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In Orlando, Democratic governor candidate Jolly promises insurance, education reforms

Florida Democratic gubernatorial candidate David Jolly delivers remarks during the Tiger Bay Club of Central Florida luncheon at the Citrus Club in Orlando on Friday, April 17, 2026. After joining the Democratic Party in April 2025, Jolly announced his campaign for governor. (Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel/TNS)
Florida Democratic gubernatorial candidate David Jolly delivers remarks during the Tiger Bay Club of Central Florida luncheon at the Citrus Club in Orlando on Friday, April 17, 2026. After joining the Democratic Party in April 2025, Jolly announced his campaign for governor. (Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel/TNS) TNS

ORLANDO, Fla. - Speaking at an event in Orlando on Friday, former U.S. Congressman David Jolly described a state suffering from an economic crisis and "exhausted by culture wars" under longtime GOP leadership.

Jolly, an ex-Republican from St. Petersburg now running as a Democrat, was making an appearance in the home turf of his main rival for the Democratic nomination for governor, Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings.

He told the Tiger Bay Club of Central Florida he would enact significant reforms to the state's insurance market and education system if elected to the governor's mansion in November.

"Are we going to be a state that becomes the Hamptons 20 years from now, or are we actually going to be a state that ensures we have a robust middle class that is capable of growing Florida strong?" Jolly said, referring to the famous enclave of the rich in New York. "Because I'm afraid of what's going to happen if we don't do something dramatically different."

Jolly said he'd establish a state "catastrophic fund" for homeowners' insurance, fully remove hurricane and wind coverage from the private market and put it in a state sovereign wealth fund and cut homeowners' insurance by 60 to 70%.

He also promised a 10-year "renaissance" in public education by using the tourist development tax to give teachers a 30% pay raise, investing in fixing failing infrastructure and setting up services like mental health and hunger programs within the education system.

Jolly also said he'd get the state "out of the Alligator Alcatraz business" by turning the land back over to Miami-Dade County. He added he would support immigrant communities and diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, or DEI, and invest in access to healthcare, upward mobility, home ownership and affordable housing.

Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis is term-limited this year. GOP officials vying for the Republican nomination include U.S. Congressman Byron Donalds, R-Naples, former House Speaker Paul Renner and Lt. Gov. Jay Collins.

One audience member asked Jolly if it's even possible for a Democrat to win in Florida, comparing his candidacy to that of former Gov. Charlie Crist, another Republican-turned-Democrat who unsuccessfully ran for governor again in 2014 and 2022, as well as the Florida GOP's significant advantage in registered voters over Florida Democrats.

Jolly said 2026 is different from 2022 and a Democratic victory is now possible in part because people are "running away from Republican candidates," though not entirely because Democrats are winning people's hearts and minds.

He said recent Democratic wins in special elections in red districts, like the state House race in Palm Beach County where U.S. President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago club is located, gives him hope.

"You want to redefine our national politics in a moment of division and crisis? It starts right here in the state of Florida by electing statewide Democrats," he said. "But I'll also tell you this: If this happens in '26, the road to the White House runs through Florida again in '28."

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Copyright 2026 Tribune Content Agency. All Rights Reserved.

This story was originally published April 17, 2026 at 5:47 PM.

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