TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – The Florida Legislature will return to the Capitol for a special session Monday that will allow lawmakers to express their support for Israel, while giving Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis some talking points as he campaigns for president.
Lawmakers are expected to consider new sanctions against Iran, which has supported Hamas, as well as vote on resolutions expressing support for Israel's right to defend itself.
After Hamas militants attacked Israeli citizens last month, a large, bipartisan group of Florida lawmakers met in the Capitol to express their horror and to stand with Israelis. Now, they'll be taking official action to send a similar message, both about the current war and against antisemitism at home.
More than 1,400 people in Israel have been killed, most of them in the Oct. 7 Hamas attack that started the fighting. The Palestinian death toll has reached 9,700, according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza.
Since the attacks, DeSantis has touted his support for Israel while on the campaign trail and used his official office to back up his words. He’s sent planes to Israel to help Floridians return home and to provide supplies for the country.
The special session will open Monday with an invocation and prayer delivered by Rabbi Yossi Harlig and David Schachter, a 94-year-old Holocaust survivor from Miami.
A bill filed last week says lawmakers “reject and condemn persistent threats against Jewish people, institutions, and communities in the State of Florida, the United States, and abroad, including those from individuals and organizations committed to the extermination of the Jewish people.”
Lawmakers will also consider new sanctions against companies that do business with Iran and a $25 million grant program to help secure Jewish schools, synagogues and other institutions. The money could be used to hire security guards and install surveillance cameras and shatterproof windows.
Florida already has sanctions against companies that directly do business with Iran and six other “countries of concern,” including Cuba, China and Russia. The U.S. federal government has imposed sanctions against Iran for decades.
Lawmakers were already scheduled to be at the Capitol for committee meetings and Republican leaders decided to use the time for the special session. The Legislature will also take up issues like hurricane relief, property insurance and providing more money for developmentally disabled students.
Lawmakers are proposing a change that would allow more school vouchers for special education students. Right now, there is a cap on the number of vouchers that can be awarded.
State lawmakers will also consider a disaster relief bill for areas hit hardest by Hurricane Idalia. Part of the proposal includes adding $176 million in funding toward the My Safe Florida Home program, which gives homeowners grants for wind mitigation improvement.
This program gives homeowners grants for wind mitigation improvement.