Tag: J & Washington
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The Best Man for the Job… in Venezuela: Why Samuel Vilchez Santiago is Too Big for Florida

If you want to understand the tragedy of modern politics, look no further than the resume of Samuel Vilchez Santiago. By all accounts, Samuel is a star. He is the classic American success story: arriving at age 13, rising to become valedictorian of Colonial High School, earning degrees from Princeton and Oxford, and serving as Read more
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The New Fortress America: Why the “Fascism” Narrative Misses the Point

By David Washington, The Orlando Voice Political Editor If you listen to the Beltway chatter, we are living through a re-run of the 1930s. The headlines scream of “authoritarianism” and a “dictatorial” drift. But if you actually read the blueprints—specifically the 2025 National Security Strategy and the Financial Stability Oversight Council’s Annual Report—you find something Read more
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The 14-Vote Gap: Predicting the Chapin-Tanna Runoff with PolyDavid

Why traditional polling fails in razor-thin local races—and how our new predictive engine changes the game. By David Washington, Political Editor, The Orlando Voice The dust has settled on the November general election, but the battle for Orlando City Council District 3 is far from over. In a contest decided by a margin thinner than Read more
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Florida DOGE Audits: The Full Story from Subpoenas to Final Numbers – How Much Money Can Stay in Your Pocket in 2026?

By Sean King, Public Relations/Media Associate, J & Washington ORLANDO – If you own a home in Dr. Phillips, rent an apartment in Pine Hills, run a small business in Lake Nona, or just drive our roads every day, this story is about one thing: your money. Back in the summer of 2025, Florida’s new Read more
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📝 The Strategic Win, The Civic Loss: What Orlando’s Election Night Really Revealed
The Unpacking of November 4th: Triumphs, Tensions, and the True Test of City Power Good evening, Orlando. The results from the November 4th municipal elections are in, and while they solidify a few campaigns, the most significant outcome is not found in the victory tallies but in the numbers that stayed home. For an electorate Read more
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The Orlando Sentinel’s Snub: Why the Editorial Board’s Endorsements are a Power Play, Not a Public Service

By David Washington, The Orlando Voice Political Editor In the chaotic, often confusing world of local politics, a newspaper’s editorial endorsement is meant to be a lighthouse. It is, in theory, a non-partisan, sober analysis designed to cut through the noise and guide voters toward the best-qualified candidates, regardless of political affiliation. This year, the Read more
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A Tale of Two Narratives: Storytelling, Scrutiny, and the Trillion-Dollar Question

By David Washington of J & Washington LLC, for The Orlando Voice In the modern political arena, the story is the strategy. We recently observed a fascinating example of this in a passionate “letter to the editor” from Congressman Maxwell Alejandro Frost. As a team that specializes in data, behavioral science, and persuasive communication, J Read more
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Gen Z’s Cultural Nihilism

By Kevyn Dufresne, J & Washington Associate In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination at the hands of a lone assailant, a national conversation around the shooter’s supposed ideology has polarized all sides of the political spectrum. With Kirk being such a controversial public figure, many online figures have rushed to point fingers at one Read more
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An Analysis of the 2025 Redistricting Process and its Political Implications

By David Washington, The Orlando Voice Political Editor 1.0 The Mandate for Change: Expansion to an Eight-District Commission The 2025 redistricting process in Orange County, Florida, represents a fundamental realignment of the county’s political landscape, driven by a direct voter mandate. The 2024 approval of a charter amendment expanding the Orange County Commission from six to Read more
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From Outrage to Resolution: Central Florida’s Latino Voice

Here in Central Florida, it means being present at town halls, commission meetings, and school board discussions. Osceola, Orange, and Polk counties hold meetings every month where issues that directly affect us, transportation, housing, education, public safety — are decided. The seats are open to the public, but too often, they are filled with the… Read more