Sat. Feb 1st, 2025

The Democratic National Convention is meeting in Chicago through Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024. (Shaun Griswold/Source New Mexico)

The Democratic National Committee will gather in Maryland on Saturday to select their new party chair, and the 15 members from Florida are split about who that candidate should be.

Seven members, including Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried and South Florida state Sen. Shevrin Jones, are backing Ken Martin of Minnesota, a vice chair of the DNC who also serves as the chairman of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor (DFL) Party.

Seven other members, including recently elected FDP Vice Chair Daniel Henry and Karla Hernández-Mats, the party’s candidate for lieutenant governor in the 2022 election, are backing Ben Wikler, the Democratic Party Chairman of Wisconsin.

Sean Shaw, a former state representative from Hillsborough County and the party’s attorney general candidate in 2018, is backing former Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley for the role.

“The future of the Democratic Party starts with investing in the South,” Fried said in a written statement.

“As Florida’s population changes, our political significance will evolve and with more Electoral College votes on the horizon, now is the time to start investing and organizing in our people. We need a new, Democratic strategy for the South that harnesses the collective power of our constituencies. A message that works in the South, will work across the country and we need our new Chair to understand that — and act on it.”

Sitting DNC Chair Jamie Harrison, who was criticized for strongly backing Joe Biden’s effort to stay in the 2024 election before departing last July, is stepping down from the role after a four-year stint. In a recent interview, Harrison doubled down on his beliefs, saying that the Democrats should have fully supported Biden in the presidential race despite his abysmal debate performance last June, which convinced enough high-ranking Democrats that he needed to drop his bid for re-election.

Biden did so in July and immediately endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris, who became the de facto candidate before she was officially nominated and selected to be the party’s standard bearer during the Democratic National Convention last August.

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