News Service of Florida
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Dealing a major setback to Gov. Ron DeSantis, a three-judge appellate panel on Monday ruled that a 2021 Florida law targeting social-media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter unconstitutionally restricts the companies’ First Amendment rights.
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Heading into a special session next week to address the state’s troubled property-insurance market, legislative leaders said late Friday they will focus on issues such as roof-damage claims, litigation and reinsurance.
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Florida is among a half dozen states where the population was undercounted during the 2020 census, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
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Gov. Ron DeSantis has signed a bill that increases the punishment for trafficking fentanyl and could lead to dealers facing death sentences or life in prison if methamphetamine they distribute kills someone.
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Florida files an emergency motion appealing a Leon County judge's congressional redistricting rulingThe state has asked an appeals court to reinstate a stay on a circuit judge’s ruling that blocked a congressional redistricting plan pushed by Gov. Ron DeSantis. An emergency motion argues that a Leon County circuit judge erred last week when he issued a temporary injunction against the plan — and when he lifted a stay on the ruling Monday.
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Florida House Democrats are poised to select a new incoming leader on Tuesday, after a would-be leader dropped his re-election bid amid sexual harassment allegations. Rep. Ramon Alexander, D-Tallahassee, says he will no longer seek a 4th term.
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Requests by three insurers are the latest evidence of problems in Florida’s property-insurance system, as lawmakers prepare to return to Tallahassee next week for a special session on the issue.
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A federal judge has scheduled a trial for early next year in a legal battle over a new state law that restricts teaching about sexual orientation and gender identity in Florida schools.
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Gov. Ron DeSantis pointed to abortion-rights protests outside the houses of U.S. Supreme Court justices as he announced signing a measure intended to prevent picketing and protests outside people’s homes.
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As a battle continues about the constitutionality of a Florida law that seeks to crack down on social-media giants such as Facebook and Twitter, a federal appeals court has allowed a similar Texas law to take effect.