Jeff Clemens

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Jeff Clemens
File:Jeff Clemens State Senate.jpg
Member of the Florida Senate
from the 27th district
Assumed office
November 20, 2012
Preceded by Lizbeth Benacquisto
Member of the Florida House of Representatives
from the 89th district
In office
November 16, 2010 – November 20, 2012
Preceded by Mary Brandenburg
Succeeded by Bill Hager
Personal details
Born (1970-09-08) September 8, 1970 (age 53)
Detroit, Michigan
Political party Democratic
Alma mater Michigan State University (B.A.)
Profession Energy conservation

Jeff Clemens (born September 8, 1970, in Detroit, Michigan) is a Democratic member of the Florida Senate, representing the 27th District, which includes Boynton Beach, Greenacres, Hypoluxo, Lake Worth, Palm Beach, Riviera Beach, and West Palm Beach in eastern Palm Beach County, since 2012, previously serving in the Florida House of Representatives, representing the 89th District from 2010 to 2012.

History

Clemens was born in Detroit, Michigan, and attended Michigan State University, from which he graduated in 1992 with a degree in journalism. He moved to Florida in 1997 and worked as a planner for the Florida Institute of Public Health, a reporter for the Naples Daily News, an aide to State Representative Mary Brandenburg, and as the Chairman of the Lake Worth Community Redevelopment Agency.[1] In 2007, Clemens ran for Mayor of Lake Worth, challenging incumbent Mayor Marc Drautz in a crowded field that included Mary Lindsey, John Jordan, William D. Coakley, and Andrew Procyk. He won 48% of the vote to Drautz's 41% in the election on March 13,[2] but because he did not win a majority, he had to run against Drautz in a runoff election held on March 27. Clemens campaigned as the most experienced candidate and condemned the negative advertisements against him funded by "outside interests," noting, "Usually an incumbent spends his time talking about the positive things he has accomplished, but in the absence of accomplishments the only recourse is to use negative attacks."[3] Ultimately, Clemens narrowly defeated Drautz by 149 votes, winning 52% of the vote to Drautz's 48%.[4]

Florida House of Representatives

In 2010, following the inability of incumbent State Representative Bradenburg to seek re-election, Clemens ran to succeed her in the 89th District, which stretched from Greenacres to West Palm Beach and Hypoluxo in eastern Palm Beach County. In the Democratic primary, he defeated Brandenburg's husband, Peter Brandenburg, winning 60% of the vote. Advancing to the general election, Clemens faced Steven Rosenblum, the Republican nominee and a former pharmacy manager. He campaigned on his support for increasing funding for education, declaring that the state's low level of spending per student is a "source of embarrassment for every Floridian," and on opposition to offshore drilling, noting, "It's not just an environmental issue. It's an economic one. Florida's economy is largely based on tourism."[5] Ultimately, Clemens defeated Rosenblum in a landslide, winning his first term in the legislature with 60% of the vote.

Florida Senate

Following the reconfiguration of Florida Senate districts in 2012, Clemens was drawn into the 27th District. In the Democratic primary, he faced fellow State Representative Mack Bernard. Clemens won the endorsement of labor unions AFL-CIO and SEIU, while Bernard received the endorsement of the Florida Chamber of Commerce.[6] In the end, Clemens was able to narrowly defeat Bernard by only seventeen votes in the primary election.[7] Bernard held out hope, however, that Clemens's victory would be overturned and filed a lawsuit to have forty absentee ballots counted. A judge in Tallahassee ruled against Bernard but allowed nine provisional ballots to be counted, which would not have been enough to allow Bernard to emerge victorious[8] In the general election, Clemens remained on the ballot as the Democratic nominee, and was elected unopposed.

During the 2014 legislative session, Clemens introduced legislation that "regulates the cultivation, manufacturing, distribution, prescribing, and retail sale of marijuana for medical purposes," which he has introduced in every legislative session he has been a part of since he was elected to the legislature, though no action has been taken on it yet.[9] Additionally, he worked with Republican State Senator Jeff Brandes to co-author legislation that would allow the Florida Department of Transportation to raise the speed limit to 75 miles per hour on certain state highways,[10] though Governor Rick Scott vetoed the legislation following opposition from law enforcement officials and the American Automobile Association.[11]

External links

References

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