Tallahassee, Florida — On July 1, Florida's new legislation took effect expanding the state's authority to designate and regulate "domestic terrorist organizations" and broadening restrictions on entities tied to "foreign countries of concern" and "designated foreign terrorist organizations." The law creates a Chief of Domestic Security who may publish designations in the Florida Administrative Register subject to specified due process and establishes public-records exemptions for related materials. The measures bar public contracts with designated entities, terminate agreements and grants involving foreign countries of concern effective July 1, 2026, and prohibit soliciting or accepting charitable contributions from designated foreign terrorist organizations or agents acting on their behalf. The statute also tightens controls on real property transactions by "foreign principals," requires registration and affidavits for certain prior owners or buyers, and grants the governor authority to suspend restrictions related to Cuba if federal diplomatic status changes. Educational institutions, school funding and student activity receive special attention, and the law may affect business dealings, mergers and acquisitions, public incentives, healthcare licensing and charitable solicitation where international connections exist.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
This new law could impact your daily life if you're involved with any designated entities or foreign principals. It may affect your business dealings, school funding, and even charitable contributions. If you have ties to any of these groups, you might want to review your connections.
Florida's new legislation is a significant step in controlling domestic and foreign terrorism. It's a complex law with many facets, so stay informed about its implications. Worth forwarding if you know someone involved in international business or education.
State law enforcement and political allies supporting expanded terrorism-designation powers gain clearer statutory mechanisms to restrict contracts and funding to designated entities.
CAIR, Muslim advocacy groups, affected nonprofits, and individuals tied to designated organizations face legal restrictions, contract bans, and reputational and financial consequences.
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Mondaq Business Briefing ABC Action News Tampa Bay (WFTS)No right-leaning sources found for this story.
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