Politics
Florida Tea Party Faithful Alive and Well, Anticipating Shining Victories from 2013 Legislature
Around the State

Tea Party protester
“I think [legislative] leadership is very supportive of what we’re doing, [even if they won’t] come out and stand at a microphone and say it,” Slade O’Brien, Florida state director of Americans for Prosperity (AFP), tells Sunshine State News. “You can just see by the committees they’re setting up and the things that they individually are pushing that they’ve taken a very hard look [at] what we’re talking about, and they’re willing to take on certain planks of it.”
It’s difficult to gauge something like a “tea party agenda,” because, as SSN has reported previously, the movement remains largely ill-defined and amorphous, with different ideological and political interests attaching themselves to it when convenient.
But if the tea party is defined as a broad grassroots commitment to limited government, less taxes, and free markets, and the legislative realization of these principles, there’s probably no better de facto representative of the movement in Florida than AFP, whose “Five for Florida” agenda has been endorsed, not only by nearly two dozen lawmakers and state Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater, but also by several organizations around the state that identify with the tea party label.
Mike Hill, president of the Northwest Florida Tea Party, sits on the board of the nonpartisan government watchdog Integrity Florida, which has come under fire over the last week for teaming with AFP to produce a report highly critical of Enterprise Florida, the state’s program for incentivizing businesses to set up shop in the Sunshine State.
Hill declined to elaborate on specific legislative proposals his tea party organization would be getting behind in the coming session, but he did share his impressions of what he thought were the top concerns of Floridians who identify with the tea party movement: gun rights, Obamacare, and government transparency.
“The tea party believes strongly in our Constitution, which means the Second Amendment gives us the right to keep and bear arms; that’s going to be a big issue for us,” Hill said, referring to efforts by some legislative Democrats to amend or revoke the state’s “stand your ground” laws.
Since the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act has been declared constitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court, Hill says tea partiers’ next target is the prospect of state-based health insurance exchanges.
“Our position on that is to not set up the state exchanges, mainly because it will mean an expansion of Obamacare in Florida and a huge expansion of our Medicare costs, which right now is eating up close to 25 percent of our state budget,” Hill explained. “We don’t believe that we can afford to increase that any more.”
One area he thinks tea partiers can ally with liberals and moderates is on the issue of government transparency, particularly with regard to the expenditure of campaign monies. “That’s something we think can be done very easily and quickly,” he says, while praising proposals already put forward by House Speaker Will Weatherford and Senate President Don Gaetz.
Some of these same concerns were echoed by O’Brien and Abigail MacIver, AFP’s director of policy and external affairs. But they were much more specific about what legislation they’re backing.
Their “Five for Florida” plan, outlined last summer, contains the following goals for lawmakers:
-- Reform taxes and end corporate welfare.
-- Don't make financial promises taxpayers can't keep.
-- Be stewards of good, transparent government.
-- Empower kids with the best education.
-- Free entrepreneurs to pursue the American dream.
Though session is still a few weeks away, and not every bill that will be considered has already been filed, O’Brien and MacIver named six pieces of legislation, already or soon-to-be filed, which they say will bring Florida closer to realizing those goals:
1. "Parent trigger” legislation, which would allow parents of public school children to convert their failing schools to charter schools.
2. House Speaker Weatherford’s pension reform legislation, which would place new state hirees on 401(k) style pension plans.
3. Freshman Rep. Neil Combee’s HB 121 (“Department of Economic Opportunity”), which would require local governments to submit a list of all local fees and tax rates, along with the length of time required to obtain certain business licenses and permits, and for this information to be published on the website of the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity.
4. A bill recently introduced by the House Education Choice and Innovation Subcommittee, which requires greater transparency on the part of charter schools and makes it easier for successful charters to expand.
5. Legislation backed by Senate Banking and Insurance Committee chairman David Simmons which would assist in the progressive depopulation of Floridians from Citizens Property Insurance, the state’s taxpayer-subsidized program for homeowners who cannot afford to purchase property insurance from private providers.
6. Legislation expected to be introduced under the patronage of Speaker Weatherford, which would expand virtual learning opportunities for Florida’s public college and university students.
“I’m much more encouraged by this session [than I was last year],” O’Brien says. “I think that the leadership in this session understands our issues and our point of view much better and is willing to focus a lot more attention on it.”
Reach Eric Giunta at egiunta@sunshinestatenews.com or at (954) 235-9116.

Comments (3)
I find it interesting that all of the so called "leaders" seem to come from the panhandle. Could it be they are not so much leaders than they are logistically advantaged? I have been in the movement since 2009 and have never heard of Hill.
I can say one thing, nice that he chooses to do something and earn his status rather than buying his status like the former fundraiser for RPOF O'Brien.
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