Longtime lobbyist Maria Zack just earned her spot on the Dec. 9 Special Election ballot that will determine who takes the open House District 90 seat to represent a coastal portion of Palm Beach County through 2026.
With all 107 precincts reporting, a complete tally of early votes and a partial count of mail-in ballots, Zack had 53% of the vote to defeat businessman Bill Reicherter in a head-to-head Republican Primary, according to unofficial numbers from the Supervisor of Elections website.
Zack won by a margin of 159 votes.
She now advances to the race’s General Election, where she faces Delray Beach Commissioner Rob Long, a Democrat, and no-party candidate Karen Yeh.
Just 8.6% of HD 90’s 31,208 voters cast ballots.
Unlike some Primary contests, where the difference between candidates is a matter of degrees, there were many factors by which voters could differentiate Tuesday’s two competitors, from their ideological inclinations to one’s affinity for conspiracy theories.
Reicherter, a former member of the Palm Beach County Zoning Board, is no stranger to seeking public office, having fallen short against late state Rep. Joe Casello for the HD 90 seat last year.
Zack also enjoyed political experience in the race, having worked for decades on campaigns and as a government relations specialist in Georgiabefore launching a software company in the Sunshine State.
Locally and electorally, Reicherter, a 56-year-old signage company executive and Realtor, may have entered Election Day as the better-known commodity of the two among residents. He runs a local nonprofit, the Reicherter-Tozzi Foundation, which assists underserved communities, and served on numerous local nonprofit Boards, including those of ChildNet, Junior Achievement of South Florida and the YMCA of Broward County — where state records show he’s long lived in a homesteaded property outside HD 90’s bounds.
Lobbyist and political operative Maria Zack has supported high-profile presidential campaigns. She’s also pushed unfounded pandemic and election conspiracies. Image via Maria Zack.
It isn’t illegal for candidates to run in a district where they don’t live, but they must have moved into the district by the time they take office. And it appears Reicherter, a Coral Springs resident, has contemplated a move for some time; he challenged Casello last year, losing by 12 percentage points. In 2022, he ran unsuccessfully against Boca Raton Democratic state Sen. Tina Scott Polsky.
Before switching to the HD 90 contest this year, he was briefly in the crowded 2026 race for Governor.
Zack, 61, has worked in politics since the early 1980s in various capacities, including as President of the Strollo Group, whose clients have included Johnson & Johnson, AT&T, Pfizer and the Greater Atlanta Homebuilders Association, among others.
In her campaign for HD 90, she leaned on her political bona fides, which include her leadership of Atlanta-based Stand for Principle PAC, a political committee that raised and spent nearly $420,000 through 2017 backing U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz’s failed presidential bid.
Her campaign website features pictures of her rubbing elbows with numerous GOP notables, from U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee and embattled border czar Tom Homan to late presidential candidate Herman Cain and former New York City Mayor Rudy Guiliani, who this week settled a $1.3 billion defamation lawsuit with voting systems company Dominion over his claim that its machines were rigged to flip votes from Trump to Joe Biden in 2020.
Bill Reicherter has long been active in the South Florida community, particularly through nonprofit work. Image via Bill Reicherter campaign.
Zack, too, is a noted 2020 election skeptic who has worked to spread several other unverified claims through her Lantana-based nonprofit, Nations in Action. Among other things, the organization purported to have uncovered evidence of “shadow government” conspiracies to “depopulate countries through a COVID attack” and fix the 2020 election by beaming software hacks from satellites over Italy into voting machines.
Despite her objections to the label, which she described to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel as “very ridiculous and very unprofessional,” Zack has remained unconvinced Biden legitimately won in 2020, telling the outlet she “can’t tell” who won but still assumes it was Trump.
She also insisted that eliminating property taxes in Florida — a proposal backed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, CFO Blaise Ingoglia and many GOP lawmakers — would lower the rate of teen pregnancies, since parents would have more money and could spend additional time at home.
Reicherter’s comments on hot-button issues, meanwhile, indicated he’d bring a moderate but conservative voice from South Florida to Tallahassee.
In an interview with the Sun-Sentinel, which later endorsed him, he cautioned against eliminating property taxes, reasoning they’d leave localities without a sufficient alternative to pay for necessary services.
He also called DeSantis’ soon-to-be-shuttered Alligator Alcatraz immigrant detention an ill-conceived “political stunt” and supported keeping Florida’s mandate to vaccinate children against diseases like polio and measles, but opposed requiring residents to take “new vaccines,” like those for COVID.
Reicherter’s campaign sitesaid that, if elected, he would support legislation providing aid to seniors and helping more skilled worker training, stand up for local home rule, protect the environment and local resiliency and back the creation of an “insurance fraud task force.”
Zack promised, if she won, to support ridding Florida of property taxes, purging the state of undocumented immigrants and empowering parents in education.
Both vowed to strengthen the local economy, support veterans and first responders and help to curb the burden of property taxes, albeit in different ways.
A detailed map of House District 90 in Palm Beach County. Image via Florida House.
Through Sept. 25, Reicherter reported raising about $5,300 in outside contributions while lending his campaign $104,000, the unspent portion of which is refundable.
By Thursday, less than a week before Election Day, he’d spent close to $32,000.
Reicherter’s other endorsers included Palm Beach County Commissioner Marci Woodward, Delray Beach Mayor Tom Carney, Boynton Beach Commissioner Thomas Turkin, former Palm Beach City Commissioner Mack McCray and BLU-PAC of Boca Raton.
Zack raised close to $15,300, about 45% of which was self-given. Notable donors included serial entrepreneur Sharon Amezcua and Marla Maples, a former wife of Trump who successfully urged state lawmakers to pass legislation this year banning weather modification activities in Florida.
Her political committee, Friends of Maria Zack, was formed in August but reported no campaign finance activity by the most recent deadline.
Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, whom Zack worked for in Atlanta during the 2012 presidential race, endorsed Zack for HD 90, as did anti-abortion nonprofit Florida Right to Life.
The Special Election for HD 90 was triggered by the July death of Casello, a Democrat who previously endorsed Long as his preferred successor.
HD 90 is a Democratic-leaning district that spans Boynton Beach, Delray Beach, Golf, Gulf Stream, Briny Breezes and parts of Highland Beach, Manalapan and Ocean Ridge.
Roger Chapin and Mira Tanna are going head-to-head in Tuesday’s Orlando City Council runoff after a margin of only 14 votes separated them in last month’s crowded General Election.
Chapin holds the big fundraising edge and the advantage of having name recognition as the son of former Orange County Mayor Linda Chapin. He also carries the support of the establishment, including Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and incumbent City Commissioner Robert Stuart, who didn’t seek re-election.
Tanna’s strengths are her grassroots campaign and the endorsements of popular Orlando Democrats like U.S. Rep. Maxwell Frost and state Rep. Anna Eskamani, who are lending their support to help her knock on doors and engage with voters.
Early voting at the Supervisor of Elections office, 119 W. Kaley St., runs 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday. Election Day precinct polls are open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Chapin and Tanna are both Democrats, and the winner will be the first new City Commissioner to represent District 3 in 20 years. The four-year term currently pays $79,343 annually for the nonpartisan seat. District 3 spans College Park, Audubon Park, Baldwin Park, Coytown and other downtown area neighborhoods north of Colonial Drive.
Tanna works as the Orlando city grants manager. She commutes to work on the bus, and is focused on fixing Central Florida’s public transit.
Chapin is a public affairs and public relations consultant. He said his biggest client is Mears Transportation, his former employer. His priorities include the Main Street Districts on Ivanhoe Boulevard and Edgewater and Corrine drives.
In making his case to voters, Chapin pointed to his long résumé of public service. After a failed bid for Orlando City Council in 2002, he got involved on the Municipal Planning Board, Downtown Development Board, Orlando Utilities Commission and more.
Chapin argues he is the most experienced candidate in the race and would “govern from the middle” to work with both Republicans and Democrats, citing Dyer as an example of a politician who can work both sides of the aisle to get things done.
Tanna’s supporters say she is the right fit and has the vision to help make changes as Orlando faces big challenges in a lack of affordable housing and congested traffic. They also say bus routes and SunRail don’t meet enough people’s needs. Tanna also pointed to her city career, saying she knows City Hall and is ready to jump in on Day 1.
Tanna’s endorsements include the Young Democrats of Orange County, Ruth’s List, the Sierra Club, the Orange County Classroom Teachers Association and Ruth’s List Florida. Endorsements also include state Sens. LaVon Bracy Davis and Carlos Guillermo Smith, as well as state Reps. Johanna López, Rita Harris, RaShon Young. Orange County Commissioners Nichole Wilson and Mike Scott and Orange-Osceola State Attorney Monique Worrell are also backing Tanna.
Chris Durant, who placed third, just out of reach in the Nov. 4 General Election, has endorsed Chapin and is being paid $1,500 to join him on the campaign trail.
Gov. Ron DeSantis is embracing wealth redistribution as part of his final budget proposal as a way of sweetening his pitch to eliminate homestead property taxes.
He justifies it by saying he’s got the money to spend to help “rural counties” by paying to make up those lost tax revenues.
“We have 32 fiscally constrained counties. You know, Miami-Dade, Palm Beach, these are powerhouses. I’m putting in my budget the revenue to totally backfill every one of those rural counties. So they’re not going to miss a single thing,” the Governor said on “Fox & Friends.”
“I’ve got a big surplus. Why would I not do that to be able to help them?”
The Governor’s budget tease is intended to support his proposal — which, so far, is only in words — to put a constitutional amendment on the ballot next year to let voters get rid of the tax on homesteaded, owner-occupied houses and condos.
One measure (HJR 201) would eliminate all non-school property taxes for residents with homestead exemptions.
Another (HJR 211) would allow homeowners to transfer their accumulated Save Our Homes benefits to a new primary residence, without portability caps or restrictions on home values.
Another proposal (HJR 205) would exempt Florida residents 65 and older from paying non-school homestead property taxes. In its current form, the measure has no long-term residency requirements for beneficiaries and no income threshold.
There’s also HJR 209, which would grant an additional $200,000 non-school homestead exemption to those who maintain multiperil property insurance, a provision that proponents say will link relief to insured, more resilient homes.
The Governor and his allies are decrying the House push, saying multiple ballot items would only confuse voters.
DeSantis’ suggestion that Miami-Dade and Palm Beach should shoulder burdens for towns like Melrose and Palatka is particularly provocative given that his appointed Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia has traveled to both big counties and alleged wasteful spending.
The executive branch budget proposal is always significantly modified in the legislative process, of course. But this pitch will force urban and suburban GOP lawmakers to decide whether their constituents should pay even more of the bills for parts of the state that haven’t figured out how to sustain themselves without state help, setting up a conflict between them and a lame-duck chief executive.
In what’s emerging as a crowded race next year, Eatonville Mayor Angie Gardner has filed to run for District 7 on the Orange County Commission — one of the new districts created in a recent redistricting process.
“Leadership isn’t about titles, it’s about trust. It’s about listening, preparing, and standing up for what’s right. That’s the leadership I’ve brought to Eatonville, and that’s the leadership I’ll bring to District 7,” Gardner said in a press release announcing her candidacy.
Gardner made headlines last month for angering Eatonville Town Council members who accused her of blindsiding them by siding with Orange County Public Schools to advance a sale regarding the historic Hungerford property, the Orlando Sentinel reported this Fall.
“For someone to take it upon their authority to go ahead of the Council and not discuss this among the Council members and have us walking into something blind that we did not know, that was not right,” said Councilwoman Wanda Randolph, according to Spectrum News 13, as the Council voted to limit Gardner’s powers last month.
But Gardner said she stood by her decision because it was best to advance Eatonville, the oldest black-incorporated municipality in the United States.
“I didn’t break any of the rules in the charter. And the term ‘strong mayor’ is what we are, and that’s what we have to be sometimes,” Gardner said, according to the news station. “So, I’m glad they recognized the power of that charter.”
The controversial agreement centered around OCPS getting a $1 million payment from Dr. Phillips Charities so the former 117-acre high school campus can be developed with housing, spaces for education and health care, according to the Sentinel. Some of the land would be donated back to Eatonville for a grocery store, conference center hotel and retail.
Gardner, who spent two decades teaching, highlighted her accomplishments as Eatonville Mayor in helping secure millions to improve infrastructure, build affordable housing and support small businesses.
“Across District 7, from Pine Hills, Maitland, College Park, and Fairview Shores, families are feeling the strain of rising costs, outdated infrastructure, and leadership that doesn’t always listen,” Gardner said in her press release.
“I’m running for Orange County Commission because every neighborhood deserves a leader who shows up, respects its history, and fights for its future. Together, we can build a county that works for all of us, one that champions uncompromised neighborhoods, strengthens our communities, and ensures every resident has a fair shot at a better tomorrow.”
Orange County voters approved a 2024 referendum to expand the County Commission from six districts to eight. The Mayor also serves as an at-large vote.
The boundary lines of District 7 were heavily debated before the Orange County Commission approved a new map in October.
The Commission decided against putting Winter Park in District 7, which covers Maitland, Eatonville and Pine Hills.