TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A former Republican congressman and vocal critic of Donald Trump says he wants to become governor in the president's adopted home state of Florida and is running as a Democrat.
David Jolly formally announced his bid Thursday, becoming the latest party convert hoping to wrest back control of what had been the country's premier swing state that in recent years has made a hard shift to the right. Under state law, term-limited Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis can't run for reelection in 2026.
Even as Florida serves as a place for the Trump administration to poach staff and test policies, Jolly says he's confident that issues such as affordability, funding public schools, and strengthening campaign finance and ethics laws will resonate with all voters in 2026. He predicts elections next year will herald nationwide change.
''I actually think Republicans in Tallahassee have gone too far in dividing us. I think we should get politicians out of the classrooms, out of the doctor's offices,'' Jolly said.
''I think enough people in Florida, even some Republicans, now understand that. That the culture wars have gone too far,'' he added.
Jolly was first elected to his Tampa Bay-area congressional seat during a 2014 special election and was reelected for one full term. The attorney and former lobbyist underwent a political evolution that spurred him to leave the Republican Party in 2018 to become an independent and then a registered Democrat. He built a national profile as an anti-Trump political commentator on MSNBC. The relationship with the network ended in April when he formed a political action committee, Jolly said Thursday in a text message.
Jolly said he has considered himself ''part of the Democratic coalition'' for five or so years, and believes in what he sees as the party's ''fundamental values'' — that government can help people, that the economy should be ''fair'' to all, and that immigrants should be celebrated.
''I struggled to exercise those values in the Republican Party,'' Jolly said, continuing: ''The actual registration as a Democrat wasn't a pivot. It was a kind of a formality.''