
NYC Dems ‘recruiting people' to move to Florida by backing Mamdani, senator says: ‘Insanity'
'Every elected official of New York on the Democratic side seems like they're just recruiting people to move to Florida. It's just insanity,' Scott said on WABC 770 AM's 'Cats Roundtable' program.
'Are you going to vote for somebody who wants to kill your job, ruin your kid's education and then also make you less safe? That's what they're doing,' the senator told host John Catsimatidis.
3 Mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani comes uptown to the United Palace to receive an endorsement from Congressman Adriano Espaillat.
Matthew McDermott
3 'Every elected official of New York on the Democratic side seems like they're just recruiting people to move to Florida. It's just insanity,' Sen. Rick Scott said on WABC 770 AM's 'Cats Roundtable' program.
Getty Images
3 'Are you going to vote for somebody who wants to kill your job, ruin your kid's education and then also make you less safe? That's what they're doing,' the senator told host John Catsimatidis.
'Don't know what these Democrats think they are doing. Who do they represent?
'We're not going to do that in Florida,' Scott said.
Florida politicians and business trade groups have been tripping over themselves to woo Big Apple CEOs and residents who are worried about the likelihood of Mamdani being elected mayor and pushing for tax hikes of up to $9 billion on the wealthy residents and corporations to pay for his agenda of more affordable housing, child care and free-bus fare fares.
Boca Raton Mayor Scott Singer, for one, is rolling out the red carpet and beaches, along with Palm Beach County economic development officials and Florida's Council of 100 business leaders.
The Mamdani campaign did not respond to a Post request for comment.
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The Hill
36 minutes ago
- The Hill
US manufacturers are stuck in a rut despite subsidies from Biden and protection from Trump
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But in 2023, factory hiring stopped growing and began backtracking as the economy returned to something closer to the pre-pandemic normal. In the end, it was a wash. Factory payrolls last month came to 12.75 million, almost exactly where they stood in February 2020 (12.74 million) just before COVID slammed the economy. 'It's a long, strange trip to get back to where we started,'' said Jared Bernstein, chair of Biden's White House Council of Economic Advisers. Zuzick at Waukesha Metal Products said that it will take time to see if Trump's tariffs succeed in bringing factories back to America. 'The fact is that manufacturing doesn't turn on a dime,'' he said. 'It takes time to switch gears.'' Hagopian at Pilot Precision is hopeful that tax breaks in Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill will help American manufacturing regain momentum. 'There may be light at the end of the tunnel that may not be a locomotive bearing down,'' he said. For now, manufacturers are likely to delay big decisions on investing or bringing on new workers until they see where Trump's tariffs settle and what impact they have on the economy, said Ned Hill, professor emeritus in economic development at Ohio State University. 'With all this uncertainty about what the rest of the year is going to look like,'' he said, 'there's a hesitancy to hire people just to lay them off in the near future.'' 'Everyone,' said Zuzick at Waukesha Metal Products, 'is kind of just waiting for the new normal.''