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Posted: 2024-10-27T12:00:05Z | Updated: 2024-10-27T21:07:18Z

Wetter, more destructive hurricanes, like the back-to-back storms that pummeled Florida this fall, are pushing the states homeowners insurance market to the brink of collapse.

When asked by Florida Atlantic University pollsters in June who was most responsible for the high cost of insurance in the state, the largest share of surveyed voters blamed Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis. But it was his Republican predecessor, Rick Scott, now a U.S. senator, who lured low-quality insurance companies to the state and left Floridas publicly owned insurer-of-last-resort agency struggling to provide for more homeowners as private insurers went bust or refused to renew policies in hurricane-prone areas.

Now Scotts Democratic challenger for Senate, former Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, is hoping voters can make the connection between Scotts eight years as governor and the financial squeeze caused as insurers increasingly fail to pay to repair properties damaged in hurricanes Helene and Milton.

As part of a years-long crusade to force more Floridians into the private insurance market, Scott raised premiums and rescinded discounts from the Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the government-backed nonprofit insurer, all while giving private companies extra incentives and protections to operate in the state.

Now that warming-fueled storms are routinely causing billions of dollars in damage across Florida, private insurers are fleeing the state, forcing customers back to Citizens. But now the deals the public insurer offers come with higher premiums and worse coverage.

During her two years in Congress representing a district stretching west of Miami, Mucarsel-Powell helped net $200 million for Everglades restoration. Shes tried since the start of her Senate campaign to highlight the contrast between her own urgent concerns over climate change and Scotts rejection of basic climate science and his votes to eliminate regulations to curb planet-heating pollution.