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Extensive Media Enterprises Good Monday morning. On what was his birthday, I am thinking of my friend James Miller. He would have been ecstatic to learn that Christian Bale is set to be part of the cast of 'Heat 2.' Please take a moment to read the obituary we published about Jimmy here. ___ Pardon the brevity of today's Burn; I'm traveling back to Florida and currently waiting at LaGuardia Airport on a delayed plane. Can't wait to get home. Thanks for understanding! ___ President Donald Trump is signaling a national shift away from anti-vaccine rhetoric ahead of the Midterms, warning Republicans that attacks on childhood immunizations are politically unpopular. Polling from GOP strategist Tony Fabrizio shows broad voter support for long-standing vaccine schedules, with even majorities of Republicans, conservatives and Trump voters backing school-entry requirements.  Debate over childhood vaccine requirements intensifies as national and Florida leaders diverge on policy. Administration figures, including Dr. Mehmet Oz, have publicly encouraged vaccination as measles cases rise. Fabrizio's data suggests candidates who support eliminating routine childhood vaccine recommendations face measurable political backlash. In Florida, however, Gov. Ron DeSantis is moving in the opposite direction. DeSantis and First Lady Casey DeSantis are backing legislation to expand non-medical vaccine exemptions, while Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo continues criticizing existing requirements. The Florida Department of Health is also advancing rules to repeal certain school immunizations. The push comes as Florida ranks third nationally in measles cases, according to the CDC. Despite polling from McLaughlin & Associates showing 79% statewide support for current school-entry requirements, SB 1756 continues advancing, setting up a sharp contrast between the GOP's national recalibration and Florida's escalating vaccine debate. ___ The Southern Group bested its previous annual record in lobbying pay, netting more than $44 million in 2025. According to newly filed Q4 compensation reports, the firm led by founder Paul Bradshaw earned an estimated $11.65 million, bringing the firm's total legislative revenues to $26.98 million and executive branch pay to $17.27 million. Brian Ballard and the team at Ballard Partners landed in the No. 2 spot, with an estimated $38.81 million earned last year, including nearly $27 million in the Legislature and another $17 million in the executive branch.  Florida lobbying firms report record compensation totals in newly filed year-end disclosures. Repeating at No. 3 was Capital City Consulting. The shop founded by Nick Iarossi and Ron LaFace collected nearly $8 million in the fourth quarter to cap off a $31.10 million performance in 2025 — the firm's best annual total to date. There was some shuffling at No. 4, with Rubin Turnbull & Associates climbing two spots from its 2024 year-end ranking on the back of a $13.57 million performance in 2025. The firm's tally includes an estimated $3.45 million in the final quarter of the year. Dean Cannon and the team at GrayRobinson landed Just $750,000 back with a $12.82 million haul in 2025. The firm's final-quarter reports showed $3 million in pay, of which $1.6 million was earned from lobbying the Legislature. |
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