Senate President Wilton Simpson is enjoying support from a variety of industries in his bid to become Florida's 12th Commissioner of Agriculture and Consumer Services next year.
Last month, he added more than $1.6 million to his intimidating war chest, including a flood of contributions from fellow Republicans in the House.
Simpson, a powerful fundraiser, holds more than $7.2 million between his campaign and four political committees: Jobs for Florida, Florida Green PAC, Florida Future and his newest, Friends of Wilton Simpson, which he launched when he announced his candidacy in September.
His gains are likely to remain strong through November, in no small part due to a big fundraising event the Trilby Republican hosted Nov. 4 at Simpson Farms, his egg farming business.
Simpson officially entered the race after months of speculation and encouragement, including an endorsement in May from former President Donald Trump.
Three other candidates for the position — Democrat Ryan Morales and fellow Republicans James Shaw and Richard Ollie Jr. — have less than $2,000 combined.
Chambers of commerce, trade associations and economic development groups gave generously to Simpson in October. Free enterprise group Associated Industries of Florida gave $125,000. Floridians United for Our Children's Future, a PC run by AIF Executive Vice President Stephen Trickey, gave another $100,000.
The Florida Chamber of Commerce donated $60,000. Florida Jobs PAC, a nonpartisan group run by Florida Chamber Vice President of Political Operations Nick Catroppo, gave $40,000.
The lobbying arm of the Florida Association of Professional Employer Organizations gave $25,000. So did the Florida Harbor Pilots Association.
Simpson's biggest donation came from the Seminole Tribe of Florida, which operates casinos and an online gambling platform throughout Florida and entered into a new long-term agreement with the state in April. The Tribe kicked in $200,000.
Naturally, the agriculture sector chipped in. Clewiston-based U.S. Sugar Corp., which runs farmland across 245,000 acres in Glades, Hendry, Martin and Palm Beach counties, donated $75,000. Its subsidiary, Southern Gardens Groves Corp., donated $25,000.
Monticello-based Simpson Nurseries, Florida's oldest nursery and a leading source of pecan trees, deciduous nursery stock and evergreens, contributed $30,000. Southern Planters, an associated business, gave $15,000. Thad Beshears, the company president and owner and the brother of former state Rep. Halsey Beshears, added $5,000.
Plant City-based Mayo Fertilizer, which operates across 13 locations in midwestern and northern Florida, contributed $20,000.
Many donations came from the real estate, construction and development sector. Tennessee-based homebuilder South Development Corporation, which gave Gov. Ron DeSantis $100,000 in August, gave Simpson $35,000 last month.
The Tallahassee-headquartered Florida Manufactured Housing Association gave $25,000. Homes by WestBay, self-described as "Tampa Bay's largest private new home builder," donated $15,000, as did the Florida Transportation Builders Association, which is also in Tampa.
Peter Collins, the co-founder and managing principal of real estate investment company Forge Capital Partners, gave $10,000. So did Tampa-based Eisenhower Property Group.
Other noteworthy donations included $100,000 from Miami-based personal injury lawyer Robert Rubenstein; $50,000 from Deerfield Beach-headquartered automotive company JM Family Enterprises; $20,000 from A Stronger Florida, a PC linked to lobbying firm Rubin Turnbull & Associates; and $10,000 contributions from NBC Universal Media, Walmart, Clearwater-based Heritage Insurance and Nashville-headquartered prison health care provider Wellpath.
Fellow politicians turned out in droves to support Simpson's next chapter of public service. Former U.S. Rep. Thomas Feeny gave $100,000 through two PCs he runs, Floridians for a Stronger Democracy and Florida Prosperity Fund. Bruce Rauner, the former Governor of Illinois, gave $25,000. Rep. Daniel Perez gave $15,000 through his two PCs, Miami United PC and Conservatives for a Better Florida. And Florida Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee Inc., which Sen. Kathleen Passidomo runs, gave $10,000.
Fellow Sen. Travis Hutton contributed $3,000 through his PC. So did Florida House Speaker Chris Sprowls and Reps. Vance Aloupis, James Buchanan, Wyman Duggan, Randy Fine, Erin Grall, Fred Hawkins, Traci Koster, Thomas Leek, Lawrence McClure, Bobby Payne, Rene Plasencia, Anthony Rodriguez, Bob Rommel, Jason Shoaf, Jackie Toledo, and Jayer Williams, among others.
Compared to the gains he made over the same period, Simpson's spending in October was sparse at just under $32,400.
His biggest expenditure, $20,000, went to Tallahassee consulting firm Cap Fin Inc. He paid another $9,500 to Jacksonville consultant Isaac Communications Inc., whose principal, Erin Isaac, worked a stint as U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist's communications director when Crist was Florida Governor as a Republican.
Of the three other candidates to replace Agriculture Nikki Fried, who is running to supplant DeSantis next year as Florida's top elected official, only Shaw has done any significant campaigning so far.
Since launching his campaign in March, Shaw — a businessman whose campaign website says he owns a trucking company, three Auntie Anne's pretzel franchises, real estate spanning 50-plus units and a 30-acre composting farm — has added $20,000 to his campaign account. All of it is his own money.
He's spent all but $1,500 of it as well. Shaw has paid $9,000 to Vero Beach-based consultant Maria Pycha, a former campaign manager for conservative media personality and author Dan Bongino, who made three unsuccessful runs at Congress.
Shaw also paid more than $4,500 on costs related to a booth at the Florida State Fair and around $1,000 on promotional material such as flyers and banners.
Morales, a business consultant who mounted an unsuccessful run last year to unseat Rep. Anthony Sabatini in House District 32, has raised $112 since launching his campaign in February.
Ollie has neither raised nor spent a cent.
The Agriculture Commissioner is among the state's top elected positions and takes one of four seats in the Florida Cabinet. Commissioners may serve up to two four-year terms.
Fried, who took office in January 2019, is vacating her position next year in accordance with the state's resign-to-run law.
If elected, Simpson would be just the third Republican to serve as Agriculture Commissioner. But for an 18-year run from 2001 to 2019, when Charles H. Bronson and Adam Putnam served in the role, Democrats have exclusively held the position since its 1888 creation.
Candidates faced a Wednesday deadline to report all financial activity through Oct. 31.
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