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Read previewOne of Florida's highest-profile billionaires will no longer get state funds to help pay his legal fees, as a newly proposed bill from his allies unraveled on Monday. In 2022, the state spent $13.015 million in matching funds given out to candidates, including Gov. The new bill would modify the existing restrictions on releasing state funds to eligible presidential candidates who live in Florida. AdvertisementPayments for candidates' legal fees through the fund would be replenished by voluntary taxpayer donations collected through driver's license registrations. He claimed late last year that he has racked up $100 million in legal fees, The Hill reported.
Persons: , unraveled, Donald Trump, Florida State Sen, Ileana Garcia, Jimmy Patronis —, Trump, DeSantis, Ron DeSantis, kkc2yyqVK0, Garcia, @JimmyPatronis, Patronis, wieqYQ8Woq — Ileana Garcia, We've, — Donald Trump, that's Organizations: Service, Business, Fighters, state's Department of Financial Services, Florida State, Florida's, Bloomberg, Trump, Florida Republican, Fighters Fund, Free, Sunshine State, White, Gov, Department of Financial Services, Forbes Locations: Florida, New York, Washington, Atlanta, Free State of Florida, Citrus County
The Florida pollster Ryan Tyson is expected to be a top advisor in Ron DeSantis' presidential bid. Ron DeSantis' presumptive presidential bid, was deeply enmeshed in a major Florida political-corruption scandal that has resulted in criminal charges for five people, two of whom have been convicted. At the center of the scandal are "ghost candidates" — those drafted to run purely to siphon votes from an opposing party in close races. It's not illegal to run ghost candidates, Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle, a Democrat, said at a news conference in 2021 after two people were arrested on campaign-finance charges in connection with the scheme. Tyson is "Ron DeSantis' brain," Peter Schorsch, the publisher of Florida Politics, said.
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