Orange County, Florida (Judicial)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Flag of Florida.svg

Orange County is located within the Florida 9th Circuit Court.

The people of Orange County are served by a Circuit Court and a County Court.

The United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida has jurisdiction in Orange County. Appeals from the Middle District go to the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit.

Judges

Orange County, Florida

Circuit courts

Florida 9th Circuit Court

Judge Appointed By

Diana Tennis

Elected

Elaine Barbour

Elected

Heather P. Rodriguez

Rick Scott (R)

John E. Jordan

Rick Scott (R)

Keith A. Carsten

Rick Scott (R)

Kevin B. Weiss

Elected

Margaret H. Schreiber

Rick Scott (R)

Reginald K. Whitehead

Elected

Luis Calderon

Elected

Greg Tynan

Rick Scott (R)

Lawrence R. Kirkwood

Elected

Leticia Marques

Elected

Lisa Taylor Munyon

Jeb Bush (R)

Robert J. Egan

Charlie Crist

Barbara Leach

Elected

Mikaela Nix

Elected

Vincent Falcone

Elected

Christine Arendas

Ron DeSantis (R)

Hal Epperson

Ron DeSantis (R)

Alicia L. Latimore

Jeb Bush (R)

Laura Shaffer

Elected

Alison Kerestes

Elected

Jeff Ashton

Elected

Christy Collins

Elected

Heather L. Higbee

Rick Scott (R)

Diego Madrigal

Ron DeSantis (R)

Mike Kraynick

Ron DeSantis (R)

Brian Sandor

Ron DeSantis (R)

Vincent Chiu

Ron DeSantis (R)

Gisela Laurent

Ron DeSantis (R)

A. James Craner

Elected

Patricia Strowbridge

Rick Scott (R)

Craig McCarthy

Ron DeSantis (R)

Eric Netcher

Ron DeSantis (R)

Michael Snure

Ron DeSantis (R)

Michael Deen

Ron DeSantis (R)

Elizabeth Joy Gibson

Ron DeSantis (R)

Tanya Davis Wilson

Elected

Mark S. Blechman

Elected

Chad Alvaro

Rick Scott (R)

Tom Young

Elected

Michael Murphy

Charlie Crist

Denise Beamer

Rick Scott (R)

Jenifer Harris

Elected

Holly Derenthal

Ron DeSantis (R)

Wayne Wooten

Rick Scott (R)

John Beamer

Ron DeSantis (R)


County courts

Orange County Court, Florida


Elections

See also: Florida judicial elections

Florida is one of 43 states that hold elections for judicial positions. To learn more about judicial selection in Florida, click here.

Election rules

Primary election

To get on the ballot, candidates for judicial office are required to obtain signatures equal to at least one percent of the number of registered electors in the geographic boundary of the district.[1] Trial court judicial candidates compete in nonpartisan primaries designed to narrow the field to two candidates for the general election. Candidates who receive a simple majority (fifty percent plus one vote) of the vote in the primary are considered winners and are not on the ballot in the general election unless a write-in candidate qualifies for the same office. Candidates who are unopposed for any office do not appear on the ballot and are considered automatically elected.[2][3]

General election

In the general election, trial court candidates compete in nonpartisan elections. Partisan organizations and political parties are forbidden from endorsing, supporting, or opposing candidates for office.[4]

Retention election

Retention elections for appellate judges ask voters a "yes" or "no" question of whether or not to retain a judge to another term. The judges do not face competition on the ballot. If a majority of votes are in favor of a particular judge, that judge will be retained to a new term.[5]


See also

External links

Footnotes