Florida Gov. Rick Scott (R) is in the middle of one of the nation’s most competitive and unpredictable U.S. Senate races, and partisan control of the entire chamber may rest in the hands of Sunshine State voters. Naturally, the Republican is looking for any possible advantage to encourage Floridians to send him to D.C.
And late last week, Scott put a spotlight on an issue that should, in theory, matter quite a bit.
“Florida hasn’t received its fair share of federal transportation funding for decades. That’s wrong, and as your Senator I’ll fight to secure real results for our state.”
The governor may not have thought this one through — because when Florida was poised to receive an increased share of federal transportation funding, it was Scott who said he didn’t want it.
Let’s take a stroll down memory lane. Just five weeks after taking office in 2011, the newly elected Republican governor made a decision that even his allies found difficult to defend. Federal officials had already allocated more than $2 billion for a high-speed rail project linking Tampa and Orlando, and with Florida struggling at the time with a 12% unemployment rate, the investment meant thousands of jobs and new economic development for the Sunshine State.
The Republican governor, however, refused to accept the money, telling officials to spend the federal transportation dollars elsewhere.
As readers who’ve been with me a long while may recall, even Republicans were disgusted. Rep. John Mica (R-Fla.), then then-chairman of the House Transportation Committee, said the governor’s decision “defied logic.” State Senator Jack Latvala (R), the then-chairman of Florida’s Senate Transportation Committee, said Scott “cut off our nose to spite our face.”









