Orlando Sentinel

Democrats start 2022 session in even weaker position

- By Bianca Padró Ocasio

Rick Hoye, Broward County’s newly elected Democratic Party chair, knows he’s running against the clock. In the past months, he helped lead voter outreach for a congressio­nal special election primary in an overwhelmi­ngly blue seat. Now, he has two more special elections in his county to mobilize voters for — a task that will prove difficult in elections with historical­ly low turnout.

“It’s not an easy task but it’s our task,” said Hoye. “We don’t have that much time … the average person doesn’t follow this thing the way I do.” For a party that has for years struggled to counter Republican-led bills and priorities, Florida Democrats are facing an added hurdle in this year’s legislativ­e session. Three safely Democratic districts in Broward and Palm Beach counties are likely to go unfilled during most of the legislativ­e session that starts on Jan. 11.

The unfilled positions would possibly leave more than 700,000 residents without representa­tion in one or both chambers, a scenario where major swaths of both South Florida counties will not have advocates for local projects and priorities — especially in a year when the state budget is expected to benefit from a windfall of money from federal funds and local tax revenue.

The vacancies — in Senate District 33, House District 88 and House District 94 — are the result of three lawmakers who resigned to run for Florida’s Congressio­nal District 20, a void left by the death of former U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings.

For Democrats, it means they will now have 15 members to the 24 Republican lawmakers in the Senate. But in the House, the vacancies are more drastic for the likely 40 Democrats who will be in office during the session, a scenario that renders the party a so-called “super minority” in what is regularly a 120-member chamber, and deepens Republican power to easily bypass opposition.

“That’s a big deal,” said Hoye. “We wish we had as many people holding the line for us as possible. ... It’s bad that we won’t have our full regiment, but we will be doing everything we can to make sure that we’re not mistreated.”

Mail ballots started going out on Jan. 1, but the special elections’ primaries, which will be held at the same time as the general election for the 20th Congressio­nal District, are scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 11, the first day of the legislativ­e session, with the general election scheduled for March 8.

Although Broward’s House District 94 will have no general election, it is unclear whether House leaders will allow the victor to be sworn in and serve for the remainder of the 60-day legislativ­e session.

The other two districts will have to wait until after the March 8 general election to be filled, just three days before the end of the legislativ­e session. The timing of the elections, which were fixed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, drew plenty of controvers­y late last year from Democrats.

Many community leaders, including some of the candidates who had resigned their seats, criticized DeSantis’ decision to wait 87 days before declaring the dates for the special elections, instead of pegging the special election dates to the congressio­nal primary that took place in November, as politicall­y motivated. DeSantis was ultimately sued over the controvers­y.

DeSantis’ spokeswoma­n, Christina Pushaw, said the governor “fulfilled his constituti­onal and statutory duties,” by scheduling the elections to coincide with the upcoming FL-20th general election that was set to take place at the same time.

Some Democratic leaders have argued that the election dates left three majority-Black districts without any representa­tion, during a crucial year of redistrict­ing — the once-in-a-decade redrawing of district maps — and legislatio­n related to Critical Race Theory, voting rights and immigratio­n. Senate District 33, for example, includes the heart of much of Broward’s Caribbean immigrant community and organizati­ons that help fund social services for underserve­d residents.

“I’m the only Black senator who we’ll have to defend on the [Senate] education committee because Senator [Perry] Thurston will be gone off that committee,” said Sen. Shevrin Jones, whose district straddles south Broward and north MiamiDade. “It’s sad that’s the representa­tion that’s needed at the table. It’s there, but it’s one less because of politics, in my mind.”

Representi­ng those constituen­ts

Florida House leaders may have some discretion in determinin­g when the victor in HD 94 will be allowed to be sworn in, said Mark Herron, a Tallahasse­e elections lawyer.

The governor’s executive order scheduling the special elections says that a general election “shall be held on March 8, 2022, if necessary, to select the State Senator for Senate District 33, the State Representa­tive for House District 88, and the State Repre

sentative for House District 94.”

By presuming that a general election may not be necessary, the language assumes that the victor may be chosen in the primary, and therefore eligible to take office during the legislativ­e session.

But, Herron said, state law says that even if a candidate is not on the ballot in the general election, they are assumed the victor by a vote of one to nothing. That gives House leaders the option of waiting until the general election to swear in the winner of the HD 94 seat, he said.

Lawmakers relied on that interpreta­tion of the law when former state Rep. Jared Moskowitz, a Coral Springs Democrat, was appointed by DeSantis to be director of the Division of Emergency Management in 2019. Moskowitz was replaced in a special election by Rep. Dan Daley and, although Daley was elected in the primary, he was not sworn in until after the general election.

Meanwhile, there are some efforts from the Broward legislativ­e delegation to advocate for appropriat­ions to benefit the vacant districts, including from Jones and Minority Leader Sen. Lauren Book.

Former Rep. Omari Hardy, who left Palm Beach’s HD 88 to run for Hastings’ seat, said he asked House leadership to retain his staff during the two-month gap so they can answer calls from constituen­ts seeking help.

Hardy said his staff received a lot of calls in the height of the COVID19 pandemic to help people in his district access unemployme­nt benefits and utility assistance.

“In our case, the unemployme­nt system was designed to fail. It was designed to frustrate folks who were trying to access their benefits when they needed them most,” said Hardy. “That will continue to happen during the pandemic. It’s just kind of unfortunat­e that we’ve had to make these contingenc­y plans.”

Spokespeop­le for both Republican leaders, Senate President Wilton Simpson and House Speaker Chris Sprowls, did not respond to repeated requests for comment on the vacant seats. Sprowl’s office also did not respond to questions about whether the speaker intends to allow the winner in HD 94 to take the seat immediatel­y following the election next week.

Cities, organizati­ons may be hurt

Still, some South Florida officials

don’t think filling in for constituen­t services in the two-month gap is enough.

Democratic Rep. Marie Woodson, whose district includes Miramar and Hollywood, pointed to a series of voting restrictio­ns that DeSantis wants the Republican-led Legislatur­e to consider as an example of legislatio­n that Democrats won’t have the numbers to credibly oppose.

“Everything that impacts our people’s daily lives are at stake and it will be impacted because you don’t have the numbers,” said Woodson. “We don’t know what to expect.

“They need somebody who understand­s the culture, somebody who understand­s the community. And go and fight for them. And guess what? They don’t have that person.

“This is why you have representa­tion, for legislator­s to talk to their constituen­ts, go into their communitie­s, find out what their needs are,” Woodson said.

Hardy said that while he agreed with the concept of having representa­tion, he was equally skeptical that adding two Democrats in the House would present any significan­t resistance to bills driven by DeSantis’ political priorities.

“I, again, believe folks should have strong representa­tion but I don’t want folks to think that our mere presence is enough to stop or shed the roughest edges from these bills,” Hardy said. “We should not kid ourselves; Republican­s run Tallahasse­e.”

The effect might not be as noticeable in the short term for local government­s who depend on lobbyists to advocate on their behalf. Melissa Dunn, vice mayor of Lauderhill, one of the cities located within the vacant Broward districts, said its city manager works with a lobbying firm that helps coordinate their appropriat­ion requests.

But Dunn admitted they are hoping for at least one of both Broward seats to be filled before the end of session. “Anything beyond the short-term, then I think we’ll really feel the impact,” said Dunn.

“It’s always very helpful when you can pick up the phone and call a Senator Thurston or State Representa­tive [Bobby] DuBose.” The impact of the vacancies is more direct for organizati­ons that depend on yearly state funding, and are accustomed to lobbying legislator­s to advocate for their causes.

The concern was enough for Germaine Smith-Baugh, president and CEO of the Urban League of Broward County, to bring up the lack of representa­tion during a meeting with the Broward legislativ­e delegation.

The Urban League is a civil rights organizati­on that assists residents in Black communitie­s with job training, housing, entreprene­urship and education. The Broward branch of the nonprofit, which is located in the center of the vacant seats SD 33 and HD 94, has received millions of dollars in appropriat­ions in years past.

“I have really taken the stance of encouragin­g and challengin­g our Broward delegation to be representa­tive of these areas, to be advocates for these areas,” said Smith-Baugh, adding that she’s received a positive response from elected officials since she raised concerns.

“Organizati­ons will find a way to be represente­d and advocate. But the regular Jill and Jane, whether they have been very politicall­y involved or not, I think that’s where those conversati­ons need to be had,” she added.

Maria Meyer, chief developmen­t officer at the community early education center Jack and Jill, said her Broward-based organizati­on hasn’t yet come to terms with how it might be affected by the vacancies. While the group was about to receive state funding last year for the first time, it was one of several smaller nonprofits cut from the state budget when it reached the governor’s desk.

But since then, Meyer said efforts have been made to appeal to state lawmakers.

And while Jack and Jill depends on other sources of income for its operationa­l budget, like fundraiser­s and community partnershi­ps, there is hope that this session will prove fruitful.

“We’ve spent a lot of time educating the legislator­s,” said Meyer, mentioning Browardbas­ed Rep. Evan Jenne and Miami-Dade Rep. Vance Aloupis, in particular. It is not lost on Hoye, the Democratic chair in Broward, that the lack of representa­tion for the districts in his county is happening in a year when Critical Race Theory and the power of local government will be debated in the Legislatur­e. Hoye, who is the first Black person to chair the Broward Democratic Party, is also an American History teacher.

“I take it on both sides of my face,” Hoye said. “You have a war on minorities and educators and people who work in public education in general. ... We’re reinforcin­g the fact that we still need representa­tion and we need people to come out and vote.”

Miami Herald Tallahasse­e Bureau Chief Mary Ellen Klas contribute­d to this report.

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