Speaker
Paul Renner
Appearances over time
1 episodes
Episodes
1Podcasts
Quotes & moments
Paul Renner claimed that after tort reform he championed as House Speaker, auto insurance rates are going down in only one state in America — Florida.
Paul Renner claimed Byron Donalds missed over 150 votes during his 5 years in Congress while rarely missing a television interview opportunity.
Paul Renner cited the My Safe Florida Home program which gives grants of up to $10,000 for home hardening and saves homeowners as much as $1,000 per year in insurance premiums.
Paul Renner cited a $28 million University of South Florida study into hyperbaric oxygen treatment for traumatic brain injury in veterans as the kind of alternative-treatment investment he champions.
All three candidates frame this race as a battle to preserve and extend Ron DeSantis's legacy. Collins calls it a test of leadership under pressure; Renner touts his record as House Speaker; Fishback says he's only running because DeSantis can't.
Florida police use Flock cameras — part of a 100,000-camera national AI network — to catch criminals and find missing children. But Fishback would ban them entirely alongside Palantir, warning they could have been used to track families who took their kids to the park during COVID. Collins supports them with local accountability guardrails.
Fishback's plan to eliminate foreign student influence: raise tuition for foreign students to $1 million per year. If they can't pay, they won't come, and Florida kids get their spots back. Renner would ban Chinese professors and students outright. Both cited Confucius Institutes as a failed experiment.
Florida property tax revenue has grown 76% in five years — a $20 billion jump — while services haven't kept pace. Fishback argues the full abolition of property tax costs only $18 billion, less than the revenue increase, funded by cutting local government fat.
Renner's closing pitch is built around a 'Contract with Florida': eliminate homestead property taxes up to a $1 million assessment for 95% of homeowners, cut insurance rates 20% through targeted reforms, and ban hyperscale data centers on day one. He's the only candidate claiming prior budget-balancing experience.
The frontrunner raised $100 million and polls near 60% — but all three rivals skewered him for skipping. Collins calls it cowardice, Renner calls it disqualifying given his taxpayer-funded campaign, and Fishback argues the polls are manufactured.
Fishback wants a statewide ban on all experimental data centers, period. Collins insists the state should set guardrails but leave decisions to local governments. The crowd's live poll: 85% oppose data centers. Nobody fully agrees on where the line is.
The candidates played a grocery price-guessing game with real Florida prices: eggs, milk, gas, Big Mac, diapers, rent. Collins won with 4 correct guesses — he knew a Big Mac costs nearly $14. Fishback knew his milk prices from Publix trips. Renner knew his diaper budget cold.
Fishback recounted meeting a Florida State University student with a 4.0 GPA in computer science who was rejected by Amazon because the company was exclusively hiring H-1B workers. His warning to Florida's 1,900 H-1B employers: hire Floridians or face state consequences.
Collins delivered the harshest attack on Byron Donalds of the night, calling him a two-time felon who wanted to raise the felony theft threshold from $750 to $1,500 and eulogized George Floyd — a page still on his congressional website. Collins called it disqualifying for a Florida law-and-order candidate.
Fishback accused Collins's campaign of hiring a Montana man with a California lawyer to sue to remove him from the ballot, calling it election theft. Collins deflected by saying it's a matter for the courts. The exchange devolved into accusations about residency, judicial respect, and who's really trying to steal the election.
Florida has the highest property insurance rates in America after more than 12 companies exited. Renner points to tort reform receipts and the My Safe Florida Home grant program; Fishback wants to personally call CEOs; Collins zeroes in on fraud.
Analysis
What they talk about
- Government 67%
- Society & Culture 33%
Connections
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