Who will fill vacant South Florida seat in Congress left by resignation of Cherfilus-McCormick?
By Carlton Gillespie
April 21, 2026 at 3:35 PM EDT
Tuesday’s resignation of Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick leaves hundreds of thousands of South Floridians in parts of Broward and Palm Beach counties without a representative in Congress.
And the 20th congressional district seat may remain empty for some time — or at least until next year when a new lawmaker is sworn in.
That’s because it’s up to Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis is unlikely to call a special election to fill Cherfilus-McCormick's seat. Republicans maintain a slim majority in the House, and DeSantis could ensure that margin by allowing the seat to stay vacant until November's election winner is sworn in next January.
READ MORE: Stolen money, straw donors and a diamond ring: The charges against Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick
U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., left, speaks to the media as her lawyer David Markus looks on after a hearing in federal court Monday, Dec. 29, 2025 in Miami. (AP Photo/Terry Renna) (4976x3318, AR: 1.4996986136226642)
Cherfilus-McCormick resigned from Congress on Tuesday, the same day she was scheduled to be formally disciplined by the House as part of an ethics investigation into her use of campaign funds.
Explaining her decision in an extended social media statement on Tuesday, the South Florida Democrat decried the internal investigation process as unfair. She said the House Committee denied her and her new attorney adequate time to prepare a defense.
“Rather than play these political games, I choose to step away,” she wrote.
The district is considered a safe Democratic seat, meaning that the upcoming Aug. 18 Democratic primary winner will easily be elected in November.
Democratic primary challengers react to resignation
That primary already has five challengers, Luther “Uncle Luke” Campbell, Elijah Manley, Mark Douglass, Maisha Williams, and Dale Holness — who lost a 2021 special election to Cherfilus-McCormick by just five votes.
Cherfilus-McCormick has sued both Holness and Manley for $1 million for defamation after both candidates publicly implicated her in the crimes she was later charged for by federal prosecutors. Both lawsuits were dropped last year.
Manley, who a February poll showed leading the primary field before Campbell entered the race, issued a statement following Cherfilus-McCormick's resignation.
"Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick did not resign out of conscience. She resigned to avoid being formally expelled from Congress by her own colleagues. She still stole $5 million meant for families recovering from disaster. She still laundered it into a congressional campaign built on a lie. She still faces a 15-count federal indictment and up to 53 years in prison, and that accountability must continue," the statement read.
Manley also called for DeSantis to quickly call a special election before the August primary saying, "Every day without a representative is another day working people in South Florida are pushed aside."
Campbell also released a statement following Cherfilus-McCormick's resignation.
"This moment is bigger than any one individual. It is about the people of this district — and they deserve stability, focus, and leadership that delivers," the statement said.
The district, which includes parts of Broward and Palm Beach counties, is dominated by registered Democratic voters (226,802) over Republican registered voters (64,689). No Party Affiliation, or NPA, voters number 102,845.
And the 20th congressional district seat may remain empty for some time — or at least until next year when a new lawmaker is sworn in.
That’s because it’s up to Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis is unlikely to call a special election to fill Cherfilus-McCormick's seat. Republicans maintain a slim majority in the House, and DeSantis could ensure that margin by allowing the seat to stay vacant until November's election winner is sworn in next January.
READ MORE: Stolen money, straw donors and a diamond ring: The charges against Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick
U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., left, speaks to the media as her lawyer David Markus looks on after a hearing in federal court Monday, Dec. 29, 2025 in Miami. (AP Photo/Terry Renna) (4976x3318, AR: 1.4996986136226642)
Cherfilus-McCormick resigned from Congress on Tuesday, the same day she was scheduled to be formally disciplined by the House as part of an ethics investigation into her use of campaign funds.
Explaining her decision in an extended social media statement on Tuesday, the South Florida Democrat decried the internal investigation process as unfair. She said the House Committee denied her and her new attorney adequate time to prepare a defense.
“Rather than play these political games, I choose to step away,” she wrote.
The district is considered a safe Democratic seat, meaning that the upcoming Aug. 18 Democratic primary winner will easily be elected in November.
Democratic primary challengers react to resignation
That primary already has five challengers, Luther “Uncle Luke” Campbell, Elijah Manley, Mark Douglass, Maisha Williams, and Dale Holness — who lost a 2021 special election to Cherfilus-McCormick by just five votes.
Cherfilus-McCormick has sued both Holness and Manley for $1 million for defamation after both candidates publicly implicated her in the crimes she was later charged for by federal prosecutors. Both lawsuits were dropped last year.
Manley, who a February poll showed leading the primary field before Campbell entered the race, issued a statement following Cherfilus-McCormick's resignation.
"Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick did not resign out of conscience. She resigned to avoid being formally expelled from Congress by her own colleagues. She still stole $5 million meant for families recovering from disaster. She still laundered it into a congressional campaign built on a lie. She still faces a 15-count federal indictment and up to 53 years in prison, and that accountability must continue," the statement read.
Manley also called for DeSantis to quickly call a special election before the August primary saying, "Every day without a representative is another day working people in South Florida are pushed aside."
Campbell also released a statement following Cherfilus-McCormick's resignation.
"This moment is bigger than any one individual. It is about the people of this district — and they deserve stability, focus, and leadership that delivers," the statement said.
The district, which includes parts of Broward and Palm Beach counties, is dominated by registered Democratic voters (226,802) over Republican registered voters (64,689). No Party Affiliation, or NPA, voters number 102,845.