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Republican Party of Florida

Florida affiliate of the Republican Party

Republican Party of Florida

Florida affiliate of the Republican Party

FieldValue
nameRepublican Party of Florida
logoRepublican Party of Florida logo.png
colorcode
foundation
membership_yearDecember 31, 2025
membership5,509,354
ideology{{unbulleted list
* {{nowrapConservatism<ref name"Paul Gottfried 2009 p. 12"Paul Gottfried, Conservatism in America: Making Sense of the American Right, p. 9, "Postwar conservatives set about creating their own synthesis of free-market capitalism, Christian morality, and the global struggle against Communism." (2009); Gottfried, Theologies and moral concern (1995) p. 12.}}}}
position
headquarters420 E. Jefferson Street
Tallahassee, Florida 32301
nationalRepublican Party
countryUnited States
stateFlorida
chairmanEvan Power
leader1_titleGovernor
leader1_nameRon DeSantis
leader2_titleSenate President
leader2_nameBen Albritton
leader3_titleSpeaker of the House
leader3_nameDaniel Perez
leader4_titleSenate Majority Leader
leader4_nameJim Boyd
leader5_titleFlorida House Majority Leader
leader5_nameTyler Sirois
womens_wingFlorida Federation of Republican Women
student_wingFlorida College Republicans
youth_wingFlorida Young Republicans
Florida Teen Age Republicans
colorsRed
seats1_titleFlorida Senate
seats1
seats2_titleFlorida House of Representatives
seats2
seats3_titleStatewide Executive Offices
seats3
seats4_titleUnited States Senate
seats4(Florida seats)
seats5_titleUnited States House of Representatives
seats5(Florida seats)
website
symbol[[File:Republican Party Disc (alternate).svg100px]]
  • Conservatism}} Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Florida Teen Age Republicans The Republican Party of Florida (RPOF), also called the Florida Republican Party, is the affiliate of the Republican Party in the U.S. state of Florida. It is currently the state's dominant party, controlling 20 out of 28 of Florida's United States House of Representatives seats, both United States Senate seats, the Governor of Florida and all other statewide offices, and has supermajorities in both houses of the state legislature.

The Republican Party held power in state politics during the Reconstruction era after the American Civil War and included African American legislators and officials. Democrats regained power in Florida and across the South until the 1960s.

History

Several of Florida's governors and U.S. senators were Republican after the Civil War during the Reconstruction era. There were Republican African American officeholders from the end of the Civil War until before 1900 in Florida. The Republican Convention of 1867 in Tallahassee was the first statewide convention of Republicans. Josiah T. Walls was a delegate to the convention.

Harrison Reed organized the Union Republican Club in Jacksonville and sent a delegation to the National Union National Convention in 1864. After the American Civil War black Republicans mainly joined the Union League organized by Daniel Richards and William U. Saunders. Richards was able to have pro-black rights resolutions passed at conventions. Reed stated they were "pandering to Negroes".

Richards, Saunders, and Liberty Billings campaigned for black support for the 1868 Florida Constitutional Convention. Edward McPherson, Clerk of the United States House of Representatives withdrew printing contracts from the "Radical Republican" supporting Jacksonville Florida Times, it later went bankrupt, instead supporting the moderate Florida Union. Richards accused Freedmen's Bureau officials of working against him.

Richards and Saunders' wing controlled a majority of the delegates at the constitutional convention. They submitted their proposed constitution to George Meade and held a nomination convention that selected a gubernatorial ticket of Billings and Saunders and Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs for Florida's at-large congressional district. However, Reed's faction, claiming that the Radicals did not have a quorum, held another meeting and received support from Meade, who later approved their constitution. The Radical's constitution made most local and state offices elected while the moderate's constitution made those offices appointed and reduce representation of black counties in the state legislature. The Florida Radicals failed to gather support in Congress for their constitution, with even Benjamin Butler supporting the moderate's constitution. The constitution was approved by voters in 1868.

Democrats regained control of Florida's state politics and across the South. Their control lasted until 1966 when Claude R. Kirk, Jr. was elected. He became the first Republican governor elected in the state since the 19th century Reconstruction era. Since 1960, the state only voted Democratic in the presidential elections in 1964 (Lyndon B. Johnson), 1976 (Jimmy Carter), 1996 (Bill Clinton), 2008 and 2012 (Barack Obama). The 2000 presidential election was decided by a margin of 537 votes out of approximately 6 million cast, giving George W. Bush the presidency over Al Gore. Richard Nixon's Southern Strategy, which took advantage of objections to the advances of the American Civil Rights Movement. This resulted in a regional political realignment for the Southern United States. The number of people registered with the party rose from 116,000 in 1952 to 1,139,000 in 1976.

The Florida Senate was still dominated by Democrats until 1992, when a majority of Republicans was elected. The Florida House of Representatives turned Republican after the November 1996 election. Since then, the number of Democrats in both chambers have continued to drop.

The Florida Legislature became the first legislature in any of the states of the former Confederacy to come under complete Republican control when the Republicans gained control of the House and Senate in the 1996 election. In the 2006 election the Democrats actually gained seats in the State House, the first instance of this occurring since the early 1980s.

Structure and composition

In the 2014 gubernatorial election, the Republican nominee was Governor Rick Scott. He defeated the Democratic nominee, former governor Charlie Crist, who was once elected as a Republican.

The Chairman of the Republican Party of Florida is Evan Power, elected by RPOF members in January 2024.

The Republican National Committee (RNC) is responsible for promoting Republican campaign activities, developing and promoting the Republican political platform, as well as coordinating fundraising and election strategy. Senator Mel Martinez of Florida is the party's former General Chairman. Michael Whatley is the current Chairman of RNC. The chairman of the RNC is chosen by the President when the Republicans have the White House and otherwise by the Party's state committees. The RNC, under the direction of the party's presidential candidate, supervises the Republican National Convention, raises funds, and coordinates campaign strategy. On the local level there are similar state committees in every state and most large cities, counties and legislative districts, but they have far less money and influence than the national body.

The Republican House and Senate caucuses have separate fund raising and strategy committees. The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) assists in House races, and the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) in Senate races. They each raise over $100 million per election cycle, and play important roles in recruiting strong state candidates. The Republican Governors Association (RGA) is a discussion group that seldom funds state races.

Ideology

The membership of the party is primarily made up of fiscal conservatives, social conservatives, neoconservatives, and members of the Christian right.

Economic policies

Republicans favor free-market policies supporting business and oppose increases to the minimum wage.

Republicans are generally opposed to a single-payer healthcare system, such as that found in Canada or in most of Europe. They also oppose the Affordable Care Act and the expansion of Medicaid under the Act.

Republicans oppose labor unions and have supported right-to-work legislation (with a right-to-work law currently in effect in Florida).

Social policies

Most of the Republicans' national and state candidates oppose abortion, same-sex marriage, and transgender rights, favor capital punishment (which is still used in Florida), and support gun ownership rights.

Republicans advocate for charter schools and school vouchers; many have denounced the performance of public schools.

Socially conservative Republicans support voluntary organized prayer in public schools and the inclusion of teaching creationism or intelligent design alongside evolution.

Symbols and name

1874 Nast cartoon depicted GOP as an elephant demolishing the flimsy planks of the Democrats

The mascot symbol, historically, is the elephant. A political cartoon by Thomas Nast, published in Harper's Weekly on November 7, 1874, is considered the first important use of the symbol. In the early 20th century, the usual symbol of the Republican Party in Midwestern states such as Indiana and Ohio was the eagle, as opposed to the Democratic rooster. This symbol still appears on Indiana ballots.

After the 2000 election, the color red became associated with the GOP although it has not been officially adopted by the party. On election night 2000, for the first time ever, all major broadcast networks utilized the same color scheme for the electoral map: red states for George W. Bush (Republican nominee) and blue states for Al Gore (Democratic nominee). Although the color red is unofficial and informal, it is widely recognized by the media and the public to represent the GOP. Partisan supporters now often use the color red for promotional materials and campaign merchandise.

Lincoln Day, Reagan Day, or Lincoln-Reagan Day, is the primary annual fundraising celebration held by many state and county organizations of the Republican Party. The events are named after Republican Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Ronald Reagan.

Current elected officials

As of 2023, the party controls both U.S. Senate seats, 20 out of the 28 seats Florida is apportioned in the U.S. House, all statewide offices, and both chambers of the Florida state legislature.

Florida Republicans have consistently won gubernatorial elections in the state since 1998.

Member of Congress

[[United States Senate|U.S. Senate]]

File:Official Portrait of Senator Rick Scott (R-FL).jpg|Senior U.S. Senator File:Portrait of Senator Ashley Moody, 2025 (cropped).jpg|alt=Junior U.S. Senator Ashley Moody|Junior U.S. Senator

U.S. House of Representatives

Out of the 28 seats Florida is apportioned in the U.S. House of Representatives, 20 are held by Republicans:

DistrictMemberPhoto
1st[[File:Jimmy Patronis, official portrait (119th Congress).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
2nd[[File:Neal Dunn, official portrait, 115th Congress (1).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
3rd[[File:Rep. Kat Cammack official photo, 117th Congress.jpgcenterframeless130px]]
4th[[File:Rep. Aaron Bean official photo, 118th Congress (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
5th[[File:Rutherford John 119th Congress (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
6th[[File:Randy Fine, official portrait (119th Congress).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
7th[[File:Representative Cory Mills Cropped Portrait.jpgcenterframeless130px]]
8th[[File:Haridopolos Mike 119th Congress (crop2).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
11th[[File:Dan Webster portrait (118th and 119th Congress).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
12th[[File:Gus Bilirakis, official portrait, 118th Congress (half crop).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
13th[[File:Anna Paulina Luna.jpgcenterframeless130px]]
15th[[File:Laurel Lee 118thCong.jpegcenterframeless130px]]
16th[[File:Vern Buchanan portrait (118th Congress).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
17th[[File:Greg Steube 117th Congress.jpegcenterframeless130px]]
18th[[File:Scott Franklin, 117th Congress portrait.jpgcenterframeless130px]]
19th[[File:Rep. Byron Donalds official photo, 117th Congress.jpgcenterframeless130px]]
21st[[File:Brian Mast official 115th Congress photo (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
26th[[File:Mario Díaz-Balart portrait (118th Congress).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
27th[[File:REP.MES Headshot (cropped 2).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
28th[[File:Rep. Carlos Gimenez official photo (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]

State

Statewide offices

Governor Ron DeSantis
  • Governor: Ron DeSantis
  • Lieutenant Governor: Jay Collins
  • Attorney General: James Uthmeier
  • CFO: Blaise Ingoglia
  • Commissioner of Agriculture: Wilton Simpson

State legislative leaders

  • Senate president: Ben Albritton
  • Senate president pro tempore: Jason Brodeur
  • Senate majority leader: Jim Boyd
  • House speaker: Daniel Perez
  • House speaker pro tempore: Wyman Duggan
  • House majority leader: Tyler Sirois

State Senate

Republicans hold a 28-seat majority in the 40-member Florida Senate.

State House

Republicans hold an 86-seat majority in the 120-member Florida House of Representatives.

Former Florida governors and U.S. senators

Governors

PhotoFormer governors of Florida
[[File:Governor Harrison Reed of Florida.jpg90px]]Harrison Reed
[[File:Florida Governor Ossian B. Hart.jpg90px]]Ossian Hart
[[File:Florida Governor Marcellus Stearns.png90px]]Marcellus Stearns
[[File:Governor Claude R Kirk.jpg90px]]Claude Kirk
[[File:Portrait of Gov. Bob Martinez.jpg90px]]Bob Martinez
[[File:Gov Jeb Bush.jpg90px]]Jeb Bush
[[File:Gov charlie crist.jpg90px]]Charlie Crist
[[File:Governor Rick Scott 2013.jpg90px]]Rick Scott

United States senators

PhotoFormer U.S. senators from Florida
[[File:Senator Rubio official portrait.jpg90px]]Marco Rubio
[[File:Senator George LeMieux.jpg90px]]George LeMieux
[[File:Mel Martinez official portrait.jpg90px]]Mel Martinez
[[File:Connie Mack III.jpg90px]]Connie Mack III
[[File:Hawkins, Paula.jpg90px]]Paula Hawkins
[[File:Edward Gurney.jpg90px]]Edward Gurney
[[File:Simon Barclay Conover - Brady-Handy.jpg90px]]Simon Conover
[[File:AbijahGilbert (1).jpg90px]]Abijah Gilbert
[[File:Thomas W. Osborn - Brady-Handy.jpg90px]]Thomas Osborn
[[File:Adonijah Welch 1.jpg90px]]Adonijah Welch

RPOF Chairs

  • C. H. McNulty (1936–1942)
  • Cyril C. Spades (1942–1950)
  • G. Harold Alexander (1950–1962)
  • Tom Fairfield Brown (1962–1966)
  • William F. Murfin (1966–1969)
  • Duke Crittenden (1969–1971)
  • L. E. Thomas (1971–1974)
  • Bill Taylor (1974–1980)
  • Henry Sayler (1980–1984)
  • Jeanie Austin (1984–1989)
  • Van B. Poole (1989–1993)
  • Tom Slade (1993–1999)
  • Al Cárdenas (1999–2003)
  • Carole Jean Jordan (2003–2006)
  • Jim Greer (2006–2010)
  • John Thrasher (2010–2011)
  • David Bitner (2011)
  • Lenny Curry (2011–2014)
  • Leslie Dougher (2014–2015)
  • Blaise Ingoglia (2015–2019)
  • Joe Gruters (2019–2023)
  • Christian Ziegler (2023–2024)
  • Evan Power (2024–present)

Electoral history

Gubernatorial

ElectionGubernatorial candidateVotesVote %Result
1860No candidate
1865
1868Harrison Reed14,42159.1%Won
1872Ossian B. Hart17,60352.38%Won
1876Marcellus Stearns24,11649.49%Lost
1880Simon B. Conover23,30745.1%Lost
1884Frank W. Pope27,86546.47%Lost
1888V.J. Shipman26,38539.63%Lost
1892No candidate
1896Edward R. Gunby8,29020.3%Lost
1900Matthew B. MacFarlane6,23817.27%Lost
1904Matthew B. MacFarlane6,35717.37%Lost
1908John M. Cheney6,45315.4%Lost
1912William R. O'Neal2,6465.46%Lost
1916George W. Allen10,33312.47%Lost
1920George E. Gay23,78817.93%Lost
1924William R. O'Neal17,49917.21%Lost
1928William J. Howey95,01839.03%Lost
1932William J. Howey93,32333.38%Lost
1936E.E. Callaway59,83219.09%Lost
1940No candidate
1944Bert L. Acker96,32121.06%Lost
1948Bert L. Acker76,15316.64%Lost
1952Harry S. Swan210,00925.17%Lost
1954J. Thomas Watson†69,85219.52%Lost
1956William A. Washburne Jr.266,98026.31%Lost
1960George C. Petersen569,93640.16%Lost
1964Charles R. Holley686,29741.26%Lost
1966Claude R. Kirk Jr.821,19055.13%Won
1970Claude R. Kirk Jr.746,24343.12%Lost
1974Jerry Thomas709,43838.8%Lost
1978Jack Eckerd1,123,88844.41%Lost
1982Skip Bafalis949,01335.3%Lost
1986Bob Martinez1,847,52554.56%Won
1990Bob Martinez1,535,06843.48%Lost
1994Jeb Bush2,071,06849.23%Lost
1998Jeb Bush2,191,10555.27%Won
2002Jeb Bush2,856,84556.0%Won
2006Charlie Crist2,519,84552.20%Won
2010Rick Scott2,619,33548.87%Won
2014Rick Scott2,865,34348.14%Won
2018Ron DeSantis4,076,18649.59%Won
2022Ron DeSantis4,614,21059.37%Won

References

Works cited

References

  1. "Voter Registration—By Party Affiliation". Florida Department of State.
  2. Paul Gottfried, ''Conservatism in America: Making Sense of the American Right'', p. 9, "Postwar conservatives set about creating their own synthesis of free-market capitalism, Christian morality, and the global struggle against Communism." (2009); Gottfried, ''Theologies and moral concern'' (1995) p. 12.
  3. (December 28, 2024). "Democrats have a Florida problem".
  4. (April 11, 2015). "Republican Convention of 1867".
  5. (December 30, 2003). "The Reconstruction Era: Primary Documents on Events from 1865 to 1877". Bloomsbury Publishing USA.
  6. [http://www2.citizen.org/hrg/medicaid/assets/reports/2007UnsettlingScores.pdf Unsettling Scores: A Ranking of State Medicaid Programs, P. 15] {{webarchive. link. (April 19, 2009)
  7. "After shunning Medicaid expansion, Florida Republicans see the political power of tackling health care".
  8. link. (September 21, 2011 . ''HarpWeek''. Retrieved on February 21, 2007.)
  9. "William Murfin Obituary (2008) - Orlando, FL - Orlando Sentinel".
  10. "Earl "Duke" Crittenden".
  11. "Builder of state GOP Jeanie Austin, 66, dies".
  12. (2000-04-25). "Jeanie Austin Dies at 66". [[The Washington Post]].
  13. "Florida Memory • Portrait of Jeanie Austin - Tallahassee, Florida".
  14. (January 2, 2024). "Carole Jean Jordan backs Peter Feaman for Republican Party of Florida chair".
  15. "About Indian River County, Tax Collector's Office".
  16. "2024 Indian River County tax collector choice: Incumbent Jordan, candidate Bradley".
  17. Special election held to replace Governor [[Daniel T. McCarty]], who died in office on September 28, 1953.
  18. Watson died on October 24, two weeks before the date of the election.
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