Rep. Johanna López said she is not running for re-election in Tallahassee but turning her sights on the Orange County Board of Commissioners instead.
López, an Orlando Democrat, was first elected to the House in 2022.
“I feel that if I was successful in representing the voice of my constituents at a school board level, at the state level, I think that I could do the same thing here in Orange County,” she told Florida Politics in an interview ahead of a Tuesday press conference announcing the decision. “I have proven results and I’m always available to listen and to grow with my community. It’s not about Johanna López, it’s about my community.”
The only other competition so far for Orange County’s District 4 is telecommunications professional Brian Jones.
López is endorsing Orange County Democratic Chair Samuel Vilchez Santiago to run for her House District 43 seat.
“He’s the right person to represent District 43,” López said of Vilchez Santiago, her former student she taught in high school. “Samuel has his heart in the right place. He’s committed.”
López said she had always eyed the Orange County Commission but saw the opportunity unfold now so she could avoid challenging an incumbent since District 4 is an open race.
López said she believes she can make more immediate difference locally.
“I receive a lot of calls to my office that are more related to commissioners than to state representatives,” said López, who lives in the Econ neighborhood.
What also appealed to her was the non-partisan role of a county commissioner.
“We have to represent everybody, and we don’t run as a Democrat or Republican. We run as a candidate that has to represent the voice of their constituents, not the voice of the party,” López said. “And that’s that that’s something that really attracted me to the commissioner’s seat.”
A County Commissioner’s current annual salary is $130,262.
If elected, López said she wants to fight for more resources for her district. For instance, she said there is no cultural center in her community. She also said her priorities included improving infrastructure, smart growth, helping small business owners and affordable housing. She also wants to improve the neighborhood by dealing with abandoned buildings.
López made headlines in Central Florida on her rise from becoming Orange County’s Teacher of the Year in 2016 to becoming the first Latina elected to the Orange County School Board in 2018. The Puerto Rico native has shared her story of how she overcame great odds as a single mother of four and a domestic violence survivor to become a public official.
“I strongly believe that most of the challenges that I also faced helped me to understand more of my community,” López said.