The Florida Legislature passed a $500 million immigration package late Tuesday meant to position the state to cooperate with the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration.
The bill creates the Office of State Immigration Enforcement to facilitate cooperation with the federal government on immigration enforcement as well as managing a grant program to help law enforcement in the state get equipment and training to assist U.S. Immigration and Customers Enforcement (ICE). The bill also strips the governor of immigration enforcement responsibilities, instead giving those powers and control of the new office to the state Agriculture Commissioner.
State Sen. Joe Gruters (R-Sarasota), the bill’s sponsor, said the bill will allow the federal government to take the lead on immigration enforcement.
“President Trump's executive orders make it clear, it's a new day in Washington, and citizenship matters. Immigration is a federal issue, and the federal government is taking the lead. President Trump is closing our borders, protecting our sovereignty, and most importantly, has the back of law enforcement leaders who are on the front lines protecting our communities from criminal illegal aliens,” Gruters said.
The package also ramps up criminal penalties for illegal immigrants who commit crimes. It requires the death penalty for any illegal immigrant who commits a capital offense, and reclassifies every crime committed to the next highest criminal offense. Additionally, if an illegal immigrant is the member of a gang, it requires they be sentenced with the maximum penalty for the crime they committed.
And the measure repeals a previous law that allowed undocumented minors to receive in-state tuition at the state’s colleges and universities. State Sen. Randy Fine (R-Melbourne), the bill’s cosponsor, said he doesn't think the state should pay the college expenses of undocumented immigrants.
“When we give that spot to an illegal immigrant, we are taking that spot away from a Floridian, or someone from the other 49 states, or someone from a country around the world who wants to come here legally and pay full price,” he said.
The education change received the strongest opposition from Democrats. Senate Democratic leader Jason Pizzo (D-Hollywood) said it was hypocritical to remove the funding while keeping education funding for people in prison.
“All you tough on crime, w back the blue, illegal immigration, let's crack down—You're letting rapists and murderers get a free education, but not the kid who obeys the law and wants to get a piece of the dream. You know how hypocritically disingenuous and stupid that is?” he said.
But whether Gov. Ron DeSantis will sign the bill is another story. The sweeping measure comes a day after legislative leaders spiked Gov. Ron DeSantis’ special session centered on immigration, instead calling their own to get this bill passed.
In a video posted to the social media platform X, DeSantis expressed frustration with the legislation, calling it weaker than his proposals.
“Agriculture has not exactly been known for immigration enforcement, so it’s almost like the fox guarding the hen house. It was bizarre. I think it was more of a sop for folks that want cheap labor. That is totally bad policy, that can’t happen,” he said.
Amid his opposition, some of his Republican political allies voted against the bill. One of them is Sen. Blaise Ingoglia (R-Springhill), who said he didn’t believe the bill gave the state enough enforcement powers to make long-term changes in the state.
“In four years, President Trump is going to be gone, and I can only hope and pray whoever succeeds, that man will take up the mantle and continue doing it. But we cannot guarantee that that person is going to be there. So, we have to have structure in place in the states in the event that we don't get that reform at the federal government,” he said.
Fine responded to DeSantis’ criticisms on the floor by pointing to the governor’s failed presidential run against Trump. Fine endorsed Trump in that contest, and in turn got Trump’s endorsement in an open Congressional race. He won the Republican primary for that deep red seat with over 80% support Tuesday. The race was called while Fine was presenting the bill.
“I’m not going to take lectures from someone who, a year ago, didn't think Donald Trump should be President. Welcome to the team. And there has been no one on the team more dedicated to President Trump being successful than the guy in the front row who is running this bill,” he said.
With a veto possible, Republican state senators may need to rely on support from some Democrats down the line. While the 82-to-30 margin the bill passed in the Florida House is enough to override a veto, the 21-16 margin in the Senate is not.
University of Central Florida political science professor Aubrey Jewett said the legislature’s actions to rebuke DeSantis and his response is a stark shift from the status quo of lawmakers' relationships with the Governor since 2018.
“It clearly shows that the legislature and the legislative leaders felt that they were being disrespected by Gov. DeSantis. They were sending him a strong message that from now and into the future, they are going to expect Gov. DeSantis to recognize them as a co-equal branch that may sometimes differ from the governor, and that if the governor wants to work with them, he's going to have to work cooperatively, as opposed to just telling them what to do,” he said.