County constitutional officer | |
---|---|
Style | The Honorable |
Type | Plural executive |
Status | CEO/Administrator |
Member of | County government |
Reports to | County commission |
Seat | County seat |
Nominator | Direct election |
Appointer | Governor of Florida [a] |
Term length | 4 years; renewable |
Constituting instrument | Florida Constitution |
Formation | 1885 |
Superseded by | State constitutional officer |
![]() |
---|
In the U.S. state of Florida, county constitutional officers are independently elected officials in each county who lead departments and perform specific functions of the county's government. [1] The Florida Constitution establishes five county constitutional officers: the sheriff, tax collector, property appraiser, supervisor of elections, and clerk of the circuit court. [2] [3] Elected state attorneys, public defenders, county commissioners, school board members, and the superintendents of schools may also be considered "constitutional officers". [4] [5] [6] In the event of the death, resignation, or removal from office of a county constitutional officer, the Governor of Florida is empowered to appoint a successor to fill the vacancy until the next regularly scheduled election. [7] [8]
Under Florida law, each county has "state" officers who are elected locally, and their salaries and office expenses are paid locally. [9] Constitutional officers establish the budgets for their offices, independent of the operating budget set by the Board of County Commissioners. Although they operate independently, constitutional officers work in cooperation with the BCC in order to serve the public efficiently and cost-effectively. [5] They are elected in partisan elections every four years, in concurrence with presidential elections and are not subject to term limits. [10] [11] The state constitution allows for counties to hold a referendum to abolish a constitutional officer in their county, with the exception of the position of clerk of court. [12] [13] Counties may also hold a referendum to establish their county's constitutional officers as non-partisan roles. [14] [15] While several counties have made small changes (for instance a non-partisan supervisor of elections in Leon or an independent comptroller in Orange), only one county, Miami-Dade, has made significant alterations, which were reverted in 2025. [16] [17]
The mayor of Jacksonville is a county constitutional officer, as per the Jacksonville Consolidation. [18] Despite being independently elected county officials, the mayor of Miami-Dade County, mayor of Orange County, and Volusia County chair are not county constitutional officers. [19] [20] [21]
The Florida Constitution establishes five county constitutional officers: [22]
List duties and responsibilities of Florida county constitutional officers: [24]
County constitutional officers are often members of their local political party executive committee. [25] County parties vote to endorse city, county, state, and congressional officials in primary elections on behalf of the state parties, which can lead to controversy over party officials voting to endorse themselves and using party funds to aid their campaigns. [26] [27] [28] In each county in Florida, the Republican and the Democratic parties maintain a state committeeman and state committeewoman, independently elected countywide every four years. [29] They are not county constitutional officers. [30]
In recent years, many corporations, including Florida Power & Light, have become involved in county constitutional officer elections. [31] [32] [33] Real estate development companies have also been involved in county constitutional officer elections, specifically county commission and property appraiser races. [34] [35] [36]
During the Jim Crow era, local governments in Florida were dominated by the Democratic Party. Aided by members of the Ku Klux Klan, they stripped citizens of their ability to choose their representatives and successfully established courthouse cliques. [37] Widespread electoral fraud, aided by county-level politicians, and acts of political violence, such as the Jackson County War, helped secure Democratic control of the "Solid South" for decades. [38] [39] [40]