Florida

Tallahassee’s new leaders lay out their legislative priorities in era of GOP dominance

In this March 7, 2022, file photo, Sen. Kathleen Passidomo, who was chosen to be the next president of the state Senate during the 2023 and 2024 terms, smiles as she stands on the dais during a legislative session at the Florida State Capitol in Tallahassee, Florida.
In this March 7, 2022, file photo, Sen. Kathleen Passidomo, who was chosen to be the next president of the state Senate during the 2023 and 2024 terms, smiles as she stands on the dais during a legislative session at the Florida State Capitol in Tallahassee, Florida. AP

Florida’s new legislative leaders were formally elected and sworn in on Tuesday, delivering speeches that offered a glimpse of what their priorities may be over the next two years.

Both House Speaker Paul Renner, R-Palm Coast, and Senate President Kathleen Passidomo, R-Naples, talked about the importance of respect across the aisle and healthy debate.

Renner and Passidomo also both discussed the rising cost of living for Floridians, housing and Hurricane Ian, with Renner announcing he’ll form a select committee to focus on hurricane recovery and resiliency. He also said the Legislature needs to focus on long-term infrastructure, even if it comes to fruition years down the line after members have left office.

In his speech, Renner denounced “ideologues” who “seek to politicize everything,” and said they spend ”more time defending drag queen story time” than teaching reading.

“In this election, moms and dads sent a clear message to these ideologues,” Renner said. “Our children are not your social experiment.”

Brandon Wolf, the press secretary for Equality Florida, on Twitter called Renner’s comments “sick” in light of the recent mass shooting at a Colorado LGTBQ club. Wolf is a survivor of the 2016 mass shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando.

Renner also denounced ESG, short for environmental, social and governance investing, saying it poses a threat to Florida’s pension fund.

During her speech, Passidomo discussed affordable housing, saying lawmakers need to do more than they did the prior session and calling it a “top priority.”

“I know state government cannot independently fix or outrun the problems caused by inflation,” Passidomo said. “But I believe a focus on safe, attainable workforce housing is one area where we can do our part.”

She also spoke at length about her goal of expanding Florida’s Wildlife Corridor and expanding the trail system.

Before Renner and Passidomo get the chance to steer Florida’s regular legislative session and focus on their bevy of issues, they first have to tackle a special session focused on Hurricane Ian property tax relief. The session will potentially address property insurance as well. DeSantis has not yet called the session but indicated in October he would do so.

This story was originally published November 22, 2022 at 3:58 PM with the headline "Tallahassee’s new leaders lay out their legislative priorities in era of GOP dominance."

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