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Orange County Democrats Reject Donald Trump’s Thank You Tour

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Orlando, FL- In the lead up to President-elect Donald Trump’s Thank You Tour rally in Orlando this evening, the Orange County Democratic Party would like to remind the President-elect that his message of division, xenophobia, and intolerance is not welcome here. Hillary Clinton won Orange County by almost 135,000 votes, a portion of her 2.8 million popular vote defeat of Trump nationwide. At the site selected to host the event, the Central Florida Fairgrounds in Orange County’s Precinct 603, he could not even gather 100 votes – over 93% of its voters rejected Donald Trump! The selection of Orlando and Orange County are proof that his transition team is clueless about our community.

Locally, the event is being spun as an opportunity to begin healing the wounds of a divisive election. Unfortunately, that message is lost on the President-elect: just a quick glance through his Twitter feed and you see a continuation of divisive, vicious attacks including a personal attack on Indiana union president Chuck Jones. Our unions are what makes America great – from the 40 hour work week to raising wages for all Americans. They fight to protect our jobs here in Florida while Trump and the Republican-controlled Congress want to fleece our workers and ship jobs overseas to foreign companies.

We have seen enough of what a Trump presidency will look like: appointing a climate change denier to the EPA, as sea levels and temperatures rise at record rates this directly impacts us here in Florida, appointing a person which supports privatizing our education system to the Department of Education, even appointing a fast food CEO to the Labor department, someone who on record has said he does not believe in providing his workers with a livable wage. Trump has appointed more millionaires and billionaires to his cabinet than any other president in our nation’s history! It is clear that Trump’s policies will harm Central Florida’s workers and families.

We, the Orange County Democrats, reject his presence in our community. We embrace our Muslim brothers and sisters. We celebrate the diversity of our Hispanic community. We support our Black community, and reject racism in all forms. We stand in solidarity with our Unions. We respect women, both in their reproductive rights and in the right to earn an equal wage. Finally, if this community has proven one thing in 2016, it is that we will not tolerate any attack on our LGBT community. We are Orlando United.

Chairman Wes Hodge said, “While the dog and pony show surrounding the President-elect’s campaign visits town, the Orange County Democrats are at work on a strategic plan for 2018. We have three tremendous new Congressional Representatives in Darren Soto, Val Demings, and Stephanie Murphy. Together, we will work our best to protect our community from the impacts of a Trump presidency. The heart of Central Florida is blue, and is home to some of the most progressive ideas and legislators in the state.” We are laying the groundwork to ensure their reelections. In them, our community has a trio of strong leaders, and our party is ready to stand behind them in solidarity. We urge all of those who want to stand up to for Orange County to join us at our monthly meetings to plan, organize, and to stay involved in the political process.

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Entertainment

Bad Bunny’s Halftime Show Was a Master Class in American Culture

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Bad Bunny appears on stage during the Super Bowl LX Pregame & Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show Press Conference on Feb. 5, 2026, in San Francisco (Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Roc Nation)

A reminder that diversity is not a threat — it is America’s strength.

By The Honorable Rick Singh
Former Orange County Property Appraiser

Bad Bunny’s halftime performance reminded us of something every American needs to hear right now:

We may come from different places, but we share far more in common than we sometimes realize. Our greatest strength has always been our willingness to embrace diversity — not fear it.

As an elected official, I delivered many speeches over the years. But one of the most meaningful moments of my public service was speaking to newly sworn American citizens — individuals who had taken their oath of citizenship just minutes before I addressed them.

I can tell you this: they were some of the proudest Americans I have ever encountered — men and women from every corner of the world, united by one oath and one dream.

For many, English was a second language. For some, this was the first country they had ever traveled to. But the pride in their eyes was unmistakable.

Watching them always brought me back to my own story.

I still remember arriving in America as a 10-year-old after spending my first decade of life in tropical Guyana — and experiencing so many things for the first time: winter in New York City without a coat, running water, electricity, trains, cars, and even an escalator, which absolutely terrified me.

I shared those experiences with them. I also shared my mother’s journey — her strength and sacrifice — which inspired me and reminded me of what so many immigrant families endure with quiet courage.

And I reminded those new Americans of something important:

Be proud of your culture.
Be proud of your food.
Be proud of your faith.
Be proud of your music.

Not only be proud of it — share it.

Share it with your American neighbors and friends, because that’s how we foster harmony and understanding.

When we share our traditions, we don’t just celebrate who we are — we educate. We break down stereotypes. We replace fear with familiarity. And we turn strangers into neighbors.

That is how we grow closer. That is how we build community.

And that brings me back to Bad Bunny.

His performance spoke powerfully to the idea of diversity — and to the universal language that connects all people: music. In many ways, it was world culture presented on one of America’s biggest stages.

It was also a master class in Puerto Rican culture — which I must remind some people is American culture.

Like so much of Latin America and the Caribbean, it also carried a deeper story: slavery and the legacy of indentured laborers, including those brought from India, who cut sugar cane and planted crops that fueled global empires.

When I saw the sugar cane fields in the performance visuals, I was reminded of where I was born — Guyana — where I spent my first ten years of life. My parents were humble sugar cane farmers.

The coconut stand selling fresh coconuts reminded me of Bourda Market in Georgetown.

And the vibrant Latin music took me right back to my childhood in the Bronx — hearing legends like El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico, Tito Puente, Eddie Palmieri, and Iris Chacón playing from apartment windows or speakers on fire escapes.

Different cultures.
Different rhythms.
Different drums from different lands.

But one shared spirit.

That’s America.

And when we embrace that truth, we don’t become weaker — we become stronger.

Because the reality is simple:

Together, we are all American.

Across Latin America and the Caribbean — regardless of language, flag, or heritage — we share lived experiences shaped by common history: agricultural roots, multi-generational homes, the neighborhood bodega or corner shop, struggle and resilience, rhythm and resistance, elders playing dominoes, and families gathering around food and music.

It’s not geography.
It’s identity.

It’s music.

In the end, Bad Bunny delivered something meaningful — not just for Puerto Ricans, but for every immigrant and every family with a story like mine.

His performance wasn’t just music and spectacle. It was a reflection of who we are, where we come from, and what we’ve overcome.

It reminded millions that being American isn’t about looking a certain way or speaking a certain language. It’s about owning your story, celebrating your roots, and contributing that richness to the shared tapestry of this country.

Boricua love, baby — you’ve got to love it.

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Opinion

Commentary: Civility as Moral Power: What Gandhi Gave King — and What King Gave America and the World

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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. did not merely change laws. He changed the moral tone of a nation.

At a time when America was convulsed by racism, violence, and injustice, Dr. King chose a path many dismissed as weak or naïve: civility, nonviolence, and disciplined love. History proved otherwise. In King’s hands, civility was neither politeness nor passivity. It was moral power.

That power did not arise in isolation. King drew deeply from the life and philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi. While studying theology and social ethics, he encountered Gandhi’s doctrine of satyagraha — the “force of truth.” What struck King most was Gandhi’s insistence that injustice must be resisted, but never with methods that corrupt the soul or mirror the cruelty of the oppressor. King later called Gandhi “the guiding light of our technique of nonviolent social change.”

From India’s struggle against British colonialism to America’s fight against segregation, the moral logic was the same: suffering willingly endured, without hatred or retaliation, can awaken the conscience of a nation. Nonviolence was not weakness; it was moral jiu-jitsu — exposing injustice by refusing to cooperate with it, while refusing to become it.

For King, civility did not mean silence in the face of injustice. In his Letter from Birmingham Jail, he made clear that unjust laws must be broken — openly, lovingly, and with a willingness to accept the penalty. Like Gandhi, King rejected both cowardly submission and violent revolt. His method of nonviolent civil disobedience was precise and intentional: it disrupted injustice while preserving the moral legitimacy of the movement.

This moral lineage from Gandhi to King remains one of the most remarkable transmissions of ethical philosophy in modern history. Different cultures. Different continents. One moral grammar. Both men believed that love is a social force, not merely a private virtue; that hatred multiplies hatred; and that the means we use to pursue justice shape the society we ultimately create.

When children were attacked by fire hoses in Birmingham and peaceful marchers were beaten on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, it was not rage that moved the conscience of the nation. It was the devastating contrast between the dignity of the protesters and the brutality of their oppressors. Civility gave the movement credibility. Nonviolence gave it legitimacy. Moral discipline gave it victory.

Neither Gandhi nor King was “nice” in the shallow sense. Both condemned injustice relentlessly. Both disrupted the comfort of the powerful. Yet neither surrendered to cruelty or dehumanization. They understood a hard truth: a movement that loses its soul cannot save a society.

Today, in an age of outrage, humiliation, and political tribalism, their shared example speaks with renewed urgency. We cancel rather than persuade. We humiliate rather than debate. We dehumanize rather than disagree — and we call it authenticity.

Gandhi and King would have rejected this moral downgrade.

They would remind us:
That cruelty is not courage.
That rage is not righteousness.
That humiliation is not justice.

Gandhi lit the torch. King carried it across an ocean. Now it rests in our hands.

To honor them is not merely to quote them once a year. It is to practice what they practiced: to resist injustice without surrendering our humanity, to speak with moral clarity without moral cruelty, and to pursue change without poisoning the future with hatred.

Their revolution was not only political.

It was moral.

And it remains ours.


Hon. Rick Singh is a former Orange County property appraiser and a civic leader in Central Florida. He writes on ethics, public service, and democratic culture.

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Opinion

OPINION: Puerto Rican Political Power in Florida Faces Decline Post-2024 Losses

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The 2024 elections marked a troubling turning point for Puerto Rican political representation in Florida. What was once a growing force of influence in state and national politics now faces a steep decline, raising alarms about the future of Puerto Rican voices in government.

In 2016, our community achieved historic milestones: Darren Soto became the first Puerto Rican from Florida elected to the U.S. Congress, Victor Torres won a seat in the Florida Senate, and four Puerto Ricans—John Cortes, Amy Mercado, René Plasencia, and Bob Cortes—held seats in the Florida State House. This wave of representation was a proud moment for Puerto Ricans, a sign that our voices were finally being heard at the highest levels.

2016 Representation Snapshot:

  • 1 U.S. Representative Seat
  • 1 Florida State Senate Seat
  • 4 Florida State House Seats

Fast forward to 2025, and the numbers tell a much different story:

  • 1 U.S. Representative Seat (Darren Soto)
  • 0 Florida State Senate Seats
  • 2 Florida State House Seats (Johanna López and Susan Plasencia)

The losses in 2024 have decimated our influence in state government. The Florida State Senate, once home to a Puerto Rican voice, is now silent. The reduction in House seats has further diminished our ability to shape policy and advocate for our community.

This is a moment for reflection and action. As a former Puerto Rican Florida State Representative, I understand the hard work it takes to elevate our community’s concerns and ensure they are heard. But these latest setbacks demonstrate that we cannot afford complacency.

We must:

  1. Prioritize leadership development by identifying and mentoring the next generation of Puerto Rican leaders.
  2. Strengthen voter engagement efforts to increase turnout and political awareness within our community.
  3. Build coalitions across Florida to amplify our collective voice and work toward shared goals.
  4. Focus on unity, setting aside partisan divides to protect and grow Puerto Rican representation.

Puerto Ricans in Florida contribute significantly to the state’s economy, culture, and community development. Yet, without strong political representation, our ability to advocate for critical issues—such as disaster recovery, housing, healthcare, and education—is severely hampered.

The time to act is now. If we fail to address this decline, the consequences for Puerto Rican communities across Florida could be dire. Let us remember that our representation is not just about holding titles but about driving meaningful change for the people we serve. Together, we can rebuild and ensure that Puerto Rican political power not only survives but thrives for future generations.

Daisy Morales
Former Florida State Representative
Advocate for Puerto Rican Leadership and Progress
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