Seeking Rents

Seeking Rents

Home
Podcast
Archive
About

Florida lawmakers banked $14 million the day before session began

Florida in Five: Five stories to read from the past week in Florida politics.

Jason Garcia's avatar
Jason Garcia
Apr 12, 2026
Cross-posted by Seeking Rents
"So when we vote this fall, how do we know who the representatives we elect will really represent? If history is a guide, we should be concerned. Jason Garcia has the answers..."
- J.C. Bruce
Photo credit: Florida Department of Management Services

This is Seeking Rents, a newsletter and podcast devoted to producing original journalism — and lifting up the work of others — about Florida politics, with an emphasis on the ways that big businesses and other special interests influence public policy in the state. Seeking Rents is produced by veteran investigative journalist Jason Garcia, and it is free to all. But please consider a voluntary paid subscription, if you can afford one, to help support our work. And check out our video channel, too.

Welcome to another installment of Florida in Five: Five* stories you need to read from the past week in Florida politics.

Florida lawmakers banked $14 million in campaign contributions on the day before the start of the 2026 legislative session, according to a Seeking Rents review of first-quarter campaign finance reports.

The avalanche of donations recorded on Jan. 12 was, in part, the result of an annual fundraising orgy that takes place in Tallahassee on the eve of every lawmaking session. Legislators are forbidden from raising money during their 60-day session, which means they — and the special interests seeking to buy access and influence in the state Capitol — must scramble to beat the opening gavel.

Much of that last-minute money was essentially laundered through intermediaries — like political committees controlled by lobbyists or campaign consultants — that make it difficult to the trace the true origins of many donations.

For example, one of the biggest session-eve spenders this year was “A Stronger Florida,” a political committee linked to the lobbying firm Rubin Turnbull & Associates, which records show doled out more than $500,000 to more than three dozen legislators. Recent large donors to the lobbyist-controlled committee include the billionaire-run insurance firm Ryan Specialty, for-profit hospital owner HCA, online casino operator ARB Interactive, and Outpost Brands, which sells loosely regulated products infused with an opioid-like extract.

But two companies stand out for the amount of last-minute money they dropped on Florida’s Republican-controlled Legislature: Gun manufacturer Sig Sauer and home insurer Slide Insurance, both of whom, records show, showered nearly $500,000 on legislators on the final day of pre-session fundraising.

More than 30 lawmakers deposited a combined $480,000 in donations from Sig Sauer on Jan. 12 — including House Speaker Danny Perez (R-Miami), Senate President Ben Albritton (R-Wauchula), incoming House Speaker Sam Garrison (R-Fleming Island), incoming Senate President Jim Boyd (R-Bradenton) and Sen. Jay Trumbull (R-Panama City), each of whom took $50,000 apiece via various fundraising committees they control.

The mass cash infusion came as Sig Sauer was lobbying those same lawmakers to pass a bill shielding the company from legal exposure related to a company-made pistol that can allegedly “ghost fire” without anyone pulling the trigger.

Emails and text messages obtained by Seeking Rents show lobbyists for Sig Sauer gave the original draft of the legislation to Trumbull and Rep. Wyman Duggan (R-Jacksonville), who received a $50,000 donation from the company in December.

Lobbyists for Sig Sauer emailed an aide to Sen. Jay Trumbull a draft of the legislation that became Senate Bill 1748.

The Sig Sauer bill passed the House of Representatives by a 75-29 vote but was unable to get through the Senate. The legislation could be resurrected in the future, though, particularly with the support of a legislator like Trumbull, who is in line to become president of the Senate after the 2028 elections.

Another text message obtained by Seeking Rents — sent by Eileen Stuart, a lobbyist for Sig Sauer, to Duggan, the House bill sponsor — shows that Sig Sauer representatives dined with Trumbull shortly before the session began. The lobbyist described the future Senate president as “firmly committed” to the legislation.

A text message from Sig Sauer lobbyist Eileen Stuart to Rep. Wyman Duggan.

Meanwhile, more than 40 lawmakers reported a combined $469,000 on Jan. 12 from Tampa-based Slide Insurance, which has become one of Florida’s more infamous insurance companies since launching in 2021.

It’s not clear what specific bills or issues the now-publicly traded company lobbied lawmakers on this session.

But the House of Representatives attempted to limit the ability of insurance companies to shift money between affiliates and subsidiaries in order to avoid state laws prohibiting excess profits. And Slide has been particularly aggressive in the past when it comes to using internal transactions to move money across its corporate structure.

The profit-stripping legislation breezed through the House by a 106-3 vote. But it was never given a single hearing in the Senate.

Senate leaders were, it turns out, the biggest beneficiaries of Slide’s session-eve contributions.

Records show that a fundraising committee chaired by Boyd, the incoming Senate president, took $170,000 from Slide — more than a third of all the money the company donated on Jan. 12.

The No. 2 recipient? Trumbull, who will follow Boyd as Senate president and who took $45,000 from Slide Insurance the day before session began.

Now, all the contributions that Sig Sauer and Slide made the day before session went to Republicans — which makes sense, since Republicans hold supermajorities in both chambers of the Legislature (as well as the Governor’s Office and all three statewide elected Cabinet posts) and have complete control over the agenda in the Capitol.

But to be very clear, plenty of corporate interests buying access in Tallahassee also make sure to spend a bit of money currying favor with some Democrats, too.

A particularly interesting example: The new campaign-finance reports show that the giant landowner behind the “Blue Ribbon Projects” bill gave $10,000 on Jan. 12 to a committee controlled by Rep. Christine Hunschofsky (D-Parkland), the incoming House Democratic Leader.

It could perhaps help explain how the legislation — which would have enabled the largest landowners in Florida to develop city-sized projects on rural tracts of land with minimal local oversight — managed to pick up a handful of Democratic votes in each of the three House committees it passed this session, despite opposition from environmental groups and local governments.

The Blue Ribbon Projects bill ultimately failed in the Senate — but just barely.

*To paraphrase Barbossa, five is more what you’d call a guideline than an actual rule.

An agency for at-risk kids in St. Pete is at risk of becoming a grifting gravy train for Tallahassee

What have Juvenile Welfare Board members said about CEO search? Texts offer a glimpse (Tampa Bay Times) ($)

See also: Pinellas Juvenile Welfare Board poised to name Glen Gilzean its next CEO (Tampa Bay Times) ($)

See also: Inside a DeSantis appointee’s taxpayer-funded spending spree (Seeking Rents)

The surveillance state

Florida police use Flock license plate cameras for ICE surveillance (Treasure Coast Newspapers)

See also: How Florida cops use cameras to read your license plate, bumper stickers (Treasure Coast Newspapers)

See also: Miami ICE leads U.S. in arrests, driven by local cops’ cooperation (Axios Miami)

See also: Activists want Orlando to take tougher stance against ICE detention center (Orlando Sentinel) ($)

See also: Manatee drops bid to tie nonprofit funding to immigration checks amid pushback (Suncoast Searchlight)

See also: Florida’s Embrace of ICE Has Come at a Cost (Bloomberg Opinion) ($)

The ‘too late in the process” excuse does not exactly inspire confidence

Environmentalists warned cruise port fix would leave Terra Ceia vulnerable (Suncoast Searchlight)

See also: Is the Tampa Bay cruise port proposal dead? (Tampa Bay Times) ($)

Retaliation.

Retaliation? Provider loses $3.5M in state contracts after fighting HIV cuts (Florida Phoenix)

What is he hiding?

Uthmeier won’t say whether he’s asked courts to keep Hope Florida report secret (Tampa Bay Times) ($)

See also: Criminal Hope Florida probe wrapped, but IRS inquiry could soon begin (Miami Herald) ($)

See also: Florida AG wants to keep his job. Voters deserve grand jury answers | Opinion (Miami Herald) ($)

Perspectives

Network can put pregnant Floridians at risk (Palm Beach Post)

We sued Florida for public records and got them … once again (Orlando Sentinel) ($)

A Smart Investment: The Case for Paid Family Leave in Florida (Florida Policy Institute)

Brace yourself — the Florida Legislature somehow did one thing right (Florida Phoenix)

A life tragically lost, but her ideals endure (South Florida Sun-Sentinel) ($)

No posts

© 2026 Jason Garcia · Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start your SubstackGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture