Kamala Harris selection settles Orange County Democrats

Val Demings
Lined up dominoes did not fall.

Democratic presidential nominee-to-be Joe Biden’s selection of Kamala Harris as his running mate has sorted out several Orange County election candidates who had been standing in a potential line of dominoes.

First, Florida’s 10th Congressional District Rep. Val Demings won’t be running for Vice President. So the Orange County Democratic Party won’t have to make an emergency selection to run for her congressional seat after next Tuesday’s primary. 

Behind the scenes there’d been quiet politicking going on this summer, with a wide array of potential candidates being pushed or at least suggested by surrogates inside the party.

Discussions have included state Sen. Randolph Bracy, state Reps. Geraldine Thompson, Kamia Brown, and Anna Eskamani, outgoing State Attorney Aramis Ayala, and Tax Collector Scott Randolph. Bracy appeared to be emerging as a favorite, though Thompson’s supporters, who’d lost the CD 10 primary to Demings in 2016, were conceding nothing about the opportunity.

If Bracy had gotten the nod, the Orange County Democratic Party would have had to make an emergency pick for his seat — Thompson would have been a natural assumption — in Senate District 11.

If Thompson had been elevated either to run for Congress or the state Senate, things could have gotten complicated to replace her on the House District 44 ballot. If the dominoes were to fall before Tuesday’s primary, Thompson’s HD 44 Democratic primary challenger Andy Farrell would have won the primary by default. But if the official notices that candidates were withdrawing were delayed so that the party didn’t receive formal word until after Tuesday, party officials could have put someone else in as a replacement nominee for the November general election.

On the Republican side, the winner of the CD 10 Republican primary, Vennia Francois or Willie Montague, now will have to face Demings in November after all. 

Francois and Montague both have been running aggressive campaigns, but defeating two-term congresswoman Demings, someone whose name recognition is off the charts in Central Florida, would be a major upset in CD 10, which covers western Orange County. Any Democrat would be tough in a district where Democrats have a 20-point advantage in voter registration.

In SD 11, Republican Joshua Adams has been running a brave campaign, but Bracy is an iconic individual there. And the district is even more pro-Democrat than CD 10, giving Democrats a 26-point advantage in voter registration. Thompson has represented that district before. And she’s lost there before, but the loss was in a primary.

If anyone is disappointed that dominoes didn’t fall, it might be the winner of the Republican primary in HD 44, where businessman Bruno Portigliatti is looking  favored to win over lawyer Frank Blanco.

This southwestern Orange County district is purple, with Republicans holding a 1-point advantage in voter registration. But in 2018 Thompson defeated an incumbent, Republican Rep. Bobby Olszewski. An unknown Democrat, or one making a late entry, would have likely tipped the advantage clearly to the Republican.

Scott Powers

Scott Powers is an Orlando-based political journalist with 30+ years’ experience, mostly at newspapers such as the Orlando Sentinel and the Columbus Dispatch. He covers local, state and federal politics and space news across much of Central Florida. His career earned numerous journalism awards for stories ranging from the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster to presidential elections to misplaced nuclear waste. He and his wife Connie have three grown children. Besides them, he’s into mystery and suspense books and movies, rock, blues, basketball, baseball, writing unpublished novels, and being amused. Email him at [email protected].


One comment

  • Linda Montalbano

    August 13, 2020 at 7:51 pm

    Racism and sexism good reasons?
    Who has a racial and sexual mind set? The 2020 Democratic primary started with 29 major presidential candidates. All done seven candidates received pledged delegates and Senator Kamala Harris was not one of them. Getting picked to become vice-president because you are black and a woman does not make you qualified to be one step away from being President of the United States. Is the only reason Barack Obama became President was because he is black? Being a woman did not help Hillary Clinton. The Democratic rejected her to be President so for racial and sexual reasons they support her for vice-president?

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