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Jeanette Nuñez

President of FIU since 2025

Jeanette Nuñez

President of FIU since 2025

FieldValue
nameJeanette Nuñez
imageJeanette Nunez official photo (cropped 1).jpg
captionOfficial portrait, 2019
office7th President of Florida International University
term_startFebruary 17, 2025
predecessorKenneth A. Jessell
office120th Lieutenant Governor of Florida
governor1Ron DeSantis
term_start1January 8, 2019
term_end1February 16, 2025
predecessor1Carlos Lopez-Cantera
successor1Jay Collins
office2Speaker pro tempore of the Florida House of Representatives
term_start2November 22, 2016
term_end2November 20, 2018
predecessor2Matt Hudson
successor2MaryLynn Magar
office3Member of the Florida House of Representatives
term_start3November 2, 2010
term_end3November 6, 2018
predecessor3David Rivera
successor3Juan Fernandez-Barquin
constituency3112th district (2010–2012)
119th district (2012–2018)
birth_nameJeanette Marie Sánchez
birth_date
birth_placeMiami, Florida, U.S.
partyRepublican
spouse
children3
educationFlorida International University (BA, MPA)
{{Infobox academicchildyes
thesis_titlenone
doctoral_advisornone
disciplinenone
workplaces{{plainlist

119th district (2012–2018)

  • Florida International University Jeanette Marie Nuñez (née Sánchez; born June 6, 1972) is an American university administrator and politician who currently serves as the president of Florida International University. Nuñez previously served as the 20th lieutenant governor of Florida from 2019 to 2025. A member of the Republican Party, she represented Miami-Dade County in the Florida House of Representatives from 2010 to 2018, also serving as speaker pro tempore for her last two years in the office. Nuñez is the first Hispanic American woman to serve as Florida's lieutenant governor.

On February 16, 2025, Nuñez resigned as lieutenant governor to become interim president of Florida International University (FIU). In June 2025, she was confirmed as the seventh FIU president, and the first ever woman to hold the position.

Early life and education

Nuñez was born in Miami to Cuban parents Victor C. and Teresa Sánchez as one of their three daughters. In 1994, she earned a BA in political science and international relations from Florida International University (FIU). In 1998, Nuñez completed her Master of Public Administration at FIU.

Career

Nuñez's first job was as an aide to state senator Alex Diaz de la Portilla. Later, Nuñez became vice president of government affairs at Jackson Health System. She became an adjunct professor and advisor at Florida International University. She served as vice president of external affairs at Kendall Regional Medical Center and Aventura Hospital & Medical Center. She became Lieutenant Governor of Florida.

Florida House of Representatives

When incumbent state representative David Rivera could not seek reelection in 2010 due to term limits, Nuñez ran to succeed him in the 112th district, which included parts of Broward, Collier, and Miami-Dade Counties, stretching from Doral to Naples. She faced Juan D'Arce and James Patrick Guerrero in the Republican primary, and promised to pass legislation to "improve the economy" and "reform the Medicaid program in order to contain the ever-growing costs that affect taxpayers." Nuñez won the primary, receiving 66% of the vote to D'Arce's 19% and Guerrero's 15%.

In the general election, she faced Democratic nominee Sandra Ruiz, a Doral City councilwoman, and Robert Van Name, an independent candidate. Nuñez campaigned on job creation, saying, "For me, the most important issue for District 112 and in fact for the entire state of Florida is creating jobs, improving the economy and lowering the tax burden for businesses and property owners." The Naples Daily News wrote, "If there is a textbook reason for redistricting reform, this race...would be it" and opined that "there is little sense of Collier connection from either Miami-based candidate", but endorsed Nuñez because she met with the editorial board and Ruiz did not, which it called "a dreadful measuring stick for picking such a high-ranking public servant". Nuñez won the election with 56% of the vote to Ruiz's 39% and Van Name's 5%.

When the state's legislative districts were redrawn in 2012, Nuñez was drawn into the 119th district, where she opted to seek reelection. She was challenged in the Republican primary by Libby Perez, but won renomination with 73% of the vote. In the general election, Nuñez only faced write-in opposition and won easily.

During the 2014 legislative session, Nuñez worked with state senator Jack Latvala to sponsor legislation that "would allow the children of undocumented immigrants to pay the same in-state tuition rates for college as other Floridians," which was passed by the legislature.

As reported by The Hill in 2018, Nuñez introduced legislation in Florida "to standardize daylight saving time for the entire calendar year". To make the "Sunshine Protection Act" nationwide, Senator Marco Rubio sponsored a bill in the Senate, because the state bill could not take effect until the federal government made the change. That was because the "provision would shift the state into a different time zone permanently", something which requires a federal regulatory action or an act of Congress.

Lieutenant Governor of Florida

DeSantis and Nuñez, 2019

Selection

On September 5, 2018, Representative Ron DeSantis selected Nuñez to be his running mate in the 2018 Florida gubernatorial election, facing off against Andrew Gillum and his running mate Chris King. DeSantis and Nuñez would go on to win the election by a margin of less than half of a percentage point. Nuñez is the first Latina woman to serve as lieutenant governor of Florida.

In 2022 DeSantis and Nuñez were reelected with 59.4% of the vote, representing a more than 1.6 million vote margin over Charlie Crist. It was the largest margin of any Republican ever elected governor of Florida and included wins in Miami-Dade for a Republican gubernatorial candidate the first time since 2002, as well as other counties that had similarly voted for Democrats even longer.

Tenure

Nuñez was sworn in as lieutenant governor on January 8, 2019, succeeding Carlos Lopez-Cantera. During her time in office, she hosted various roundtables and events in support of exiles from Venezuela.

In February 2025, Nuñez resigned as lieutenant governor to be appointed as interim president of Florida International University.

Florida International University

On February 17, 2025, Nuñez was appointed as the interim president of Florida International University by DeSantis. In June 2025, she was confirmed as the seventh president of FIU.

Political positions

Immigration

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Nikki Fried criticized Nuñez in 2022 for saying: "Although states do not have jurisdiction over immigration, it has jurisdiction over the well-being of our residents. Entering the country illegally and fleeing a dictatorship to seek asylum are two different things, and misrepresenting that is offensive." Of Cuban refugees, Nuñez added, "The governor isn't going to stand there with his arms crossed. He's thinking what he's going to do. He's going to send them, frankly, to the state of Delaware, the president’s state".

Personal life

Jeanette Nuñez married Adrian Nuñez in 1997. They have three children. Nuñez is Roman Catholic.

Notes

References

References

  1. (7 November 2020). "Florida Lt. Gov. Nunez's father, Cuban exile, dies at 84".
  2. (September 5, 2018). "DeSantis has chosen first female Cuban-American lieutenant governor running mate". [[Naples Daily News]].
  3. "Lieutenant Governor Nuñez". Florida Office of the Governor.
  4. Miguel-Navarro}}{{Dead link, Tracy X.. (August 19, 2010). "Job creation the key issue to candidates in House race that includes Collier". [[Naples Daily News]].
  5. Miguel-Navarro, Tracy X.. (October 27, 2010). "Job creation on minds of candidates for House District 112". [[Naples Daily News]].
  6. (October 4, 2010). "Editorial: Here is a summary of our endorsements in contests in Collier and Lee counties.". [[Naples Daily News]]}}{{Dead link.
  7. Nielsen, Allison. (May 1, 2014). "In-State Tuition Bill Soars Through Senate". Sunshine State News.
  8. (March 14, 2018). "Rubio legislation would keep daylight saving time year-round".
  9. Smiley, David. (September 5, 2019). "DeSantis picks Miami state legislator Jeanette Nuñez as running mate". Miami Herald.
  10. Dunkelberger, Lloyd. (November 15, 2018). "Ron DeSantis nails down win in Florida governor's race". News4Jax.
  11. Stofan, Jake. (January 7, 2019). "Jeanette Núñez to become first Hispanic female Lieutenant Governor". WJHG.
  12. Stofan, Jake. (January 7, 2019). "Jeanette Núñez to become first Hispanic female Lieutenant Governor". ABC News 7.
  13. Ogles, Jacob. (February 16, 2019). "Jeanette Nunez, Casey DeSantis meet with Venezuelan exiles". Fla Pol.
  14. Holly, Jessica. (February 15, 2019). "Florida Lt. Governor Nunez holds roundtable discussion on Venezuela at FIU". WSVN.
  15. (February 5, 2025). "Expected early exit of Florida's Nuñez creates new opening for DeSantis to cement control". [[Politico]].
  16. DeFede, Jime. (February 5, 2025). "Florida Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nunez expected to be named interim FIU president". [[CBS News]].
  17. https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/state-politics/article299842924.html
  18. Scheckner, Jesse. (June 18, 2025). "Jeanette Nuñez confirmed as FIU President, vows to prioritize students, elevate school ranking". [[Florida Politics]].
  19. "Lt. Governor Jeanette Nuñez makes controversial comments on Spanish radio regarding Cuban migrants – WSVN 7News | Miami News, Weather, Sports | Fort Lauderdale".
  20. "Nuñez faces backlash for comments about Cuban migrants".
  21. Swisher, Skyler. (September 6, 2018). "Ron DeSantis' running mate Jeanette Nuñez once called Trump a 'con-man.' Here's what you need to know.". South Florida Sun-Sentinel.
  22. "Society for American Archaeology - Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez (R)".
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