In 2010, Brandes ran for the
Florida House of Representatives from the 52nd district, which was based in
Pinellas County, challenging incumbent
Democratic State Representative
Bill Heller. In a good year for Republicans nationwide and statewide, Brandes narrowly defeated Heller, winning over him with 51% of the vote. Following the reconfiguration of
Florida Senate districts in 2012, Brandes opted to run in the
22nd district, which encompassed the southern part of Pinellas County and
South Tampa, rather than seek a second term in the House. In the Republican primary, he faced fellow State Representative
James Frishe. Brandes was endorsed by former
Governor Jeb Bush; he defeated Frishe with 56% of the vote. He was unopposed in the general election. In 2016, he ran unopposed in both the primary and general election in the 24th district. During the 2018 general election, Jeff Brandes defeated Lindsay Cross for his reelection in the 24th district. While serving in the Senate, Brandes, an opponent of red-light cameras, attached a provision onto highway safety legislation that would "require the cities and counties [that have cameras] to create an administrative appeals process for motorists who contest the initial red-light camera violations." Additionally, he sponsored legislation that was signed into law by Governor
Rick Scott dealing with the "pension plans that cover public safety workers"; the legislation was strongly opposed by police and firefighter unions, who warned that it would "cause a spike in pension costs." Brandes received a 114.3% (A+) score from
Americans for Prosperity, a conservative advocacy group funded by the billionaire
Koch Brothers. He was the #1 rated legislator by far for AFP in Florida. Brandes's district was reconfigured and renumbered after court-ordered redistricting in 2016. It now includes only portions of the southern part of Pinellas County. On March 3, 2018, Brandes rejected a two-year moratorium on the sale of AR-15s. He voted yea for controversial Senate Bill 86 in 2021. Brandes opposed a 2022 bill that would repeal no-fault auto insurance, describing support for the bill as "legislative malpractice". He also voted with Democrats on the repeal of the
Reedy Creek Improvement Act, meaning he voted against the repeal measure. In March 2022, Brandes voted for HB 5, which prohibits abortion after 15 weeks. The bill was later signed into law. Brandes was unable to run for reelection in 2022 due to term-limits. ==References==