On Tuesday, voters will choose between Democratic Delray Beach Commissioner Rob Long and Republican lobbyist Maria Zack for the open seat representing House District 90.
Independent candidate Karen Yeh, a local businesswoman, is also on the ballot, but she’s raised only a modest sum and is widely viewed as a long shot.
The Special Election in HD 90 will decide who finishes late Democratic Rep. Joe Casello’s term.
Long, a civil engineer, is running on his record in local government and environmental work. He has emphasized public safety, infrastructure, redevelopment and water quality as his primary issues, highlighting his past service on the Palm Beach Soil & Water Conservation District and his role on the Palm Beach Transportation Planning Agency Board.
He’s also significantly outraised his opponents. Through Dec. 4, Long and his political committee reported close to $152,000 raised and roughly $91,000 on hand, drawing support from labor groups, environmental and LGBTQ organizations, police and firefighter unions, trial lawyers and business interests like Associated Industries of Florida and the Florida Association of Realtors.
Long’s backers now include every Democratic legislator from Palm Beach County and several members of Congress. At one point, the list also included Republican businessman Bill Reicherter, whom Zack narrowly defeated in the GOP Primary in late September.
Reicherter endorsed Long in early October after telling the South Florida Sun-Sentinel that Zack is a “single-issue conspiracy theorist.” But in a late-breaking press release published last week, Zack’s campaign apparently reversed his position, urging voters to back her instead and criticizing Long’s record on public safety and city priorities.
Zack, a longtime lobbyist and founder of The Strollo Group, has leaned into a hard-right platform centered on eliminating property taxes, “stopping the harm of illegal immigration,” and expanding school choice. She also promises to support law enforcement.
Her campaign materials showcase photos with national Republican figures and endorsements from former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich and the anti-abortion group Florida Right to Life.
She also brings heavy baggage. Zack’s nonprofit, Nations in Action, has promoted debunked claims that satellites over Italy helped hack U.S. voting machines in 2020, a QAnon-linked theory known as “ItalyGate.”
Zack has said she “can’t tell” who really won that election, but assumes it was Donald Trump.
Her campaign finance reporting has also drawn scrutiny. Initial filings showed tens of thousands of dollars in spending that wasn’t backed by reported contributions or loans, an apparent violation of state law barring campaigns from operating in the red.
Zack later amended her reports to add nearly $32,000 in self-loans and called the discrepancy a bookkeeping mistake.
Zack has raised about $82,000 directly, more than 40% of which came from her bank account, with the rest from out-of-state donors and high-profile supporters like former Trump spouse Marla Maples.
Yeh, meanwhile, raised $1,900, of which all but $700 went to a qualifying fee.
HD 90 is a Democratic-leaning district in Palm Beach County that spans Boynton Beach, Delray Beach, Golf, Gulf Stream, Briny Breezes and parts of Highland Beach, Manalapan and Ocean Ridge.