Several of Florida's governors and U.S. senators were Republican after the Civil War during the
Reconstruction era. There were Republican
African American officeholders from the end of the Civil War until before 1900 in Florida. The Republican Convention of 1867 in Tallahassee was the first statewide convention of Republicans.
Josiah T. Walls was a delegate to the convention.
Harrison Reed organized the Union Republican Club in Jacksonville and sent a delegation to the
National Union National Convention in 1864. After the
American Civil War black Republicans mainly joined the
Union League organized by Daniel Richards and
William U. Saunders. Richards was able to have pro-black rights resolutions passed at conventions. Reed stated they were "pandering to Negroes". Richards, Saunders, and
Liberty Billings campaigned for black support for the
1868 Florida Constitutional Convention.
Edward McPherson, Clerk of the
United States House of Representatives withdrew printing contracts from the "
Radical Republican" supporting
Jacksonville Florida Times, it later went bankrupt, instead supporting the moderate
Florida Union. Richards accused
Freedmen's Bureau officials of working against him. Richards and Saunders' wing controlled a majority of the delegates at the constitutional convention. They submitted their proposed
constitution to
George Meade and held a nomination convention that selected a gubernatorial ticket of Billings and Saunders and
Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs for
Florida's at-large congressional district. However, Reed's faction, claiming that the Radicals did not have a quorum, held another meeting and received support from Meade, who later approved their constitution. The Radical's constitution made most local and state offices elected while the moderate's constitution made those offices appointed and reduce representation of black counties in the state legislature. The Florida Radicals failed to gather support in Congress for their constitution, with even
Benjamin Butler supporting the moderate's constitution. The constitution was approved by voters in 1868. Democrats regained control of Florida's state politics and across the South. Their control lasted until 1966 when
Claude R. Kirk, Jr. was elected. He became the first Republican governor elected in the state since the 19th century Reconstruction era. Since 1960, the state only voted Democratic in the presidential elections in 1964 (
Lyndon B. Johnson), 1976 (
Jimmy Carter), 1996 (
Bill Clinton), 2008 and 2012 (
Barack Obama). The
2000 presidential election was decided by a margin of 537 votes out of approximately 6 million cast, giving
George W. Bush the presidency over
Al Gore.
Richard Nixon's
Southern Strategy, which took advantage of objections to the advances of the
American Civil Rights Movement. This resulted in a regional political
realignment for the
Southern United States. The number of people registered with the party rose from 116,000 in 1952 to 1,139,000 in 1976. The Florida Senate was still dominated by Democrats until 1992, when a majority of Republicans was elected. The Florida House of Representatives turned Republican after the November 1996 election. Since then, the number of Democrats in both chambers have continued to drop. The Florida Legislature became the first legislature in any of the states of the former
Confederacy to come under complete Republican control when the Republicans gained control of the House and Senate in the 1996 election. In the 2006 election the Democrats actually gained seats in the State House, the first instance of this occurring since the early 1980s. ==Structure and composition==