Florida’s abortion rights groups are taking stock after a narrow loss in last week’s ballot referendum but say the fight to overturn the state’s six-week abortion ban isn’t over. Florida became the first state to reject an abortion rights amendment since Roe v.
Donald Trump has improved his electoral vote share while the GOP has control of both Senate seats and the governor's office.
The 2021 law included requiring voters to request mail-in ballots each election cycle, rather than every four years as was previously allowed.
Two freshly reelected representatives from Florida were picked for Trump's cabinet. Here's who is representing Florida in the House, what happens next.
Floridians will likely know who their next U.S. senator will be by the beginning of January, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis announced on Monday. With Florida's senior Sen. Marco Rubio tapped to be President-elect Donald Trump's secretary of state,
Gov. Ron DeSantis, just returned from a trade mission in Italy, said he likely won’t make a decision until early January. Other candidates are also interested, though President-Elect Donald
Frank Artiles was found guilty on three election-related counts after running a no-party spoiler candidate in a 2020 Florida Senate race.
Democrats hoped the state was "in play," but Tuesday's results left them with more questions than answers after another crushing general election defeat.
The Florida Senate race was a highlight on the 2024 ballot, and Amendment 4 on abortion rights has drawn national attention.
DeSantis and opponents to Amendment 4 argued the ballot measure's authors are "lying" to Floridians, and words used, like "health care provider" and "viability" leave too much room for "outsiders" and unqualified practitioners to come to Florida and perform unsafe procedures.
While the nation is anxiously waiting to see who will be the next president, Florida is watching six constitutional amendments.