Debbie Mayfield Explained

Debbie Mayfield
Office:Majority Leader of the Florida Senate
Term Start:November 23, 2020
Term End:November 14, 2022
Predecessor:Kathleen Passidomo
Successor:Ben Albritton
State Senate1:Florida
District1:17th
Term Start1:November 8, 2016
Predecessor1:Redistricted
Office2:Member of the Florida House of Representatives
Term Start2:November 4, 2008
Term End2:November 8, 2016
Predecessor2:Stan Mayfield
Successor2:Erin Grall
Constituency2:80th district (2008–2012)
54th district (2012–2016)
Birth Date:2 December 1956
Birth Place:Pensacola, Florida, U.S.
Party:Republican
Education:Santa Fe College

Debbie Mayfield (born December 2, 1956) is an American politician serving as a Republican member of the Florida Senate who has represented the 17th district, which includes Indian River and southern Brevard Counties, since 2016. She previously served four terms in the Florida House of Representatives, representing parts of the Treasure Coast from 2008 to 2016. She has been majority leader since 2020.[1]

History

Mayfield was born in Pensacola, and grew up there, attending Pensacola High School. She moved to Vero Beach in 1989, and began working for Barnett Bank, eventually rising up to Senior Vice-President of Residential Lending. Mayfield eventually left the bank to start the Mayfield Group, a mortgage brokerage firm that she owned and operated. She now lives in Melbourne.[2]

Florida House of Representatives

When incumbent State Representative Stan Mayfield, her husband, was unable to seek re-election in 2008 due to term limits, she ran to succeed him in the 80th District, which ran along the Treasure Coast, including northern St. Lucie County, eastern Indian River County, and southeastern Brevard County. She won the Republican primary unopposed, and advanced to the general election, where she faced Neal Abarbanell, the Democratic nominee. During the course of the campaign, Mayfield's husband, who was running for Indian River County Tax Collector, died of cancer.[3] Despite this, Mayfield ended up defeating Abarbanell by a wide margin of victory, winning 64% of the vote. In 2010, she was challenged in the Republican primary by Art Argenio and Bradley Ward, who hammered Mayfield for being insufficiently conservative, despite the fact that she voted "consistently with the GOP majority."[4] Mayfield ended defeating both of them handily, winning 52% of the vote to Argenio's 34% and Ward's 15%, and in the general election, she only faced write-in opposition, winning easily.

In 2012, when state legislative districts were redrawn, Mayfield was moved into the 54th District, which included much of the territory that she had previously represented in the 80th District. She won both the primary and general election entirely unopposed.

Florida Senate

In 2016, Mayfield ran for the Florida Senate seat vacated by Thad Altman, who was term limited. She defeated fellow state representative Ritch Workman in the Republican primary, 42 to 35%, and Democrat Amy Tidd in the general election, 62 to 38%.[5] [6]

In 2020, President of the Senate Wilton Simpson appointed Mayfield as Majority Leader.[1]

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sen. Debbie Mayfield named Florida Senate majority leader . Dave . Berman . Florida Today . Mar 20, 2021.
  2. News: Mayfield. Debbie. 2020-10-28. Donald Trump Helped Florida's Economy During the COVID-19 Pandemic. Florida Daily. 2020-10-29.
  3. Web site: State Rep. Stan Mayfield, 52, dies of cancer. September 30, 2008. December 13, 2013. TCPalm.com. Ed. Bierschenk.
  4. Web site: Running to the Right in House District 80. June 2, 2010. December 13, 2013. Sunshine State News. Kenric. Ward.
  5. News: Debbie Mayfield defeats Ritch Workman in Senate GOP primary. Neale. Rick. August 31, 2016. Florida Today. 2016-11-12.
  6. News: Republicans sweep Brevard legislative races. Price. Wayne. November 8, 2016. Florida Today. 2016-11-12.