Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) Secretary Melanie Griffin has filed to run for Senate District 14, the seat previously held by now-Lt. Gov. Jay Collins.
Griffin filed paperwork Friday for the SD 14 election next year. But she’s expected to run in the Special Election, which is scheduled for a Primary on Jan. 13 and a General Election on March 24.
Griffin is the second Republican to join the race, but the first competitive candidate. Perennial candidate Amaro Lionheart has also filed as a Republican.
Sources tell Florida Politics another prominent Republican is likely entering the race soon. Previous speculation centered around Rep. Josie Tomkow, though she has yet to confirm her intention.
One Democrat, Brian Nathan, has filed for the seat.
The SD 14 vacancy occurred on Aug. 12 after Gov. Ron DeSantis tapped Collins to be his Lieutenant Governor.
DeSantis appointed Griffin to lead DBPR in December 2021.
Griffin is also a lawyer for Shumaker, Loop & Kendrick and senior advisor for business-to-business relationships with Shumaker Advisors Florida. She previously served as President of the Executive Board of the Hillsborough Association for Women Lawyers.
She founded the business Spread Your Sunshine, which offers speaking and professional training services as well as “inspirational” stationery and gifts.
The Tampa lawyer is a triple graduate of Florida State University. After earning her bachelor’s degree in finance from the FSU College of Business, she went on to get a master’s degree in business administration and a Juris Doctor (JD-MBA).
Griffin won the 2017 FSU Inspire Award for FSU alumnae of distinction. Other accolades include being named an FSU Notable Nole and receiving the FSU College of Business Recent Alumni Achievement Award. She is a member of the College of Law’s Board of Visitors.
SD 14, which is based in Hillsborough County, favors the GOP. Republicans control nearly 39% of the electorate, with Democrats having just under 32%. More than 29% of the district’s voters are registered with no party affiliation.
Still, it’s been a frequent swing district. Collins was first elected to the Senate in 2022, flipping the seat red after former Sen. Janet Cruz had flipped it blue just four years before.
And even without a registration advantage, political winds in Florida have been blowing to the right for some time, with historic gains in races even in areas, such as Hillsborough County, that had been trending more to the left.
The year Cruz lost to Collins, the vote margin was about 10 percentage points. Worse, at the time, Democrats had a voter registration advantage, albeit slight at just 2 percentage points.
But still emboldened by off-year elections across the country this week that saw big wins for their party, Democrats are anxious for a flip despite the odds.
Griffin’s ties to the GOP donor class through her work with DBPR and within Republican circles positions her to be a strong fundraiser. She’s also helped by her husband, Mike Griffin, who is a prominent Tampa-area and statewide business leader, further setting this short election cycle up to be a high-profile affair.