Fresh off posting a 19-point win in the Governorโs race and taking supermajorities in both chambers of the Legislature, the Republican Party of Florida raised $10.3 million from after the election through the end of the year, according to state campaign finance reports. Thatโs nearly 60 times what the Florida Democratic Party raised โ $171,000 โ in the same period.
The FDP haul is also far short of the $1.3 million it took in after the 2018 Midterm Election cycle.
FDP Chairman Manny Diaz resigned this week following the dismal election performance. He replaced Terrie Rizzo after the 2020 election, which saw former President Donald Trump win Florida by 3 points, with major inroads in Miami-Dade County.
Diaz, a former Miami Mayor, helped the party โ which faced steep debts and failed to pay health care premiums for workers as Rizzo left โ raise money. But he didnโt arrest the partyโs slide among voters in Miami-Dade as DeSantis won the county. The FDP is expected to meet later this month to elect Diazโ successor.
In a lengthy letter announcing his resignation, Diaz pointed to chronic issues that have plagued Democratic campaigns in Florida for decades: lack of engagement with voters, targeting voters only during elections and lack of resources.
โDuring my tenure I hoped to address these issues, and build a united party without silos, focused exclusively on our purpose โ to elect Democrats,โ Diaz stated.
โInstead, I found obstacles to securing the resources and a long-standing, systemic and deeply entrenched culture resistant to change; one where individual agendas are more important than team; where self-interest dominates and bureaucracies focus on self-preservation.โ
Meanwhile, the RPOF used its largesse to help pay for Gov. Ron DeSantisโ inauguration. It also returned $8.5 million to DeSantisโ political committee. The money could be used for a 2024 presidential campaign. DeSantis is seen as a potential contender for the GOP nomination, despite Trumpโs entry into the contest shortly after the Midterms, but he hasnโt said whether heโll get into the race.
This article was first published at Florida Politics.
This article appears in Jan 5-11, 2023.

