Bill would require governor not to delay special elections

State Sen. Tina Polsky, a Broward-Palm Beach county Democrat, is sponsoring legislation that would require Florida governors to act more quickly to set special elections to fill state legislative and congressional vacancies. (Phelan M. Ebenhack/Associated Press)

Since taking office, Gov. Ron DeSantis has taken two different approaches when a member of Congress or the Florida Legislature resigns or dies.

Sometimes he acts speedily to call a special election to fill the vacancy and get a replacement in office quickly, especially if it’s a district in which voters are likely to elect a Republican.

In other cases he takes his time, waiting weeks to schedule elections, with dates far in the future, more commonly when the vacancy is in a Democratic district.

State law leaves the timing — when to announce special elections and when to hold special primaries and general elections — up to DeSantis. State Sen. Tina Polsky, a Broward-Palm Beach county Democrat, and state Rep. Michael Gottlieb, a Broward Democrat, are sponsoring legislation that would require governors to act more quickly, setting timetables for various scenarios.

A Florida governor can fill many vacancies on his own, including members of the Florida Cabinet, county commissioners and school board members. But he doesn’t have the authority to pick replacements for the legislative branch.

For federal offices, the governor can appoint a replacement senator to fill in until the next election. (That’s how Ashley Moody became the appointed senator when U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio resigned to become secretary of state.) U.S. House vacancies must be filled by voters.

Under DeSantis’ unexplained delays, lasting far longer than under previous Republican governors, sometimes mean residents of vacated lawmakers’ districts go without representation for months.

“It’s terrible that we can’t count on special elections in a timely manner,” said state Sen. Tina Polsky, a Broward-Palm Beach county Democrat. The result, she said, is sometimes “there’s no representation for certain people.”

The decisions are widely believed to be political. “It shouldn’t be dependent on politics or what the seat looks like,” Polsky said.

The governor’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment about the Polsky-Gottlieb legislation or about how DeSantis goes about deciding when special elections will be held.

In 2021, in response to questions about a delay in setting election dates — and the assertion that his actions were aimed at keeping Democratic seats vacant — his press secretary at the time said simply that he “has fulfilled his constitutional and statutory duties.”

No representation

A DeSantis delay in setting special election dates means a Palm Beach County district in the state House of Representatives will be unrepresented in Tallahassee for the entire 2026 legislative session.

An unusual feature of the current example is it involves Republican-leaning District 87, home to 115,600 active registered voters — including the state’s most prominent Republican, President Donald Trump whose official residence is his Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach.

The vacancy didn’t come as a surprise; it came about because DeSantis appointed the previous representative to a new job. Former state Rep. Mike Caruso resigned from the District 87 seat on Aug. 18 when DeSantis appointed him clerk of the circuit court and comptroller of Palm Beach County.

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