confirmed the motive was not to stop voter fraud but to make it harder for Democrats and minorities to vote:

Wayne Bertsch, who handles local and legislative races for Republicans, said he knew targeting Democrats was the goal. “In the races I was involved in in 2008, when we started seeing the increase of turnout and the turnout operations that the Democrats were doing in early voting, it certainly sent a chill down our spines. And in 2008, it didn’t have the impact that we were afraid of. It got close, but it wasn’t the impact that they had this election cycle,” Bertsch said, referring to the fact that Democrats picked up seven legislative seats in Florida in 2012 despite the early voting limitations.

Another GOP consultant, who did not want to be named, also confirmed thatinfluential consultants to the Republican Party of Florida were intent on beating back Democratic turnout in early voting after 2008.

[...]A GOP consultant who asked to remain anonymous out of fear of retribution said black voters were a concern. “I know that the cutting out of the Sunday before Election Day was one of their targets only because that’s a big day when the black churches organize themselves,” he said.

Though the state ultimately went to President Obama, the Republican effort to suppress votes was largely successful. A post-election report found that new voting restrictions led to a huge increase in provisional ballots, which are cast when there is some question of the voter’s eligibility.

While crying voter fraud, the Florida GOP had to confront its own scandal when a voter registration firm they hired turned in hundreds of fraudulent registration forms in several Florida counties. The GOP hastily cut ties with the group when the state opened a criminal investigation into their operations.

UPDATE:

African American pastors in Florida said they were “appalled but not surprised” at the Post’s report. One Jacksonville pastor said, “Even while cloaked in the dubious language of ‘voter fraud,’ the real reason for these measures was always clear. African Americans in Florida knew that, and we fought back – by voting.”

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Filed under Voter Disenfranchisement, Voter Suppression

11-5-12: Obama’s Accomplishments via Video (Rachel Maddow is the best)

Please share this…not just today, but for posterity.  In my opinion, this president is turning out to be historic in terms of his accomplishments, given the opposition he has endured and probably will continue to endure.

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Filed under Obama's Accomplishments, Rachel Maddow

Gov. Scott says no to more early voting in Florida. Y’all just keep standing in line

Could Governor Scott’s decision be partisan?

The Maddow Blog

After days of long lines and long waits for early voting, Florida Democrats asked Governor Rick Scott, a Republican, to extend early voting. It now ends on Saturday, because Republicans cut the number of days for early voting in half. Citing heavy turnout, Dems and League of Women Voters asked Governor Scott to restore voting this Sunday, the last day for “Souls to the Polls” drives before the election.

Governor Scott said no. From the Broward/Palm-Beach New Times:

“Early voting will end Saturday night,” Scott told reporters in response to the request. “But I want everybody to get out to vote.”

Scott’s Republican predecessor, Governor Charlie Christ, extended early voting in 2008because voters were waiting in line for several hours. Then Barack Obama won the state, and Florida Republicans decided fewer days would be better somehow.

Florida Republicans have cut into Democrats’ lead in early and absentee voting this year. But here’s the thing about early voting: It gives campaigns a greater chance of bringing in voters who might not otherwise vote. They can make appointments with marginal voters to get them to the polls, and the first appointment doesn’t work, they can go back for a second and third and fourth try. Democrats in Florida seem to be doing just that. Among voters who’ve missed the last few elections, Democrats say they’re winning this time by more than 77,000 votes.

(Florida photos: Up top, an hour wait Sunday in Winter Park, Florida, by Stacy Forrest; below, an hour and a half wait Tuesday in Palm Beach Gardens, Brian Hashiguchi. How to send us stuff.)

 

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5 Voter Misinformation Campaigns To Watch Out For

I prefer to call it a deliberate disinformation campaign…

Think Progress

Though most voter ID laws and voter purges have been thrown out or delayed by judges, voter suppression efforts are still alive and well. With two weeks to Election Day, voters in critical swing states are being inundatedwith false information and intimidating messages meant to discourage them from voting. While shenanigans have been reported in every election, voting rights advocates say efforts to confuse and intimidate voters are taking an even more prominent role this year.

  • Phone voting. Residents in Florida, Indiana and Virginia are receiving mysterious phone calls telling them they can vote by phone instead of going to the polls. Virginia’s board of elections has received at least 10 complaints, mostly from seniors, though the total number of people affected by these calls is unclear.
  • Fake voter purge letters. Also in Florida, a mass mailing of fake letters questioning voters’ citizenship is being investigated. The letter, written on fake letterhead of a local county’s Supervisor of Elections, tells recipients in 23 counties to fill out a “voter eligibility form” with their Social Security information, Florida drivers licence number, and addresses. The letter claims the recipients must send the form to the Supervisor of Elections within 15 days or be purged from the rolls — mimicking actual purge letters ordered by Florida governor Rick Scott (R) challenging 200 Floridians’ citizenship.
  • Intimidating billboards. Dozens of billboards warning that voter fraud is a felony popped up suddenly in predominantly African American and Latino neighborhoods of Cleveland, Ohio earlier this month. The message, which includes the prison sentence and fine for voter fraud, is likely targeting former felons who do have the right to vote in Ohio. The company, Clear Channel Outdoor, announced they would take down intimidating voter fraud billboards after the sponsor refused to come forward. The company is also donating 10 billboards declaring, “Voting is a Right. Not a Crime!”
  • Misleading voter ID ads. Though a judge ruled that Pennsylvania voters without a photo ID could still cast a regular ballot, state-sponsored ads have continued to tell residents they must show an ID. These ads are aired on television and radio, at posters at the DMV, and were mailed to thousands of seniors via a state prescription drug program. Abillboard targeting Spanish speakers also continued to promote the ID requirement for at least a week after the ruling.
  • Employer pressure. Several CEOs are pressuring their employees to vote for Romney by suggesting they will be forced to fire workers if Obama wins the election. While employers used to be banned from directly expressing political opinions to employees, the Supreme Court changed that with its 2010 Citizens United ruling. Workers have reported being pressured to vote, donate, and attend Romney rallies by their bosses.

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Rick Scott Vows New Voter Purge In Florida Before Election

Florida Secretary of State Rick Detzner

comprehensive report was just released yesterday concluded that “voter fraud” is virtually non-existent.  The proverbial cat is out of the bag and yet Governor Rick Scot of Florida has decided to do yet another purge on “ineligible” voters.

Think Progress

Gov. Rick Scott’s (R-FL) handpicked Secretary of State Ken Detzner announced on Tuesday that the administration will soon begin another voter purgeto remove “ineligible” voters from the rolls before the November 6 election. Florida county election supervisors remain weary of the effort, however, telling ThinkProgress that they may not have enough time to implement the purge.

 

Last month the U.S. Department of Homeland Security agreed to a request from Florida and other states to allow them to compare voter rolls against the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) database. Though it is unclear how this list can logistically be used by the states, Detzner told elections supervisors the state would be developing a list of names   for “additional actions in accordance with applicable laws.”

But even if Scott’s purge survives multiple lawsuits challenges its timing and legality, the mechanics of removing people from the voting rolls between now and the November elections may render Detzner’s efforts moot.

Volusia County Supervisor of Elections Ann McFall (R) told ThinkProgress that she has received no communication from the state whatsoever and does not see how she would have time to carry out the effort:

The law hasn’t changed for the process we have to go through. You’re looking at the letter going out [to those identified by the state as potentially non-citizen voters], then they get 30 days to respond, [then the county would] advertise the names in the paper, [and after that it would require an additional] 30 days to remove [the voters] from the records. I don’t think we can do it. Physically, I don’t think we can do it. That doesn’t mean we can’t check to see after the election [if any non-citizens voted]… I don’t want anyone on the books who isn’t eligible, but that’s what the odd-numbered years are for.

In other words, it would take at least 60 days between when the counties sent out letters and when the counties could remove any voters from the rolls. With the election just 83 days away, that does not leave much time.

Continue reading here…

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Filed under Voter Supression