Florida Rep. Anthony Sabatini removed from House panel over unexcused absences

Under House rules, committee members are allowed one unexcused absence on any given committee.

Florida Rep. Anthony Sabatini removed from House panel over unexcused absences
PHOTO VIA ANTHONY SABATINI/TWITTER
The Florida House has removed Rep. Anthony Sabatini from a House panel for unexcused absences during the upcoming Session’s interim meetings.

Sabatini, a Howey-in-the-Hills Republican who frequently clashes with House Republican leadership, was marked absent at two Children, Families and Seniors Subcommittee meetings this year without being excused, once on Oct. 21 and once on Dec. 1.

Under House rules, committee members are allowed one unexcused absence on any given committee. Taking two unexcused absences results in a member’s automatic removal.

Sabatini requested an excused absence from Children, Families and Seniors Subcommittee Chair Thad Altman the day before his Oct. 21 absence. However, Sabatini did not respond to Altman’s request for an explanation. Sabatini gave no notice ahead of his Dec. 1 absence.

Rules Committee Chair Paul Renner, a Palm Coast Republican and the House Speaker-designate, sent Sabatini a memo on Dec. 3 notifying him of his removal.

“It should also be noted that of your 21 committee meetings over the six-week interim, you have been absent for thirteen, nine of which have been excused,” Renner added. “Of the five meetings of the Children, Families & Seniors Subcommittee, you have only attended one meeting.”

Altman stressed the House applies the automatic removal rule equally.

“All the committees are important,” Altman told Florida Politics. “There’s real significant issues that are facing our committees.”

House Rules also allow House Speaker Chris Sprowls to appoint a member to fill an automatic vacancy.

Sabatini, who is running in the Republican Primary to challenge Democratic U.S. Rep. Stephanie Murphy‘s re-election, has sparred with Sprowls in recent months, calling him a “RINO” — a “Republican in Name Only.” Despite being in his second term in the House and being a member of the majority, Sabatini did not receive any leadership roles within his assigned committees.

He’s also had attendance problems in recent weeks.

Sabatini skipped the first floor session during last month’s Special Session for a D.C. fundraiser. He was in the State Capitol the following day, but was improperly marked present during one quorum call.

A conservative Super PAC ran ads that week criticizing the Representative for his truancy.

Sabatini did not immediately return Florida Politics’ request for comment.

He remains a member of five committees and subcommittees: the Ways and Means Committee, the Government Operations Subcommittee, the Secondary Education and Career Development Subcommittee, the State Administration and Technology Appropriations Subcommittee, and the Joint Administrative Procedures Committee.

This article first appeared at Florida Politics.
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