Gov. Scott called the newly-passed Florida budget a "backroom deal" Tuesday in Tallahassee, the latest indication that if he doesn't veto the whole budget and call lawmakers back for a special session, his line item veto pen may get quite a workout.

The Florida Senate and House passed the $82.4 million budget Monday, three days late as Republican leaders wrangled over various issues, including higher education spending, health care funding, tax cuts and whether to eliminate economic development agencies Enterprise Florida and Visit Florida.

The last issue greatly angered Scott, who traveled the state attacking lawmakers who supported killing the agencies. 

House Speaker Richard Corcoran, R-Lutz, called Visit Florida and Enterprise Florida "corporate welfare" while Scott said they were essential for job creation and tourism promotion in Florida. 

Corcoran defended the budget Monday night, calling it a fight for "the soul of the [Republican] party."

The legislature ended up stripping incentive money for Enterprise Florida and slashing Visit Florida's budget by two-thirds.

As governor, Scott can veto any budget line he wants, and he is known for cutting items he feels were inserted without going through the proper channels, ala "backroom deals."

Speculation is also that Scott may completely veto the budget and call the Legislature back for a special session, something that hasn't been done since Gov. Lawton Chiles' time in the 90s. 

Corcoran is confident he has enough votes to override such a veto. However, if Scott overrides the education conforming package that accompanied the budget, it may not be the case.

The budget overtime capped an unusual session that included Republicans feuding, a state senator resigning over using racial slurs in front of black colleagues, and the passage of fewer bills than normal. 

Only 250 bills out of more than 3,000 passed during the 60 day session. While the budget is the only issue that had to pass the session, major bills on expanding gun rights, cracking down on illegal immigration, restricting abortion and implementing the medical marijuana amendment.

Among the things that did pass -- an expansion of the Stand Your Ground law, death penalty reform (which has been signed by the governor), funding a reservoir south of Lake Okeechobee, allowing spirits to be sold in grocery stores, and a bill to regulate companies such as Uber and Lyft.

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.