Ash Marwah for State Representative District 52

After much deliberations, I have decided to run for State Representative District 52 seat again and here is why:

Homeowners Insurance: My opponent, John Temple has voted for two Insurance Laws in Florida, gave $3 Billion of our TAX DOLLARS for reinsurance and our Insurance Premiums keep on skyrocketing. The Legislature has ended the 2024 session with no relief for Consumers. Nothing is being done in the rest of 2024 to help Floridians with rising Insurance Premiums. We need to FREEZE insurance premiums first before we are going to find a solution to this ongoing crisis in ever rising housing costs.

Here is a summary of those two Florida Laws:

https://www.flsenate.gov/Committees/BillSummaries/2022A/html/2878

https://www.flsenate.gov/Committees/BillSummaries/2022D/html/2874

Abortion: I support Amendment 4 which may be on the ballot this November pending Florida Supreme Court approval. John Temple has voted for a near BAN ON Abortion in Florida. It is up to the people and their conscience to decide what they want in the future in Florida. The Abortion Law as passed in Florida is draconian in nature and bodes ill for healthcare for women. Banning abortion after 6 weeks, when most women don’t even know if they are pregnant is literally a BAN ON Abortion in Florida.

Here is a summary of this Law: 

https://www.flsenate.gov/Committees/BillSummaries/2023/html/3106

Border Control: I am for BUILD THE WALL and reinstate STAY IN MEXICO Policy. As a legal immigrant myself, I support stern measures to control the border and prevent migrants from streaming across the border continuously. We need to provide more resources to Border Patrol to stop this unchecked flow of migrants.  

Florida is No. 1 on the List where home insurance costs are forcing families to leave Florida

Florida 

Florida is the most expensive state for home insurance, with the average annual cost rising $9,213 last year. That is 421% higher than the national average.

Waterfront homes near Naples Pier in Naples, Florida

Waterfront homes near Naples Pier in Naples, Florida, on Feb. 13. (Lisette Morales McCabe/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Rates jumped by 14% in 2023 as several major insurers stopped renewing certain policies or left the state entirely, citing concerns over hurricane risk. Severe weather damages in Florida topped $15 billion last year.

https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/surging-home-insurance-costs-could-force-families-leave-these-10-states