Florida's 110th House of Representatives district explained

State:Florida
District:110
Chamber:House of Representatives
Representative:José R. Oliva
Party:Republican
Residence:Miami Lakes
Percent White:88.0
Percent Black:6.0
Percent Hispanic:87.0
Percent Asian:1.0
Percent Native American:0.1
Percent Pacific Islander:0.0
Percent Other Race:3.1
Percent Remainder Of Multiracial:1.8
Population:154,817
Population Year:2010

Florida's 110th House district elects one member of the Florida House of Representatives. The district is represented by José R. Oliva. This district is located in the Miami metropolitan area. The district covers a portion of Miami-Dade County including a portion of Hialeah, Florida.[1]

As of the 2010 census, the district's population is 154,817.[2]

Past representatives

RepresentativesPartyYears of serviceHometownNotes
align =left nowrap George FirestoneDemocratic1967Unknown date of being elected, just the year, according to the cited source.[3]
align =left nowrap Carey MatthewsDemocraticNovember 5, 1968 - January 15, 1972resigned on January 15, 1972
align =left nowrap Walter Wallace Sackett Jr.DemocraticNovember 7, 1972 - November 2, 1976
align =left nowrap Roberta FoxDemocraticNovember 2, 1976 - November 2, 1982
align =left nowrap Ileana Ros-LehtinenRepublicanNovember 2, 1982 – November 4, 1986redistricted
align =left nowrap Lincoln Díaz-BalartRepublicanNovember 18, 1986 – August 28, 1989
align =left nowrap Miguel De GrandyRepublican1989 - November 3, 1992
align =left nowrap Rudy GarcíaRepublicanNovember 3, 1992 – November 7, 2000
align =left nowrap René GarcíaRepublicanNovember 7, 2000 – November 4, 2008
align =left nowrap Esteban BovoRepublicanNovember 4, 2008 – March 25, 2011Resigned March 25, 2011 to run for Miami-Dade Commissioner [4]
align =left nowrap José R. OlivaRepublicanSeptember 19, 2011 – Present

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jose R. Oliva - 2018 - 2020 (Speaker Oliva) - Florida House of Representatives . 20 September 2020.
  2. Web site: District 110 Demographic Profile (House). Florida House of Representatives. September 20, 2020.
  3. Web site: House of Representatives. April 21, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20180113095046/http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/fefdl/florida/House19672001.html. January 13, 2018. live. Wayback Machine.
  4. Web site: Rep. Bovo Resigns from Florida House to Run for Miami-Dade Commissioner.