@adhdrunsme@MikeNellis If she didn’t want it aired, she should have stayed quiet. There also isn’t anything new here, trolls, everyone already knew the story. This just highlights her glaring hypocrisy. So STFU and cry somewhere else ❄️
After this powerful interview, pro-life Congresswoman Kat Cammack asked me not to air the story of her near-fatal pregnancy complication. But her firsthand account of seeking emergency medical care under Florida’s abortion laws is too important to ignore. Full interview out now.
UPDATE! Dasha Kilpatrick has been identified as the woman at HEB who harassed two Muslim women while wearing scrubs.I verified this after receiving it yesterday & shes a medical massage therapist,but working an apparent student permit & this is regular behavior for her.More⬇️
The @GovRonDeSantis regime has been an absolute nightmare collision of partisan insanity, corruption, and incompetence. But, Florida voters haven’t proven themselves to be all that bright, so can common sense win here? God, I fucking hope so.
🎇 🎇let’s do this , Florida
Don’t blow it !!! Our tent is big with plenty of seats for an overflow crowd !!
“For decades, Florida was the archetypal presidential swing state — and as recently as 2016 and 2018, Democrats came close to winning statewide elections there.
Then things took a turn. After Ron DeSantis was elected governor in 2018, the Sunshine State moved solidly right of the country in 2020, and 2022 and 2024 brought double-digit drubbings for Democratic candidates — convincing many that Florida was just purely a red state now.
Could the blue wave building in 2026 change all that?
David Jolly thinks so. A former Republican congressman who quit the party back during Trump’s first term, Jolly officially became a Democrat last year — and is now the party’s likely gubernatorial nominee in the contest to succeed the term-limited DeSantis. (The Republican primary is still contested, but the Trump-endorsed Rep. Byron Donalds has a large lead in polls.)
Like other Democrats across the country, Jolly’s message is laser-focused on affordability. But as a former Republican trying to win a reddened state, his pitch is a bit different from what we’ve seen in blue territory. He’s also coming off years as a frequent MSNBC commentator, and has many thoughts on what ails our politics.
Senior politics correspondent Andrew Prokop sat down with Jolly on Monday for a conversation about the race, to ask him about the key issues ailing the state — and whether Democrats actually have a chance at winning Floridians back to their side”
https://t.co/FrAZDXBTRs