Backlash in Black-Plural Florida District as Wasserman Schultz Enters Race

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz announced she will run in Florida’s newly redrawn 20th Congressional District—a Black-plurality seat long represented by Black Democrats—sparking fierce pushback from Black leaders and candidates who fear vote-splitting. Four Black contenders have floated consolidating behind one or two rivals to challenge her as the district’s maps were drawn amid ongoing redistricting and a Supreme Court decision on race considerations. The seat is open after Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick resigned following ethics findings and a federal indictment, with others like Luke Campbell and Dale Holness in the race. Wasserman Schultz had about $2.5 million raised by March, giving her a fundraising edge as the field coalesces and party dynamics evolve; House leadership and CBC members have offered cautious or undecided endorsements.
- Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz faces backlash for running in a Florida district long represented by Black Democrats NBC News
- Jeffries declines to back Wasserman Schultz as Black leaders revolt over district switch Fox News
- To beat Wasserman Schultz, Black candidates consider coalescing behind one person Miami Herald
- Black Florida voters should close this door that gerrymandering opened The Hill
- "He's never done that": Jeffries stuns colleagues by withholding Wasserman Schultz endorsement Axios
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