Forward is committed to allowing candidates to formulate positions on all issues without adhering to a party platform or litmus tests. We also are committed to improving the incentives that drive the integrity of elections and governance.
Our Legislative Agenda, then, focuses on bills before the Florida Legislature that may enhance or detract from these incentives. We will advocate for the support of or opposition to such bills. Individual Forwardists may hold a different view which, of course, we will respect.
Tap the links below for analysis and calls to action on specific bills:
House Bill 1205: Initiative Petitions for Constitutional Amendments - OPPOSE
Senate Bill 588: Campaign Communications - SUPPORT
Senate Bill 208: Agreement Among the States to Elect the President by National Popular Vote - OPPOSE
Forward is committed to allowing candidates to formulate positions on all issues without adhering to a party platform or litmus tests. We also are committed to improving the incentives that drive the integrity of elections and governance. Our Legislative Agenda, then, focuses on bills before the Florida Legislature that may enhance or detract from these incentives. We will advocate for the support of or opposition to such bills. Individual Forwardists may hold a different view which, of course, we will respect.
The Florida Forward Party opposes this bill as it reduces voter rights and limits debate on issues important to Floridians by effectively eliminating citizen-sponsored amendments to the Florida Constitution. (We similarly oppose the Senate companion bill SB 7016).
In 2024, our ballots included two citizen-sponsored amendments to the Florida Constitution – one on recreational marijuana use and one on abortion rights. Both received more than 50% support from voters – obviously important issues for many people.
Had HB 1205 been enacted prior to 2024, you likely would not have had the opportunity to vote on either of these ideas. It is challenging to get an amendment on the ballot, as it should be, within reason. This bill creates new obstacles, big and small and mostly cynical. It creates unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles that make compliance nearly impossible and dramatically increases fines for simple mistakes in an effort to intimidate sponsors. Specifically, the bill would:
We encourage you to reach out to your Representative and Senator and ask them to oppose this bill. We also ask you to spread the word via your personal networks, social media communities, letters to the editor and the like. To make this easier, we are providing links to connect with your Representative and Senator and a variety of suggested ways to talk about this bill.
Not left, not right, Forward!
Find Your State Representative
The Florida Legislature is on the path to effectively eliminating citizen-sponsored amendments to the Florida Constitution. In recent years, citizen-sponsored amendments addressed recreational marijuana, abortion rights, homestead property tax exemptions, open primaries, the minimum wage and more. You likely favored some of these and not others, but for the most part these are important issues that the Legislature often addresses without listening to the public.
I reached out to my Representative and Senator and told them I am against HB 1205. Please do the same, and spread the word! We need to fight to hang on to this important right.
Forward is committed to allowing candidates to formulate positions on all issues without adhering to a party platform or litmus tests. We also are committed to improving the incentives that drive the integrity of elections and governance. Our Legislative Agenda, then, focuses on bills before the Florida Legislature that may enhance or detract from these incentives. We will advocate for the support of or opposition to such bills. Individual Forwardists may hold a different view which, of course, we will respect.
The Florida Forward Party opposes SB 208 as this bill would erase the votes of Floridians and replace them with votes from other states. In electing the president, no matter whom we voted for, our votes would be converted to match the national popular vote. Thus, the bill makes voters in the country’s largest population centers – which excludes most Floridians – supreme and strengthens the national Democrat-Republican duopoly.
Think about it: under this bill, if no one in Florida voted in a presidential election, the state would still officially support, through our Electoral College votes, whomever won the national popular vote. Whether we voted or not would not make a difference!
Had this bill been widely adopted in 2016, Hilary Clinton would have been elected President. You may have liked or disliked that outcome, but why she would have won is troubling. The answer is … California. Mrs. Clinton won the California popular vote by more than 4 million votes but lost everywhere else by about 1.5 million votes. Her national popular vote victory was really a California Democrat machine victory.
This math reveals the problems with SB 208. Under this bill, presidential campaigns would focus on large cities and states and their major-party political machines to drive voters to the polls. The incentives would be to pay attention to people in highly-populated areas who support a candidate. Forward Party voters, independent voters, and small community voters would just not matter – during or after elections.
There are better ways to improve the dynamics of the Electoral College. One example would be to have half of Florida’s 30 electoral votes awarded to our popular vote winner and the other half awarded in proportion to the popular vote outcome. Thus, there would be a premium for winning yet more than one presidential candidate could win electoral votes in Florida. The duopoly prefers the “winner-take-all” approach as it allows them to ignore large swathes of the country. This alternative approach – just one of many better options – would create incentives for campaigns to vie for voters throughout Florida.
Not left, not right, Forward!
Find Your State Representative
Given how crazy presidential elections have been, many people just want to forget about them for a while. But the Legislature is considering a bill that would take way our rights in future presidential elections, so we need to push back now.
Senate Bill 208 would require that all 30 of Florida’s Electoral College votes be given to whomever wins the national popular vote, not to the person we Floridians want to elect. Let Vermont or Illinois or California do what they want, but I want my vote to count.
I reached out to my state Representative and Senator told them I am against SB 208. Please do the same. And spread the word! We deserve our own voice in electing presidents.
Forward is committed to allowing candidates to formulate positions on all issues without adhering to a party platform or litmus tests. We also are committed to improving the incentives that drive the integrity of elections and governance. Our Legislative Agenda, then, focuses on bills before the Florida Legislature that may enhance or detract from these incentives. We will advocate for the support of or opposition to such bills. Individual Forwardists may hold a different view which, of course, we will respect.
The Florida Forward Party supports bill SJR 802, which would result in a proposed amendment to the Florida Constitution to set term limits for county commissioners and school board members. If adopted by the Legislature, the proposed amendment would be submitted to voters for approval or rejection during the November 2026 general election.
Public service, including roles on county commissions and school boards, is to be commended. Membership experience and continuity on such entities can enhance their functioning and the services they perform. Still, term limits facilitate the injection of new voices and fresh ideas. These, in turn, help school boards and county commissions remain sensitive to evolving community needs and perspectives. Term limits also prevent “lifers” from using the power of incumbency to monopolize seats. The proposed limits of eight consecutive years of service strike a reasonable balance.
We benefit from term limits in many areas of government. The SJB 802 proposed term limits for school boards exist in statute; this bill simply codifies them in the Florida Constitution, but the limits for county commissions would be new. We believe passage of this bill would enhance the health of our local governance.
Not left, not right, Forward!
Find Your State Representative
Term limits are not perfect, but in general they work. We get new choices more frequently. SJR 802 will help set 8-year term limits for school boards and county commissions. That feels like a good balance to me.
I reached out to my Representative and Senator told them I am for SJB 802. Please do the same. And spread the word! Better incentives in government will give us better government.
Forward is committed to allowing candidates to formulate positions on all issues without adhering to a party platform or litmus tests. We also are committed to improving the incentives that drive the integrity of elections and governance. Our Legislative Agenda, then, focuses on bills before the Florida Legislature that may enhance or detract from these incentives. We will advocate for the support of or opposition to such bills. Individual Forwardists may hold a different view which, of course, we will respect.
The Florida Forward Party supports SB 588, which will discourage politicians and their teams from sending us unwanted texts and calls once we have told them to stop. Under the bill, candidates or campaigns that ignore “opt outs” pay expenses a person incurs to force the offenders to stop.
The Forward Party is all for voter outreach in many forms – we use text and email messaging regularly. Still, bombarding people with unwanted “junk” texts and calls repels many people from what should be healthy political dialog. Once someone opts out, that must be respected. We need more tools – like this bill – to ensure our reasonable preferences are adhered to.
Not left, not right, Forward!
Find Your State Representative
We all know how irritating it is to get dozens (hundreds?) of texts from politicians asking for money. The good news is that the Legislature is considering a bill that might make things a little better.
Senate Bill 588 would subject candidates and campaigns that ignore an “opt out” request to pay legal fees when they get sued to stop. If I had my druthers, it would cost them more than that, but this is a good start.
I reached out to my state Representative and Senator told them I am for SB 588. Please do the same. And spread the word!
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