Thursday, January 08, 2026

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene breaks with the GOP on Obamacare, calling to avoid premium hikes (Sahil Kapur, NBC News, October 6, 2025)

MTG is righteous on health care, government shutdown and  Epstein file coverup.  From NBC:

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene breaks with the GOP on Obamacare, calling to avoid premium hikes

Greene said she's "not a fan" of Obamacare but complained that her "own adult children’s insurance premiums for 2026 are going to DOUBLE" if Congress ignores the issue.
Image: House GOP 6/10/25 Marjorie Taylor Greene politics political politician
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., called on her party's leadership to address the coming premium hikes.Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images file

WASHINGTON — Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., broke with her party Monday evening by calling for action on expiring Obamacare subsidies to avoid premium hikes, adding a prominent MAGA voice to the cause led by Democrats.

In a long post on X, Greene, the far-right MAGA firebrand, made it clear she was not in Congress when the 2010 law passed.

“Let’s just say as nicely as possible, I’m not a fan,” she wrote. “But I’m going to go against everyone on this issue because when the tax credits expire this year my own adult children’s insurance premiums for 2026 are going to DOUBLE, along with all the wonderful families and hard-working people in my district.”

“No I’m not towing the party line on this, or playing loyalty games. I’m a Republican and won’t vote for illegals to have any tax payer funded healthcare or benefits. I’m AMERICA ONLY!!!” Greene added.

Extending expiring Obamacare funding is the top demand of Democrats during the government shutdown. The money expires at the end of this year.

Republicans are divided over the issue, with more than a dozen swing-district House members and some senators calling for an extension of the funds. But many conservatives in the party want the money to expire on schedule, and party leaders are noncommittal about whether they will extend it.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., have insisted the issue will not be discussed until Democrats cave in on their present stance and reopen the government first.

Greene said GOP leaders have not addressed the issue with the conference.

I’m carving my own lane,” she wrote. “And I’m absolutely disgusted that health insurance premiums will DOUBLE if the tax credits expire this year. Also, I think health insurance and all insurance is a scam, just be clear! Not a single Republican in leadership talked to us about this or has given us a plan to help Americans deal with their health insurance premiums DOUBLING!!!”

Her post caught the eyes of at least one Democrat in Congress.

Rep. Greg Casar, D-Texas, the chair of the Progressive Caucus, wrote on X: “I don’t quote MTG often, but... ‘Not a single Republican in leadership… has given us a plan to help Americans deal with their health insurance premiums DOUBLING!!!’”



DeSantis’ nonstop fundraising shows cash, appointments linked. (Herald-Tribune)

RONALD DION DeSANTIS, Florida Governor, links money with access and appointments. 

His political committee planned to link in-person meetings, golf games and dinners to contributions, as the Tampa Bay Times reports.  Orlando Sentinel columnist Scott Maxwell commented, "I imagine sex workers have similar rate structures."  That's a subtle way of calling the Boy Governor a whore.

And in this story from the Herald-Tribune, below the photo, his appointments are of major donors.

Claiming to be a religious Roman Catholic, Florida Republican Governor RONALDS DeSANTIS stiffs the poor, refusing to block efforts to hurt affordable housing, while refusing to help efforts to expand Medicaid and seeking to inflict a poll tax on the poor who have served their time for felonies.

Sinister fellow. 

We in St. Augustine and St. Johns County barely got to know this phony hobbledehoy in our employ since he was elected to Congress in 2012, an alien implant from the Koch Brothers. DeSantis treated one local official rudely, bailing on a scheduled appointment and breezing past him in his House office, presumably on his way to one of his more than 40 faux Fox News appearances, which attracted the endorsement of fellow phony DONALD JOHN TRUMP.

As they say in East Tennessee, Flori-DUH's Governor RONALD DION DeSANTIS "bears watching'." He rather reminds me of Tennessee Governor LEONARD RAY BLANTON, convicted of selling liquor licenses, who issued paid pardons to murderers and was removed early, with Lamar Alexander sworn in as Governor on January 18, 1979 (I was in the Nashville Tennessean newsroom that day, as a Georgetown University undergraduate investigating TVA coal procurement criminality on a Fund for Investigative Journalism grant). Watch this guy.

In United States v. Blanton, 700 F. 2d 298 (6th Cir. 1983), 719 F.2d 815 (6th Cir.1983)(en banc) cert. denied, 465 U.S. 1099, 104 S.Ct. 1592, 80 L.Ed.2d 125 (1984). \Governor LEONARD RAY BLANTON, corrupt Democratic Governor of the State of Tennessee, and his staff, were held to account for selling liquor licenses.

In the words of Patrick Henry in the Virginia House of  Burgesses in 1765, RONALD DION DeSANTIS "can profit by their example."

Any self-respecting FBI agent would seek torun an undercover op on DeSantis under RICO and Hobbs Act.

Harrumph to this hypocrite!

Since it is Sunday, here's some Bible quotes for this double-minded-man, followed by accounts of his catering to greedy billionaires -- pay-to-play, imitating the worst of RICHARD MILHOUS NIXON, RAY BLANTON and DONALD JOHN TRUMP.  

Luke 16:10
The person who is trustworthy in very small matters is also trustworthy in great ones; and the person who is dishonest in very small matters is also dishonest in great ones.
James 1:8
He is a double-minded man, unstable in all he undertakes.
Matthew 6:24
"No one can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to one and despise the other You cannot serve God and wealth.
Luke 16:13
"No servant can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will be devoted to one and despise the other You cannot serve God and wealth."
1 Corinthians 10:21
You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of demons; you cannot partake of the table of the Lord and the table of demons.








DeSantis’ nonstop fundraising shows cash, appointments linked


Posted Sep 15, 2019 at 5:28 AM
Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Top donors land posts as governor quietly bolsters his war chest

TALLAHASSEE — Proud of his nonstop approach to leading Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis also hasn’t taken much of a break from fundraising — quietly salting away almost $2.6 million in contributions since being sworn into office in January.

Unlike his predecessor, now-U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, DeSantis is far from a multi-millionaire who can help underwrite the cost of his own elections. But like Scott, DeSantis also is favoring some of those who give to his political spending committee by handing them appointments to influential government posts.

One of DeSantis’ most reliable donors, Jacksonville developer John Rood, a former ambassador to the Bahamas, recently emerged as a leader of the state’s efforts to help that nation recover from the destruction caused by Hurricane Dorian.

“John knows all the people over in the Bahamas,” DeSantis said Tuesday of Rood, whom he called “a friend of mine.”

Rood and his Vestcor Companies have contributed more than $68,000 to Friends of Ron DeSantis this year, most of it coming this summer as the governor stepped up his fundraising.

Rood, a longtime Republican fundraiser who initially favored DeSantis’ opponent, Adam Putnam, in the Republican primary for governor, faces a tough task in the Bahamas, where he served as ambassador under former President George W. Bush.

Rood said he is working with the organization Mission of Hope International to build 1,000 units of transitional housing in Marsh Harbour, and is looking to raise money from individuals and companies in Florida.

Other DeSantis donors have given, then gotten what look like less demanding assignments.

John Palmer Clarkson, a manufacturing executive, was reappointed to the Jacksonville Port Authority in August, two months after he gave $10,000 to DeSantis’ committee. Charles Lydecker, an insurance executive from Ormond Beach, was named to the State University System Board of Governors in June, after giving $10,000 to DeSantis’ political committee before his election.

Similarly, Stephen Hudson of Fort Lauderdale was appointed by the governor in July to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. His Hudson Capital Group gave $25,000 last fall to DeSantis.

Ron Howse, president of a Cocoa engineering and land planning company, was reappointed in August to the St. Johns Water Management District, after contributing more than $14,700 last year.

Howse also is chair of the Florida Transportation Commission, and last year helped DeSantis’ campaign by making his airplane available to the governor.

None of the contributors contacted by GateHouse Media returned phone calls. The governor’s office also did not respond to email requesting comment on DeSantis’ fundraising.

DeSantis’ aggressive fundraising recently drew more attention when the Tampa Bay Times reported the existence of internal memos prepared by campaign strategists for the governor that contained different levels of contributions individuals were expected to make in order to meet, golf or dine with the governor.

The documents raised concerns that access to the governor came with a price, and only those with the cash to contribute to his campaign would be heard. DeSantis’ team said they never implemented the pricing scheme.

While DeSantis and Scott have different styles as governors, both are vigorous fundraisers who appear to have embraced a connection between donors and those who serve on state boards and commissions. DeSantis also has followed Scott’s lead of staying in almost constant motion around the state, promoting his policies and programs.

Early in last year’s U.S. Senate campaign, GateHouse newspapers reported that Scott had collected close to $1.4 million from 127 of the people he appointed to boards and commissions, or from their spouses and children. They gave either to his Senate campaign or the New Republican PAC supporting his bid to unseat three-term Democratic U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson.

Such cash, though, amounted only to a drop in the bucket for Scott’s campaign, which spent $82.8 million, including $65 million from the candidate’s own pocket. Scott and his, wife, Ann, are worth at least $352 million, according to U.S. Senate financial disclosures filed last month.

But DeSantis and his wife, Casey, don’t have that kind of bank account.

DeSantis’ financial disclosure filed with the state in July reported a net worth last year of $283,605.

Still, the two Republican leaders share a kinship among donors.

James “Bill” Heavener, whose business interests include serving as CEO of Full Sail University, the Winter Park for-profit college, last month added $50,000 to DeSantis’ political committee, on top of the $150,000 he contributed last year.

Heavener and his wife, Christie, poured at least $228,600 into Scott’s campaign last year. A University of Florida graduate, Heavener was put on the school’s board of trustees by Scott, who also named him to the board of Enterprise Florida, the state’s business development arm.

Danny Doyle Jr., a former Scott appointee to the State University System Board of Governors who runs a Tampa-based imaging company, was part of a family investment of at least $108,600 to the Scott campaign. Last month, he put $100,000 into DeSantis’s account.

Some advisers say the governor’s smart to keep his fundraising machine going well in advance of an expected 2022 re-election campaign. DeSantis and his political committee raised more than $58 million for last year’s governor’s race — a figure his Democratic opponent, Andrew Gillum, came close to matching.

Outside groups put millions more into the race.

“The governor’s race cost $100 million, and it’s hard to raise $100 million in a short amount of time,” said Brian Ballard, a Tallahassee lobbyist who chaired the governor’s inaugural committee.

“It’s smart to start early and do it in a methodical way. It’s not fun for anyone. No one takes joy in fundraising, but he’s smart doing what he’s doing,” Ballard added.

Ballard gave DeSantis’ political committee $10,000 last September. One of his company’s partners, Katherine San Pedro, was named by DeSantis to the Enterprise Florida board in July.

Steve Schale, a Democratic consultant, said that Scott “rewrote the rules for fundraising,” relying on his own political spending committee and shunning the state’s Republican Party.

But when it comes to DeSantis’ attention to fundraising, Schale said it’s no surprise.

“Am I shocked he’s raising money? Hardly. It’s like there’s gambling in ‘Casablanca,’” said Schale, referring to the movie classic.

Like Scott, DeSantis also seems to be going his own way, although Florida GOP chair Sen. Joe Gruters of Sarasota said he has no problem with the governor’s approach.

“The governor and the party are 100% together,” Gruters said. “I couldn’t be happier with his performance, governing. I am his chairman, and he’s doing a great job for the party.”

The donations to Friends of Ron DeSantis also don’t guarantee favorable treatment.

Rood, the prominent donor, is in the housing business. In June, he was stung when DeSantis vetoed $8 million for a Jacksonville workforce housing apartment complex being developed by Rood’s Vestcor Cos.

It was the single biggest line-item veto handed down by DeSantis. And it came after Vestcor gave $25,000 to DeSantis’s political committee four months earlier.

But the development, called Lofts at Cathedral, was seen as the first time state affordable housing money had been earmarked for a specific project.

“I don’t know if that’s the precedent we want to go down,” DeSantis said in explaining why he axed the dollars.

But that evidently didn’t rattle the Rood-DeSantis relationship.

Two months after the veto, records show Vestcor tucked another $18,000 into the Friends of Ron DeSantis account.

Florida’s Full Sail University ‘hoodwinked’ students with fake jobs, whistleblowers say (Steven Walker, Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service, October 6, 2025)

UPDATE, January 8, 2026: Amid a pending fraud investigation, Florida Boy Governor RONALD DION DeSANTIS has appointed JAMES W. "BILL" HEAVENER to an other term on the University of Florida Board of Trustees.  Mother Jones reported in 2023 that HEAVENER contributed more than $150,000 to Governor DeSANTIS' campaign. 

October 6. 2025: Another federally funded for-profit trade school rightly requires judicial and investigative scrutiny.  Let justice be done, at last. $377,000,000 in federal funds annually.  It's our money. From Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service: 

Florida’s Full Sail University ‘hoodwinked’ students with fake jobs, whistleblowers say

Full Sail denied the allegations, emphasizing that the two whistleblowers never worked at Full Sail.
2
Full Sail University in Winter Park, Fla., Wednesday, May 14, 2025. In May, a federal court unsealed a whistleblower complaint against Full Sail alleging fraud and a
Full Sail University in Winter Park. In May, a federal court unsealed a whistleblower complaint against Full Sail alleging fraud. [ WILLIE J. ALLEN JR. | TNS ]
Published Yesterday
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Whistleblowers in a federal court case in California allege Central Florida’s Full Sail University engaged in a “pay-for-play” student hiring scheme to earn more federal funding.

The case, initially filed in 2024 and unsealed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California in May, names Full Sail and the Los Angeles Film School, both operated by University of Florida alumnus and trustee James W. Heavener.

The complaint alleges that LA Film School and Full Sail funneled money to employers to hire students for jobs that lasted scarcely longer than two days, all so the schools could count them as “employed” to hit a 70% employed threshold for more federal funding. The students were “hoodwinked” into going along, it said.

Full Sail, a private, for-profit entertainment arts college in Winter Park, receives $377 million per year in federal funding, according to the complaint.

“Full Sail emphatically denies the claims against it and will not permit these individuals pursuing financial benefit to continue to attempt to damage our reputation unchallenged,” the school’s statement read.

The whistleblowers were David Phillips, LA Film School’s former vice president of career development, and Ben Chaib, the school’s former vice president of admissions. The two claim the operations of the schools, although separated by about 2,500 miles, were tightly knit and the fraudulent activities were coordinated by Heavener at both locations.

The whistleblowers claim Heavener said there weren’t jobs for some LA Film School graduates, necessitating the scheme.

“Full-time time jobs don’t exist for these people, they don’t exist,” the complaint claims Heavener said.

They also claim Heavener instructed LA Film School to “focus strictly on the appearance of compliance.”

The complaint alleges that LA Film School pressured students into signing a “self-employed” form after their short-term jobs so the school could continue to count them as “employed.” Most self-employed graduates reported a yearly income of between zero and $5,000, according to the complaint.

Tuition at LA Film School and Full Sail for a bachelor’s degree can range from about $30,000 to almost $100,000.

Heavener oversees a multitude of business interests including education, real estate, banks and media production through The Heavener Company. He joined the UF Board of Trustees in 2013, has served as President of the University of Florida Gator Boosters and was a recipient of the 2018 Golden Gators Lifetime Philanthropist Award. He has also been a major financial supporter of Gov. Ron DeSantis.

On a Reddit forum for Full Sail, some alumni said the allegations weren’t surprising.

“The only thing I got from that school was a massive amount of loans and decades of stress because of it,” one user wrote. “The school is too expensive, and outcomes are not good but yea believe that the for-profit school gives a crap about you. Go to State schools,” wrote another.

ANNAL$ OF DeSANTI$TAN: Who Owns RON DeSANTIS (Mother Jones)

If Florida is still corrupt, here's Exhibit A. Who owns or rents Florida Governor RONALD DION DeSANTI$, our disgraceful ex-Congressman from St. Johns County, a bumptious bigot, who disdained citizens and Commissioners while trolling for campaign cash and face time on faux Fox News? Mother Jones has assembled a list of 313 contributions of $100,000 or more from DeSANTIS's last big money campaign. Check it out, my friends. Notice any surprises here? The $100,000+plus Club includes devious developer-Senator TRAVIS JAMES HUTSON, controversial ICI Homes Chair and University of Florida Board Chairman MORI HOSSEINI, among others, including developers, gamblers, polluters, government contractors, and others, including sordid or assorted right wingers desiring government favors. From Mother Jones Magazine. https://cleanupcityofstaugustine.blogspot.com/2023/11/annals-of-desantistan-who-owns-ron.html From Mother Jones Magazine: 

Who Owns Ron DeSantis?

In his last campaign, he pulled in 313 contributions of $100,000 or more from an assortment of plutocrats and special interests.

Black and white photo of Florida Governor Rob DeSantis appears on a red background. The background shows rows of black text that list various dollar amounts and donor names.

Mother Jones; Bryon Houlgrave/AP


In recent months, Ron DeSantis has received a load of bad press focused on his slippage in the 2024 polls, shake-ups within his organization, and less-than-stellar campaign finances. Yet the Florida governor is one of the most prodigious political cash-chasers in recent US history. When he successfully ran for reelection in Florida in 2022, DeSantis, who was first elected to the Sunshine State’s top executive position four years earlier, raised a whopping $211 million for his state political committee and set an all-time record for gubernatorial fundraising. Along the way, he collected huge bundles of campaign money from eccentric billionaires, magnates who had run afoul of the law, corporations that seek lucrative contracts from the government he runs, and even a prominent businessman once identified by law enforcement authorities as associated with a Mafia crime family. 

What made DeSantis’ money-grab such a feat was that most of the candidates he surpassed were tycoons who had poured their own fortunes into their campaign treasuries. (Businesswoman Meg Whitman dumped $144 million of personal funds into her unsuccessful quest in 2010 for the California governorship.) DeSantis topped them all by hitting up corporations, fat-cat donors, and political action committees for super-sized contributions. Gargantuan donations in the six-, seven-, and eight-digit range poured into his political pockets. Of the more than 200,000 contributors to his 2022 effort, 313 handed him $100,000 or more, with 11 slipping DeSantis $1 million or more. These $100,000-and-above donations accounted for $113 million, or 54 percent of his total take. 

Florida imposes no restraints on the size of political donations to state political committees. (In a presidential race, a contributor can only give $3,300 directly to a candidate, but an unlimited amount to an independent-expenditure committee, better known as a super PAC, which supports the candidate.) DeSantis took advantage of Florida’s wide-open campaign finance system to bring in a never-before-seen amount of dollars, swamping his Democratic opponent Charlie Crist, who collected a measly $32 million. Despite DeSantis’ current financial woes, the 2022 contest demonstrates that he can pull in the big bucks. It also shows who has their hooks into DeSantis.

A large chunk of the cash DeSantis raised for his gubernatorial race has gone into boosting his presidential bid—perhaps illegally. At the end of his successful reelection contest, DeSantis had about $82 million remaining in his war chest. Earlier this year, what was left of his state campaign committee transferred that money to a super PAC called Never Back Down that has been supporting DeSantis’ presidential effort. “There’s no question that it’s illegal for a federal candidate to transfer money they raised for a state committee to a federal super PAC,” Erin Chlopak, senior director for campaign finance at Campaign Legal Center who worked for nearly a decade as part of the Federal Election Commission’s Office of General Counsel, told OpenSecrets, a nonprofit, in May. The Campaign Legal Center and End Citizens United each have filed complaints with the Federal Election Commission alleging that DeSantis’ transfer of money raised for a state campaign to a federal campaign violates federal election law. 

Though DeSantis routinely blasts the so-called swamp—”I don’t want top drain the swamp, I want to break it,” he has exclaimed—and decries elites and the “ruling class,” this list of donors is chockfull of the rich and powerful: people, companies, and PACs that seek out policies and favors from elected officials. While major presidential candidates are often the recipients of similar largesse via political parties and PACs, few office-seekers in modern-day America have directly received such immense donations from so many sources as has DeSantis. He is—or was—a king of big-money politics.

His 2022 gubernatorial race provides a perspective into DeSantis’ fundraising world. It reveals that while holding power in the state of Florida, he has pursued ultra-rich and out-of-state donors to fill his campaign chest. His roster of contributors includes businesses that his administration awarded major contracts.

So even as DeSantis trods a rougher path in the 2024 GOP race, it’s worth looking at the well-heeled spenders who financed his last political venture. These are his underwriters—the people and organizations to which he is indebted and would be should he find himself in the White House. 

Below is a long list of the members of DeSantis’ $100,000-Plus Club. (The number of donors who handed him between $10,000 and $100,000—nothing to sneeze at—is also substantial: 1,754 people and entities.) And there are contributors and patterns that warrant a shout-out before we turn to the roll call.  

The most generous financial supporters of DeSantis’ gubernatorial campaign were Republican outfits, such as the Republican Governors Association ($21 million), and the usual assortment of GOP megadonors: Robert Bigelow ($10 million), a hotel magnate who has used his fortune to fund efforts seeking to prove the existence of UFO aliens and an afterlife; Ken Griffin ($5 million), the CEO of multinational hedge fund Citadel and a reliable source of money for conservative candidates and causes; Walter Buckley Jr. ($1.25 million), the co-founder of a venture capital fund that made a fortune in the dot-com bubble; Paul Tudor Jones II ($1 million), a hedge-fund billionaire who has played both sides of the street by supporting the presidential campaigns of Barack ObamaJohn McCainMitt Romney, and Rudy Giuliani; and Bruce Rauner, ($960,000), a former GOP governor of Illinois who lives in a posh gated community in Key Largo, Florida, which received early access to Covid vaccination. (Griffin has yet to commit to a 2024 candidate. Recently, he was talking up former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.)

The list continues: Richard Uihlein ($700,000), the billionaire co-founder with wife Elizabeth Uihlein ($500,000) of the Uline shipping company, who financed a group that organized the rally that preceded the January 6 attack on the US Capitol and candidates involved in the effort to overturn the 2020 election; Charles Johnson ($594,919), a principle partner of the San Francisco Giants and a financial underwriter of pro-Trump election deniers; Edward DeBartolo Jr. ($522,000), a businessman best known as former owner of the San Francisco 49ers, who was pardoned by President Donald Trump in 2020 for his involvement in a gambling fraud case in Louisiana in the 1990s; Bernie Marcus ($500,000), a cofounder of Home Depot, who has denounced “woke people [who] have taken over the world” (Marcus recently endorsed Donald Trump); and John Childs ($456,592), the chairman of a private equity firm who was charged with solicitation of prostitution in 2019 in a Florida sex spa scandal. (The charges were later dropped and his record expunged.) 

Of course, far-right groups kicked in loads of cash, led by the Club for Growth PAC ($2 million) and the Judicial Crisis Network ($500,000). DeSantis’ money-bags included business PACs—for instance, the Realtors Political Advocacy Committee ($375,203) and the Voice of Florida Business Political Action Committee ($475,000)—as well as those companies and entities that do business with the state, foremost among them the Seminole Tribe of Florida ($2 million), with whom DeSantis forged a $2.5 billion deal that allowed the tribe to expand its gambling operations to include sports betting, craps, and roulette.

Other one-hand-washes-the-other contributions came from Phillips and Jordan ($252,500), a construction firm that was granted a $175.8 million contract by the state for an Everglades restoration project; Nomi Health ($252,250), which was handed $46 million in contracts by the state in 2021 for Covid-19 testing and vaccine work; and Herzog Contracting ($250,000), which pocketed at least $32.7 million in contracts from the Florida Department of Transportation during DeSantis’ tenure. JM Family Enterprises, a huge automotive conglomerate that lobbied the state legislature to pass a bill banning most automaker-to-consumer direct sales that DeSantis later signed, sent $325,000 to his campaign. 

DeSantis’ top donors are riddled with folks and outfits with checkered pasts. For example, HillCour, Inc. ($312,409) and another firm agreed to pay over $7 million to the US Health and Human Services Department to resolve allegations in 2018 related to a Medicaid kickback scheme. Onetime Los Angeles nightclub mogul Sam Nazarian ($179,581) in 2014 gave up control of a Las Vegas hotel after an investigation revealed he had used drugs and paid $3 million in alleged extortion payments to felons. Health Option One ($125,000) faced a lawsuit in 2021 for an alleged bait-and-switch scam in which customers were duped into buying limited-coverage health care plans. The company denied the allegations and later agreed to settle the dispute.

Businessman John Cafaro ($120,000) in 2010 was sentenced to three years’ probation for failing to disclose a loan to his daughter’s congressional campaign. Las Vegas tycoon Steve Wynn ($100,000) was accused last year by the Justice Department of acting as an unregistered foreign agent for China and lobbying Trump on that country’s behalf in order to protect his business interests in Macau. (A federal judged dismissed the case; government lawyers are currently appealing the decision.) Separately, Wynn was accused of sexually harassing dozens of his employees and pressuring them to perform sexual acts. He agreed to pay Nevada a $10 million settlement in July to resolve the sexual misconduct case. DeSantis accepted $100,000 from the John Rosatti Trust, a fund connected to businessman John Rosatti, an automotive and restaurant tycoon (and founder of BurgerFi) who three decades ago was linked to the mob. Rosatti was identified by the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement as an alleged associate of the Colombo crime family in New York City, according to a 1993 decision by the state’s Casino Control Commission.

Other notable contributions came from Leila Centner ($301,000), the co-founder of the Miami-based Centner Academy, which was a hotbed of anti-vax activism and disinformation during the Covid pandemic; Adam Marcus Hendry ($100,000), whose company, Tzadik Management, filed more evictions during the early days of the pandemic than any other landlord in Florida, according to a July 2020 analysis by the Center for Public Integrity; and the Portopiccolo Group ($100,000), a private equity company that acquired nursing homes during the pandemic and caused disruptions at facilities that resulted in weakened care for residents, according to investigations by the Washington Post and the New Yorker. Tread Standard LLC, a mysterious shell company, handed $210,000 to DeSantis. 

DeSantis rounded up quite a collection of billionaires, corporations, right-wingers, and reprobates, as he collected over one-fifth of a billion dollars for his 2022 campaign. Never before in modern American politics has a non-presidential candidate bagged so much in direct donations from the well-heeled and special interests. At this point, DeSantis is far from a good bet to be the next resident of the White House. But whatever happens in the GOP presidential sweepstakes, he will stay a powerful force in Florida and likely continue to be prominent within national politics. That means all these donations could remain solid investments and hold their value. 

The DeSantis campaign did not respond to multiple requests for comment regarding the fundraising for his 2022 race or the transfer of funds from that effort to the super PAC now supporting his presidential bid. 

Here are the 313 donors who invested $100,000 or more in DeSantis during his 2022 reelection campaign:

  1. $21 million, Republican Governors Association
  2. $10 million, Robert Bigelow, hotel magnate
  3. $7.3 million, Florida state matching funds
  4. $7 million, Republican Party of Florida
  5. $5 million, Ken Griffin, founder of hedge fund Citadel
  6. $2 million, Club for Growth PAC
  7. $2 million, Seminole Tribe of Florida
  8. $1.25 million, Walter Buckley, Jr., retired venture capitalist
  9. $1.1 million, David MacNeil, car accessories company founder
  10. $1 million, James Bowen, Jr., financial services chairman
  11. $1 million, Paul Tudor Jones II, hedge fund billionaire
  12. $960,000, Bruce Rauner, former Illinois governor
  13. $700,000, Richard Uihlein, billionaire co-founder of Uline shipping company
  14. $680,000, Florida Prosperity Fund
  15. $594,919, Charles Johnson, San Francisco Giants principal partner
  16. $522,000, Edward DeBartolo, Jr., businessman and former 49ers owner
  17. $521,325, James Pallotta, investment company founder
  18. $509,200, Sun Labs USA Inc, healthcare company
  19. $505,000, Gale Lemerand, restauranteur
  20. $500,000, Patricia Duggan, glass artist and museum founder
  21. $500,000, Spring Bay Capital, investment firm
  22. $500,000, Judicial Crisis Network
  23. $500,000, Bernie Marcus, Home Depot co-founder
  24. $500,000, Disruptor, Inc., investment firm
  25. $500,000, Elizabeth Uihlein, billionaire co-founder of Uline shipping firm
  26. $500,000, Craig Mateer, investment manager
  27. $487,500, J. Christopher Reyes Trust
  28. $475,000, Voice of Florida Business Political Action Committee
  29. $462,500, M. Jude Reyes 1999 Trust
  30. $456,592, John Childs, chairman of private equity fund
  31. $450,960, NextGen Management LLC, medical technology company
  32. $440,000, Floridians for a Stronger Democracy
  33. $405,000, Hutson Companies LLC, real estate developer
  34. $400,000, McCormick Drive LLC, real estate investment company
  35. $400,000, Florida Care, Inc., healthcare company
  36. $375,204, Realtors Political Advocacy Committee
  37. $370,000, Associated Industries of Florida Political Action Committee
  38. $367,750, TECO Energy, Inc., utilities company
  39. $360,000, Floridian’s United for Our Children’s Future
  40. $360,000, Thomas Peterffy, Hungarian American billionaire
  41. $350,000, Floridians for Economic Advancement
  42. $345,000, Palm Beach Innovation Task Force
  43. $325,000, JM Family Enterprises, Inc., automotive company
  44. $325,000, Fidelity National Financial, Inc. PAC for Florida
  45. $312,409, HillCour Inc, healthcare services
  46. $305,000, Timothy and Harvey Youngquist, drilling company executives
  47. $304,000, Roma-HC Bridge LLC
  48. $303,000, Conservatives for Principled Leadership
  49. $303,000, Charter Communications, Inc., telecommunications provider
  50. $301,000, Leila Centner, co-founder of Centner Academy
  51. $300,000, Cannae Holdings LLC, investment and management company
  52. $300,000, iGas USA Inc, refrigerant supplier
  53. $300,000, MasTec Inc, infrastructure construction company
  54. $295,000, Elaine Wold, philanthropist
  55. $288,426, Steven Scott, healthcare and technology investor
  56. $277,650, Anderson Columbia Company Inc, heavy civil construction firm
  57. $261,308, Testing Matters, Inc., clinical laboratory
  58. $257,000, Dawn and John Hamlin, marketing executive and wife
  59. $255,000, Betty Roschman, wife of late fast food restauranteur
  60. $252,500, Phillips and Jordan Inc, construction company
  61. $252,250, Nomi Health, Inc., health care services provider
  62. $250,000, Lorybo Holdings LLC, financial company
  63. $250,000, Whip Fund Raising LLC
  64. $250,000, Herzog Contracting Corporation, railroad and highway contractor
  65. $250,000, Moshe Popack, real estate investor
  66. $250,000, Black Knight Infoserv LLC, data and analytics provider
  67. $250,000, Nilda Milton Revocable Trust
  68. $250,000, Eisenhower Management, Inc., real estate developer
  69. $250,000, Driven Capital Management LLC, real estate investment manager
  70. $250,000, Nathan Saks, real estate developer
  71. $250,000, Steven Herrig, insurance company executive
  72. $250,000, John W. Childs 2013 Revocable Trust
  73. $250,000, Rural Route 3 Holdings LP
  74. $250,000, Barrow Realty LLC
  75. $250,000, Island Doctors
  76. $248,189, Thomas Corr, oil import executive
  77. $229,221, Ged Lawyers LLP
  78. $225,000, Daytona Toyota
  79. $225,000, Maya Ezratti Revocable Trust
  80. $225,000, Daniel Doyle, Jr., imaging equipment executive  
  81. $220,000, Florida Chamber of Commerce PAC
  82. $214,200, Blake Casper, businessman and former restauranteur
  83. $210,000, Anthony Lomangino, trash and recycling tycoon
  84. $210,000, Stephen Ross, real estate executive
  85. $210,000, Tread Standard LLC
  86. $200,000, Thomas Smith, investment manager
  87. $200,000, William Austin, hearing aid manufacturing executive
  88. $200,000, JL Holding Corp, property management
  89. $200,000, The Big Easy Casino
  90. $200,000, CFG Community Bank
  91. $200,000, The Committee for Justice, Transportation and Business
  92. $200,000, Dosal Tobacco Corporation
  93. $200,000, South Development Corporation
  94. $200,000, Florida Phosphate Political Committee, Inc.
  95. $200,000, Southern Glazer’s Wine and Spirits LLC
  96. $200,000, Automated Healthcare Solutions LLC
  97. $200,000, Book Capital Enterprises LLC
  98. $200,000, Riaz Valani, investor and early e-cigarette investor
  99. $200,000, Lawrence DeGeorge, venture capitalist
  100. $200,000, Ronald Foster, Jr., construction executive
  101. $200,000, Supporters of Comprehensive Primary Care PC
  102. $200,000, UnitedHealth Group, Inc.
  103. $200,000, Kane Financial Services LLC
  104. $200,000, Junction City Mining Co LLC
  105. $200,000, Andrew James McKenna, late McDonald’s chairman 
  106. $187,500, Cheryl and Michael Meads, DeSantis appointee to a water board and her husband
  107. $187,000, Troy Link, meat snacks executive
  108. $179,581, Sam Nazarian, veteran nightclub mogul
  109. $178,000, Ygrene Energy Fund Inc, home improvement loan provider
  110. $175,000, Raymond Hyer, retired asphalt executive
  111. $175,000, Richard Corbett, real estate developer
  112. $175,000, Murray Goodman, real estate developer
  113. $175,000, Metro Development Group LLC
  114. $175,000, Alex Kleyner, real estate investor 
  115. $170,597, Bank of Tampa Money Market Account
  116. $170,000, James Davis, billionaire co-founder of staffing agency
  117. $170,000, Committee of Safety Net Hospitals of Florida
  118. $169,735, The Villages of Lake Sumter, Inc., retirement community
  119. $165,000, Homes by WestBay LLC, home construction company
  120. $161,071, ICI Homes Residential Holdings LLC, home building company
  121. $160,000, Hudson Capital Group
  122. $160,000, Rom L. Reddy Revocable Trust
  123. $160,000, Jorie Kent, travel company co-owner
  124. $158,350, John Rood, real estate executive
  125. $155,454, Patrick Neal, Florida real estate developer and former politician
  126. $155,031, Rahul Patel, DeSantis-appointed University of Florida trustee 
  127. $155,000, FTA PAC, Inc.
  128. $153,000, Florida Credit Union Political Action Committee (Florida CUPAC)
  129. $150,745, Jay Demetree, Jr., real estate developer
  130. $150,350, James Heavener, real estate manager
  131. $150,229, Humana Inc, health insurance company
  132. $150,000, John Foster Kirtley, investment firm co-founder
  133. $150,000, Dennis and Graciela McGillicuddy, real estate director and philanthropist
  134. $150,000, Strong Communities of Southwest Florida PC
  135. $150,000, William Parfet, former CEO of drug testing company
  136. $150,000, Wayne Huizenga Jr., son of billionaire who launched Blockbuster
  137. $150,000, Vahan Gureghian, charter school entrepreneur
  138. $150,000, Dream Finders Homes LLC
  139. $150,000, Equality Champions, political committee
  140. $150,000, La Ley Con John H. Ruiz PA, law firm
  141. $150,000, DentaQuest PAC TN C
  142. $150,000, Sasha Averdick, design studio owner
  143. $150,000, R & L Transfer Inc, freight shipping company
  144. $150,000, Publix Super Markets, Inc.
  145. $150,000, Lockwood Management LLC, property management company
  146. $150,000, James Liautaud, founder of Jimmy John’s sandwich chain
  147. $150,000, P&L Investments LLC, investment management firm
  148. $150,000, RaceTrac Petroleum Inc
  149. $145,000, Gregory Burns, freight shipping executive
  150. $145,000, Jeffrey Silverman, investment management executive
  151. $140,000, SPF Roofing Systems, Inc.
  152. $137,500, FTBA Transportation PAC
  153. $137,500, Brent Sembler, real estate development executive
  154. $136,000, Partridge Investments LLC
  155. $135,000, Peter Morse, investment manager
  156. $133,000, Marshall Field, investor and department store heir
  157. $130,079, Fort Partners LLC, real estate company
  158. $130,000, Citizens for Principled Leadership PC
  159. $128,000, Florida Medical Association Political Action Committee
  160. $128,000, Jacksonville Kennel Club, Inc., greyhound racing
  161. $125,000, Florida Harbor Pilots Association, Inc.
  162. $125,000, Davidson 2005 LLC, textile manufacturing
  163. $125,000, Ring Power Corporation, construction equipment dealer
  164. $125,000, Independent Living Systems, home health services company
  165. $125,000, Jonathan Lubert, hedge fund executive
  166. $125,000, Cody Khan, hotel and resort owner
  167. $125,000, ECN Capital Advisory Group LLC
  168. $125,000, LaunchED, education company
  169. $125,000, Charles Lydecker, insurance executive
  170. $125,000, FPF Fire PC, firefighters association political committee
  171. $125,000, Bruce Toll, luxury-home building company co-founder
  172. $125,000, Health Option One LLC, insurance company
  173. $125,000, Keeping Florida Affordable PC
  174. $125,000, 10jin LLC, technology provider for schools
  175. $125,000, Thomas Murphy, Boca Raton resident
  176. $125,000, ABC Liquors, Inc.
  177. $125,000, Vecellio Group, Inc., construction company
  178. $125,000, The Presidential Coalition LLC, conservative political organization
  179. $125,000, Trulieve Inc, cannabis dispensary
  180. $120,000, John Cafaro, real estate developer and investor
  181. $120,000, Elevated LLC
  182. $120,000, Aspect Holdings LLC, investment firm
  183. $120,000, Centene Management Company LLC, health insurance company
  184. $120,000, Richard Cole, DeSantis-appointed University of Florida trustee
  185. $117,250, Florida Home Builders PAC
  186. $115,313, Herbert Henkel, former CEO of Ingersoll-Rand
  187. $115,000, Benjerome Trust
  188. $115,000, Toyota of Orlando
  189. $114,653, Omeed Malik, former Bank of America executive
  190. $113,783, St. Joe Company, real estate developer
  191. $111,250, Barbara Feingold, DeSantis-appointed Florida Atlantic University trustee
  192. $111,217, William Foley II, insurance company executive
  193. $110,000, Roy Hinman II, family medicine physician
  194. $110,000, Thomas Sabatino, Florida resident
  195. $110,000, John Slavic, investment management executive
  196. $110,000, Richard Chaifetz, billionaire founder of ComPsych Corporation 
  197. $110,000, Silva & Silva PA, law firm
  198. $110,000, Daniel Baker, concrete company founder
  199. $110,000, Greener Pastures LLC, landscaping company
  200. $109,978, Brian Sidman, founder of real estate private equity firm
  201. $109,000, Willis Johnson, billionaire founder of car auction company
  202. $108,000, Robert W. Stork Revocable Trust
  203. $106,809, Disney Worldwide Services, Inc.
  204. $105,000, Foley & Lardner LLP, law firm
  205. $105,000, Michael Rabinowitz, investment banking executive
  206. $105,000, Diane Weiss, retired Boca Raton resident
  207. $104,704, Nancy and Gary Chartrand, philanthropists
  208. $103,290, Vector Group Ltd, holding company for tobacco and real estate
  209. $103,000, RAI Services Company, tobacco company
  210. $103,000, Digrijay Gaekwad, entrepreneur
  211. $103,000, Orange Park Kennel Club Inc, greyhound racing
  212. $103,000, Anthony Imbesi, luxury yacht broker
  213. $102,500, McNitt Management, Inc., construction management
  214. $102,500, Jason Hope, technology executive
  215. $100,500, Kemp Ruge & Green Law Group
  216. $100,200, Neomi Dezertzov, wife of real estate executive
  217. $100,125, Richard Boyce, former investment firm partner
  218. $100,000, Jeff Yass, billionaire co-founder of trading firm Susquehanna 
  219. $100,000, JAT Capital Partners LP
  220. $100,000, James Davis, billionaire majority owner of New Balance
  221. $100,000, Victoria Rose, retired Pompano Beach resident  
  222. $100,000, Wilbur Ross, businessman and former secretary of commerce
  223. $100,000, HGI DB Fund I LLC, capital management
  224. $100,000, Jamie B. Coulter Trust
  225. $100,000, Heritage Insurance Holdings, Inc.
  226. $100,000, Helen Schwab, wife of investment firm founder Charles Schwab
  227. $100,000, Kenny Troutt, billionaire founder of Excel Communications
  228. $100,000, Myrtle Management, Inc., real estate company
  229. $100,000, Summit Contracting Group, Inc., construction company
  230. $100,000, The Portopiccolo Group, private equity firm
  231. $100,000, Evan Trestman, attorney
  232. $100,000, Joseph Imbesi, real estate investor
  233. $100,000, Morris Automotive Consultants LLC
  234. $100,000, Arch Aplin III, former head of convenience chain Buc-ee’s
  235. $100,000, Discover, LLC, investment management
  236. $100,000, Jay Francis, auto sales manager 
  237. $100,000, Steve Wynn, former luxury casino and hotel developer
  238. $100,000, Miller Electric Company
  239. $100,000, Colleen Simeone, Florida resident
  240. $100,000, David K Reyes Living Trust
  241. $100,000, Victoria Stapleton, marketing executive
  242. $100,000, Douglas Scharbauer, Texas oil mogul and racehorse owner
  243. $100,000, Joseph O’Brien, Jr., auto dealer
  244. $100,000, K12 Management, Inc., education company
  245. $100,000, Indelible Business Solutions, Inc., management consulting firm
  246. $100,000, Phillip Frost, health care investor
  247. $100,000, Phillip Ruffin, gambling industry billionaire
  248. $100,000, Brenda O’Loughlin, real estate developer
  249. $100,000, Wendover Art Group, wall art company
  250. $100,000, Amscot Corporation, financial services company
  251. $100,000, Intrivo Diagnostics Inc, at-home COVID tests company
  252. $100,000, IGT Global Solutions, gambling equipment manufacturer
  253. $100,000, The Collection, automotive dealership
  254. $100,000, ICI Homes, Inc., home construction company
  255. $100,000, Itzhak Ezratti, Israeli founder of homebuilding company
  256. $100,000, Payward, Inc., cryptocurrency exchange and trading platform
  257. $100,000, PPRE LLC, development company
  258. $100,000, Adam Marcus Hendry, real estate executive
  259. $100,000, Boyne Capital Management LLC
  260. $100,000, Standard Industries, Inc., industrial company
  261. $100,000, Elijah Norton, Arizona insurance executive and political candidate
  262. $100,000, Wayne Boich, investment executive
  263. $100,000, Pamela Muma, philanthropist
  264. $100,000, Dynamic Commerce Ventures LLC, real estate development
  265. $100,000, Dwight Schar, founder of homebuilding giant NVR
  266. $100,000, Creighton Companies LLC, construction company
  267. $100,000, Administrative Group LLC, restaurant management
  268. $100,000, Purple Good Government PAC
  269. $100,000, TCI Holdings LLC, construction company
  270. $100,000, Michael William Kosloske, retired insurance executive
  271. $100,000, Wescon Management Group Inc, automotive services
  272. $100,000, Joseph White, plumbing company chairman
  273. $100,000, Stuart Lasher, financial manager
  274. $100,000, The Vestcor Companies Inc, real estate development
  275. $100,000, Sharon Nuckolls, Florida resident
  276. $100,000, George Heisel, Jr., financial company shareholder
  277. $100,000, Dhruv Management LLC, hotel management
  278. $100,000, Cirilla Milton, homemaker
  279. $100,000, Franklin Street Financial Partners
  280. $100,000, Lester Woerner, real estate investment chairman
  281. $100,000, Mark Kolokotrones, financial and venture capital executive
  282. $100,000, ANF Group Inc, Florida-based contractor
  283. $100,000, Florida Free Enterprise Fund
  284. $100,000, Mara L. S. Delminium Trust
  285. $100,000, David Baum, sensor manufacturing executive
  286. $100,000, Anita Zucker, chemical manufacturing executive
  287. $100,000, Gary Yeomans, car dealerships owner
  288. $100,000, UBS Financial Services
  289. $100,000, John Falkner, industrial farm owner and developer
  290. $100,000, John Rosatti Trust
  291. $100,000, Cherna Moskowitz, wife of late businessman Irving Moskowitz
  292. $100,000, John Rakolta III, president of Detroit-based construction company
  293. $100,000, Florida Manufactured Housing Association PAC, Inc.
  294. $100,000, Chris D. Peyerk Trust
  295. $100,000, Steven Witkoff, founder of real estate firm
  296. $100,000, Thomas Tull, billionaire former film producer
  297. $100,000, First Coast Energy LLP, major distributor of Shell gas
  298. $100,000, Michael White, insurance sales
  299. $100,000, Gregory Cook, co-founder of multilevel marketing company doTerra
  300. $100,000, Derek Carr, retired Boca Raton resident
  301. $100,000, Darwin Deason, billionaire computer services entrepreneur
  302. $100,000, Benderson Development Co LLC
  303. $100,000, Jeffrey Roschman, fast food heir and executive
  304. $100,000, Belleair Bluffs Management LLC, investment management
  305. $100,000, Denise Coyle, property development executive
  306. $100,000, Debra Gelband, foundation executive
  307. $100,000, Rick Case Enterprises, automotive dealerships company
  308. $100,000, John Kang, health care company founder
  309. $100,000, Peter Worth, insurance executive
  310. $100,000, Granger Family Investment Holdings LLC, investment firm
  311. $100,000, Robert Day, asset management firm founder
  312. $100,000, Frisbie Group LLC, real estate company
  313. $100,000, Robert Willenborg, gaming company executive