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With Rep. Alexander's exit, Florida House Democrats could choose a new incoming leader next week

Rep. Ramon Alexander, D-Tallahassee, asks a question concerning a concealed weapons bill during a criminal justice subcommittee meeting, Wednesday, March 15, 2017, in Tallahassee, Fla. (AP Photo/Steve Cannon)
Steve Cannon
/
AP
Rep. Ramon Alexander, D-Tallahassee, asks a question during a criminal justice subcommittee meeting on March 15, 2017, in Tallahassee, FL.

Florida House Democrats are poised to select a new incoming leader on Tuesday, after a would-be leader dropped his re-election bid amid a controversy involving sexual harassment allegations.

House Democrats will meet to make their selection when lawmakers are at the Capitol for a special legislative session on property insurance.

As of Wednesday, Rep. Fentrice Driskell, D-Tampa, was the only candidate for the leadership post, according to a spokesman for the House Democrats. Under Democratic caucus rules, potential candidates must submit letters of intent to the House clerk.

“No one else has sent that message in, so we have seen no other people file,” House Minority Office spokesman Jackson Peel said.

Driskell, an attorney who was first elected to the House in 2018, was slated to become leader of the Democratic caucus after the 2024 elections. But that timeframe could move up because of the announcement last week by Rep. Ramon Alexander, D-Tallahassee, that he would not seek re-election to his House seat in November.

Alexander had been slated to succeed outgoing Leader Evan Jenne, a Dania Beach Democrat who faces term limits, after the November elections. But Alexander will leave the Legislature after a report by the Tallahassee Democrat newspaper detailed accusations against him by a former employee of Florida A&M University.

The complaints, filed with the Florida Commission on Human Relations by Michael Johnson, Jr., included allegations that Alexander groped him and sent sexually explicit text messages.

Alexander contended that the relationship with Johnson was consensual, which Johnson denied.

If Driskell is chosen to succeed Jenne for a two-year term, she would become the first Black woman to hold the position. She also will lead a Democratic caucus that is badly outnumbered by Republicans, who have chosen Rep. Paul Renner, R-Palm Coast, to become House speaker this fall.

Driskell represents Hillsborough County’s House District 63 and is widely viewed as a rising star in Democratic politics. She will run this year in House District 67 because of boundary changes that resulted from the once-a-decade reapportionment process.

Driskell announced Tuesday that she qualified by petition to run in District 67.

Driskell is the third House Democrat, after Alexander and Rep. Ben Diamond, D-St. Petersburg, to be considered as a successor to Jenne.

Diamond initially was in line to become leader in November before pivoting to run for Congress instead of seeking another term in the state House. Diamond last week suspended his campaign for a Tampa Bay-area congressional seat.

Alexander’s district includes Gadsden County and part of Leon County. After his announcement, five Democratic candidates have jumped into the District 8 race: Hubert Ross Brown, Trish Brown, Gallop Franklin, Delaitre Hollinger, and Marie Rattigan.