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News: whistleblower Rebekah Jones runs for Matt Gaetz’s seat
NEWS
INDEPENDENCE DAY
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PHOTO VIA REBEKAH JONES/TWITTER
Whistleblower Rebekah Jones plans to run for Rep. Matt Gaetz’s congressional seat, saying ‘moral Republicans’ want to vote for someone with integrity
BY AVA LOOMAR
Days after former Florida Department of Health GIS manager Rebekah Jones received official whistleblower protection for her lack of discretion about the state’s COVID-19 dashboard, she was suspended from Twitter for platform manipulation and spam. Without her main outlet of 400,000 followers, she turned to Instagram to make a big announcement.
After a media frenzy, Jones deleted the post. She said she was attempting to point out Gov. Ron DeSantis’ “hypocrisy” in writing a law that allowed political candidates to sue media companies that ban them, while still celebrating her Twitter suspension.
At the time, Jones said she believed there would be a good candidate who could “keep this pervert [Gaetz] from writing laws regulating his own sick behavior.”
Turns out that person is, in fact, Jones. The bit became reality when she filed on June 25 to run as an independent candidate in Florida’s First Congressional District.
FL-01 is one of the most Republican districts in the state, and in the past three elections, has voted for Rep. Matt Gaetz with higher than 30 percent margins. An independent has never won the congressional seat in the district, and a Democrat has not won in this millennium, but Jones hopes Gaetz’s sex trafficking allegations and her personal sacrifices will help sway voters.
As an independent candidate, Jones will be competing against members from both parties. Despite the challenges this poses, she says she feels that running as an independent will allow her more flexibility to address her constituents’ needs. Though she leans Democrat, she says she tends to disagree with her progressive friends on certain policy issues.
On her campaign website, Jones lists eight issues on her platform: protecting Florida’s environmental systems, promoting government transparency, fighting for media accountability in disinformation, giving access to representatives, ensuring the district’s veterans are taken care of, scrutinizing restrictive voting laws, funding science and research, and boosting support for all levels of education.
Jones says there’s still room to add other issues on her platform after she talks to more residents. For example, she thinks human trafficking remains a major issue in the state, and it’s something Jones has a personal connection to. When she was young, she says, she discovered her grandfather had been trafficking a young girl. She called the FBI and says her grandfather went to jail in the Philippines.
Gaetz seems unconcerned with Jones’ entrance into the race. Before Jones’ official filing, Gaetz tweeted, “Looks like I’m running against Florida’s Fauci…”
Gaetz has previously said that Dr. Anthony Fauci, the national infectious disease expert, has “blood on his hands” for involving himself in the type of research that “erupted this virus into the world.” (Neither Gaetz nor his staff have responded to calls to his office for comment.)
Jones has been at the center of political COVID-19 turmoil for more than a year. In May of 2020, she was fired from her role in the state Department of Health for “insubordination.” She claimed the FDOH, guided by DeSantis, asked her to manipulate data to show the state was ready for reopening.
For months, Jones and her opponents battled online. The administration highlighted Jones’ sometimes unsavory past, and trolls began to bog down her notifications.
In December, law enforcement raided Jones’ home, searching for evidence that she sent an unauthorized message through an FDOH service. After finding evidence on her computers, Jones was charged with a third-degree felony offense. She and her family moved to Maryland in January because she said she feared for her safety. The raid, she thought, was an intimidation tactic.
After a year of investigation into Jones’ whistleblower claims, the Florida Inspector General decided Jones qualified for whistleblower protection. Six days later, her Twitter presence was effectively silenced. While she created a new account for her campaign, it was suspended within a day of its creation.
Gaetz had already raised over $1.8 million for his campaign by the end of March, spending about $1.3 million of that total. Jones admits that she has a long way to catch up to combat Gaetz’s “ridiculous pile of money.”
Considering the communication setback, she says the key to reaching voters is to have a dialogue. On her website, anyone can book a one-on-one appointment to speak to her. She thinks that “moral Republican men and women” want someone with integrity to vote for who isn’t a Democrat. And despite the “failed smear campaigns by people like DeSantis,” she says she hopes voters won’t forget that she “risked my career, freedom and safety for the people of Florida.”
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