Republicans are concerned about 2 upcoming special elections in Florida

Samori Toure

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To replace the seats of Mike Walsh and Matt Gaetz.


 

At30wecashout

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GOOD AND fukk EM! There is a local progressive thats going to be running for congress so i'm hitting up her first "campaign stop" and I hope more come out of the woodwork, but in the meantime, Republicans need to be beat to fukking shyt in every election from here on out. If seats flip enough, they can put pressure on Trump and get the wheels turning.

Things are going to get worse, folks. Recession, food shortages, rising costs, and in the midst of it failing social services. Since this country is retarded and loves Republicans, this won't push them into the dustbin of history, but if Dems get a solid majority before they can be perma-locked via gerrymandering and voter suppression, they need to run the score up on Trumps ass.
 

bnew

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abcnews.go.com



Republicans raise concerns about Florida special election as candidates vie to replace Mike Waltz​


ABC News

6–7 minutes



Some Republicans are raising concerns ahead of a key special election in Florida on Tuesday in what appeared to be a safe U.S. House district for the party as Republican state Sen. Randy Fine vies for the chance to take the seat vacated by former Rep. Mike Waltz.

The special election in Florida's 6th Congressional District, which is on the state's eastern coast and includes the city of Daytona Beach, is being held on Tuesday, April 1, to fill the vacancy created by Waltz when he resigned to become President Donald Trump's national security adviser.

Some concerns have been raised with Fine's own party over his fundraising and campaigning as he has lagged behind Democratic candidate Josh Weil, according to filings with the Federal Election Commission.

Fine has raised or received about $987,000 from late November 2024 through mid-March, while Weil has raised or received over $9 million from Oct. 1, 2024, through mid-March. Fine also donated $600,000 to himself last week, according to other FEC filings.

(Weil's campaign has spent over $8 million of its money, per the filings. Fine's campaign also spent much of its money before his own donations last week.)

randy-fine-ap-jt-250326_1743011136989_hpMain.jpg


In this May 18, 2021, file photo, Rep. Randy Fine answers questions from the media in Tallahassee, Fla.

Steve Cannon/AP, FILE

Another special election, in the state's 1st District, will also occur on April 1 to fill the vacancy left by former Rep. Matt Gaetz when he resigned from Congress late last year.

While Republicans are favored to win both races, given that the districts were ruby-red in 2024, some have speculated that the margin between the Republican and Democratic candidates could be tighter than anticipated, given Trump's voter disapproval ratings and Democrats' success in some recent legislative district elections.

Those voicing concerns about the 6th District race include Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who told reporters on Tuesday, "Regardless of the outcome in that, it's going to be a way underperformance from when I won that district by in '22 [as a candidate for governor] and what President Trump won in November."

"They're going to try to lay that at the feet of President Trump," DeSantis added. "That is not a reflection of President Trump. It's a reflection of the specific candidate running in that race. And President Trump, if he were on the ballot in this special election, he would win by 30 points, no question."

PHOTO: Aerial View of Beach Front in Daytona Beach, Florida


Aerial shot of Daytona Beach, Florida

STOCK IMAGE/Getty Images

DeSantis did say that he still expects a Republican candidate will be successful in the district. Still, DeSantis and Fine have clashed before, including when Fine switched his endorsement in the 2024 presidential primaries from DeSantis to Trump.

Steve Bannon, a former Trump adviser, said on Monday on his podcast show that "Trump won that district by 30 points in November. ... We have a candidate that I don't think is winning. That's an issue."

ABC News reached out to Fine's campaign for comment about the Republican concerns.

josh-weil-gty-jt-250326_1743011334322_hpEmbed_4x3.jpg


Democrat Josh Weil speaks during a League of Women Voters of Volusia County candidates forum in Daytona Beach, Fla., on March 19, 2025.

Mark Harper/Daytona Beach News-Journal via USA Today Network via Imagn Images

Fine, on social media, has continued to express optimism, writing on X on Tuesday night, "As I sit in my [state] Senate office for the last time, I want to thank the voters who have elected me seven times to represent them in Tallahassee. It's been a profound honor, and I can't wait to do it again."

The National Republican Congressional Committee, the campaign arm of House Republicans, has not invested in the race but indicated it is not worried about a loss.

"Randy Fine is going to be a member of Congress. Everything else is just noise," Mike Marinella, a spokesman for the NRCC, told ABC News.

Fine, who was elected to the Florida state Senate in 2024, previously served as a state House representative and worked beforehand as a casino executive. In the state legislature, Fine promoted bills on school choice, immigration, combating antisemitism and other issues.

He also sponsored a high-profile measure in 2022 that would eliminate some special districts in Florida, including one that encompasses Walt Disney World, amid a fight between the Florida government and The Walt Disney Company. (ABC News is owned by The Walt Disney Company, which also owns Walt Disney World.) A settlement was reached in March 2024.

The Florida special elections could affect the balance of power in the House of Representatives. As of Wednesday, less than a week out to the special election, Republicans have a razor-thin majority in the U.S. House, with 218 seats to Democrats' 213 seats. (Four seats, including the two Florida seats, are vacant.)

Fine does have some momentum -- for instance, he does have Trump's strong endorsement.

president-trump-02-gty-jef-250326_1742989977102_hpEmbed_2_3x2.jpg


President Donald Trump meets with US Ambassadors in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on March 25, 2025.

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

Trump wrote in late March on his social media platform Truth Social, "A highly successful, Harvard educated businessman, and greatly respected State Legislator, Randy has been a tremendous Voice for MAGA." The president also encouraged Republicans to vote early. The early voting period began on March 22.

Fine also has recent history pointing in favor of Republicans holding on to the district.

In the U.S. House general election in this district in 2024, Waltz received 67% of the vote, while Democratic candidate James Stockton received 33% of the vote. In this district in the presidential race, meanwhile, Trump received about 65% of the vote, while Vice President Kamala Harris received about 35% of the vote.

Both Democrats and Republicans have said special elections are not necessarily comparable to regular elections, given that voter turnout can be much lower during the special elections.

ABC News' Lauren Peller and Soo Rin Kim contributed to this report.
 

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nbcmiami.com



DOGE cuts are testing some conservative voters' faith in special election for Matt Gaetz's old seat​


Associated Press

7–9 minutes



As the Trump administration forges ahead with its dramatic reshaping of the federal government, voters in a northwest Florida congressional district that's home to thousands of veterans will be among the first to put the president's agenda to an electoral test.

The state's Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, a Republican endorsed by President Donald Trump, is widely expected to win the special election in Florida's 1st Congressional District on April 1 and help pad Republicans' narrow majority in the U.S. House of Representatives. The seat became vacant with the resignation of former Rep. Matt Gaetz in a heavily Republican district.

In a longshot bid, Democrat Gay Valimont is seeking to hinge the race on the Department of Government Efficiency Service's push to fire federal workers and dismantle federal agencies. A win for her would defy decades of political convention and could send loud signals about how the president's aggressive second term in the White House is playing with voters across the political spectrum.

Florida's 1st Congressional District stretches across the state's western Panhandle region and is known for its sugar-sand beaches and sprawling military installations — including the country's largest Air Force base. The district is home to more veterans than any other congressional district in the country and reelected Gaetz to a fifth term in 2024 by a more than 30-point margin over Valimont.

But as Trump’s executive orders and the slash-and-burn tactics of billionaire Elon Musk ’s DOGE take aim at federal agencies that serve the region’s veterans, the faith of some of the district’s conservative voters is being tested.

The seat opened up after Trump nominated Gaetz for attorney general. The conservative withdrew from consideration amid an investigation into alleged sexual misconduct, which he has denied.

A district that's home to veterans braces for VA cuts​


Local​










With more than 89,000 veterans, the 1st District is home to thousands of families who in various ways depend on the federal government, which gives veterans preferential treatment in hiring. According to a state analysis, defense spending accounts for nearly a quarter of northwest Florida’s economy.

A Navy ship docked at a Pensacola port towers over the city’s historic downtown. Local roads bear names like Commander Street and Petty Officers’ Way.

Many service members return to the area to raise families or retire, and they seek care at the Pensacola VA clinic, which staffers say is stretched beyond its capacity.

Tim Chandler, who served 16 years in the Marine Corps, volunteers at the clinic every week, helping his fellow veterans navigate a complicated healthcare system. He applauds the VA's providers, but sees the parking lot jam-packed with cars and hears the stories of patients pushed to their breaking point.

“We need an emergency room," Chandler said. "We need a bigger building. We need incentives for more doctors.”

As DOGE continues its push in the name of rooting out waste, fraud and abuse, federal officials have said they plan to cut more than 80,000 jobs across the Department of Veterans Affairs, an agency long criticized for bureaucratic inefficiency and lengthy wait times.

Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins has said the layoffs won't impact veterans’ health care or benefits. The VA, in a statement, said “mission-critical positions” would be exempt and medical staff and claims processors would not be affected.

Heather Lindsay, a Republican and the mayor of Milton, Florida, in neighboring Santa Rosa County, called the cuts “disastrous,” saying they’re a threat to services that veterans like her brother rely on.

“We have a demonstrated need in this area. And yet they’re going to cut VA services,” Lindsay said in an interview.

Jason Boatwright, a former staffer for Gaetz, said Patronis should be defending the Pensacola VA.

“He needs to stand up and say: ‘You want to make cuts? That’s fine. But don’t do it here. We can’t afford it here,'” Boatwright said.

Lindsay said she doesn't understand “why more questions haven't been asked” by Republican leaders like Patronis.

“It concerns me for our future as a nation,” she said.

A Democrat's longshot bid​


Valimont, who previously led the Florida chapter of gun control group Moms Demand Action, has made the chaos unleashed by the Trump administration at federal agencies a centerpiece of her campaign.

“Imagine if Matt Gaetz’s seat saves the Department of Education,” she told about 150 people at a Pensacola town hall she hosted earlier this month. “We have a shot to make this right. Because y’all, we may save the entire United States with this seat.”

The Pensacola Democrat has acknowledged that her party may not be able to “fix” all that the Trump administration has done — but said she can be a backstop to “not do anything worse.”

Patronis, a former state lawmaker who has served as Florida's chief financial officer since 2017, has campaigned as a staunch ally of the president.

In an interview, Patronis said he would challenge Trump if he thought the president's actions were harming northwest Florida — but he dismissed concerns that DOGE's efforts to exert control over congressionally authorized programs are illegal.

“Everything that President Trump has rolled out so far, we’ve been lockstep on,” Patronis said. “If Congress right now had a problem with what the president’s doing, you would see Congress act.”

Trump’s endorsement of Patronis in November appeared to head off a more robust Republican primary. The GOP nominee is expected to win easily, even though he doesn't live in the district — a fact that rankles some local Republicans, though residency isn't required by the Constitution.

Lindsay, the Milton mayor, worries her party's electoral dominance is breeding complacency — among candidates and voters.

“There are a lot of people who think it’s probably not even worth their time,” she said. “Because that leader’s not going to listen to them, because they’re only listening to President Trump and Elon Musk.”

Even in a part of the state where some are afraid to “come out” as Democrats, Valimont hopes to win over conservatives by pounding the all-out effort to slash federal agencies, and tying Patronis to Florida's property insurance crisis. His office helps regulate insurance in the state, which has some of the highest rates in the country.

Valimont's campaign has raised more than $6 million, and party officials say volunteers from as far away as Alaska and Hawaii have come to help get out the vote.

Escambia County Democratic Party Chair Derrick Scott said he thought Valimont has a chance if she can appeal to conservatives "who are willing to take the secret to their grave that they voted for a Democrat this one time.”

For many local Republicans, losing the 1st District seat is unthinkable. Doug Stauffer, chair of the Okaloosa County GOP, says the question isn’t whether his party will win but by how much.

“If we don’t win decisively,” Stauffer said, “then we have failed.”
 

Json

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Even in a part of the state where some are afraid to “come out” as Democrats
Crazy. It’s like this is Mississippi too.

At least voting for a Dem as a white person would get you shunned out of the community
 

DonB90

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One is in the panhandle the other in north central Florida

The Republicans will be aight, the crackas in those areas would vote for Ted Bundy as long as he had an R by his name
 
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