Sink is a former president of Florida operations at
NationsBank, now
Bank of America. She was appointed by former
governor Lawton Chiles to the Commission on Government Accountability to the People. She also served on Chiles' Commission on Education and was vice-chair of
Florida TaxWatch. Sink has served with the Florida Chapter of the
Nature Conservancy, and as Chair of the Board of the
United Way of
Hillsborough County and the Suncoast chapters.
Florida chief financial officer Sink was the Democratic candidate for Florida's office of
chief financial officer in 2006. She defeated
Republican Tom Lee 53.5 percent to 46.5 percent. She was also the first Democrat elected to the state Cabinet since 1998.
Florida Taj Mahal scandal On August 30, 2010, Sink sent letters to the
Florida Supreme Court and the
Florida governor's inspector general, arguing that preliminary findings of an audit of spending on construction of a new courthouse warranted further investigation. The audit found excessive and ethically questionable spending on the new judicial building—which she referred to as the
"Taj Mahal"—for the First District Court of Appeals.
2010 gubernatorial candidate In 2008, Sink stated that she would "assess the landscape after the first of the year, and make a decision then." In January 2009, Sink announced she would not run for either seat, preferring to stand for reelection as CFO. The announcement that Gov.
Charlie Crist would forgo re-election to run for
the Senate seat being vacated by Mel Martinez altered her position, and on May 13, 2009, Sink announced her intention to run for governor. On August 24, 2010, Sink won the Democratic primary for governor. She faced health care executive
Rick Scott in the general election, as well as an independent (
NPA) candidate, urban designer and policy analyst, . A former independent candidate, Bud Chiles, endorsed Sink in September 2010. On October 25, 2010, during a televised debate, Sink read a text message sent to her makeup artist's cellular phone from a campaign official instructing Sink as to debate strategy, contrary to the rules of the debate. Sink fired the adviser who sent the text message. After a close election, Sink conceded, giving victory to Scott. He scored 49% of the vote to Sink's 48%.
2014 campaign for Congress Republican
Bill Young, who had represented the 13th District and its predecessors since 1971, died on October 18, 2013. On October 30, Sink told the
Tampa Bay Times that she would run in the special election to replace him. She quickly gained support from national Democratic power brokers. The only other declared Democratic candidate,
Jessica Ehrlich, who had faced Young in the 2012 general election, dropped out of the race on November 6, effectively handing the nomination to Sink. Sink faced
David Jolly, Young's former general counsel, in the March 11 election. A longtime resident of
Thonotosassa in eastern
Hillsborough County, Sink told the
Tampa BayTimes that she would move to
Pinellas County as soon as possible. Although members of the House are required only to live in the state they represent, it has become a very strong convention that they live in the district they represent. She signed a one-year lease for an apartment near her campaign headquarters in
Clearwater to establish residency in the district, with plans to buy a house in the district later. The 13th District had been in Republican hands since
William Cramer won the seat in 1954; he was succeeded by Young in 1971. It had been one of the earliest districts in the South to turn Republican. It was widely thought that Sink had a chance of winning, as Obama carried the district twice, and Sink carried the district in her 2010 gubernatorial campaign against Scott. The race was close, with Sink earning 46.6 percent of the vote to Jolly's 48.4 percent. ==Political positions==