WCTV - Politics - Misc

Gary Yordon


After eight years as a host and producer on public television, Gary was elected to the Leon County Commission in 1986. During his dozen years in public office he served twice as Commission Chairman and six years as Chairman of the Tourist Development Council.

Known for his ability to build consensus, Gary was the only county commissioner in Florida ever to be nominated for the John F. Kennedy Profiles In Courage Award for his efforts to protect Florida’s water resources.

After leaving office in 1998, Gary returned to his roots and began hosting the popular CBS Television political program, The Usual Suspects. Today, the show remains a political staple in the state of Florida.

He has directed the campaigns of more than 100 local, state and federal candidates as well as designing media for government sponsored referendums. Gary also produces award winning media for corporate clients as well as private agencies.

Gary is frequently called on to lecture on political media and public relations.


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Visit the State of Florida Web Site

CBS Political Headlines

  • Inside the IRS office that targeted conservative groups
    Employee who worked in IRS Cincinnati office for 24 years says she doesn't recall any discussion of politics
  • Video: McCain jokes to reporters: We'll "subpoena" you if you don't mute your phones
    In a strange reference presumably to news that the Department of Justice secretly subpoenaed two months' worth of phone records from the Associated Press, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., joked with reporters that "we're going to subpoena all of you if you don't go to mute on your phones."
  • Video: Former employee of Cincinnati IRS office speaks out
    Dean Reynolds speaks to Bonnie Esrig, a retired employee of the IRS office that's accused of political targeting. She says that in her 24 years in the office under two Democratic and two Republican presidents, she never heard anyone say, "The president wants this done."
  • Video: Carney: U.S. to refer "more frequently" to Burma as "Myanmar"
    As a "diplomatic courtesy," the United States "has begun to allow limited use of the name Myanmar" to describe the former pariah state of Burma as it inches closer toward democracy, White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters Monday - but official U.S. policy, he added, "remains that Burma is the name of the country."
  • Video: Obama hosts Burmese president at the White House
    In a photo op Monday afternoon with Burma's president, Thein Sein, President Obama repeatedly referred to the nation as Myanmar - new acknowledgement of a "diplomatic courtesy" allowing "limited use of the name" to describe the former pariah state, though official U.S. policy "remains that Burma is the name of the country."
  • Burma or Myanmar? WH grappling with name game
    President says "Myanmar" in meeting with the former pariah state's president, but official policy remains "Burma"
  • Top Obama officials knew about IRS probe, says WH
    Chief of Staff Denis McDonough and others learned of looming IRS report last month, but didn't tell the president
  • Video: Senior WH aides knew about IRS probe, Carney says
    White House spokesman Jay Carney said Denis McDonough, President Obama's chief of staff, was among a handful of senior aides informed of the Treasury inspector general's findings that the IRS was targeting conservative groups for heightened scrutiny in their tax-exempt application process - but insisted he did not intervene in the "ongoing" investigation, or tell the president.
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