Ben Albritton — Florida Senate President Who Ratified DeSantis’s 24-4 Congressional Map
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Ben Albritton — Florida Senate President Who Ratified DeSantis’s 24-4 Congressional Map

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Ben Albritton — Florida Senate President Who Ratified DeSantis’s 24-4 Congressional Map

Who Is Ben Albritton?

Ben Albritton (born August 17, Lakeland, Florida) is the President of the Florida State Senate, representing Senate District 27 (Hardee, DeSoto, and portions of Polk and Charlotte counties in central Florida). He attended Florida Southern College, earning a B.S. in Business/Citrus in 1990, and has operated as an agribusiness owner in Wauchula throughout his career. An elder at First Christian Church of Wauchula, Albritton was elected to the Florida House in 2010 and to the Florida Senate in 2018, where he became Majority Leader before assuming the Senate Presidency.

Albritton’s district is in the heart of Florida’s traditional agricultural belt — a world removed geographically and culturally from the South Florida minority communities whose congressional representation was altered by the redistricting he approved. That distance may explain the ease with which he deferred to DeSantis’s map.

The Senate’s Role in the 2026 Redistricting

Albritton’s role in Florida’s 2026 redistricting parallels Speaker Daniel Perez’s in the House: he was the legislative leader who ensured the Senate would ratify the governor’s map without independent scrutiny.

Key documented actions:

  • April 24, 2026 — Three days before DeSantis released his map, Albritton confirmed his office was “awaiting a communication from the Governor’s Office regarding congressional redistricting” and that Senator Donald Gaetz would “file the Governor’s map as Senate Bill 8D”
  • This statement confirmed the Senate’s posture: it was waiting to receive and file a map it had not drawn and had not yet reviewed
  • The Redistricting Foundation complaint characterized the legislature as collectively “determined to lend its imprimatur to whatever map the Governor and his team drew”
  • April 29, 2026 — The Florida Senate voted to approve DeSantis’s 24-4 map two days after seeing it; Albritton presided

This timeline — announcement April 27, approval April 29 — gave the Senate approximately 48 hours to review and vote on a redistricting plan that would reshape Florida’s congressional delegation for years.

What Was Approved

The 24-4 map that Albritton’s Senate approved targets four Democratic incumbents (Castor, Soto, Frankel, Wasserman Schultz), threatens Jared Moskowitz, and alters the boundaries of the majority-Black FL-20 district in South Florida. See the daniel-perez-profile for full map details.

Context for Non-Florida Readers

Why the Senate president matters: In Florida’s legislative structure, the Senate president controls committee assignments, the budget process, floor scheduling, and the chamber’s relationship with the executive branch. When Albritton signaled the Senate would ratify whatever DeSantis produced, he effectively removed the Senate as an independent check on executive redistricting power.

Florida’s Fair Districts Amendment: Florida voters in 2010 passed the Fair Districts Amendment with 63% of the vote, prohibiting maps drawn to favor a party or incumbent, or to diminish minority representation. By approving DeSantis’s map, Albritton’s Senate overrode a constitutional voter mandate.

Agribusiness perspective: Albritton’s background is citrus farming and agriculture in rural central Florida — a constituency with no demographic or economic connection to the urban and suburban minority communities whose representation was altered by the maps he approved. His Senate district has no majority-minority communities affected by the redistricting.

Impact on Voters

Directly affected voters are the same as those described in the Perez profile: Tampa, Orlando, and South Florida minority communities whose congressional districts are being dismantled.

Additionally affected: Every Florida voter who cast a vote for the Fair Districts Amendment in 2010 has that constitutional protection overridden by Albritton’s Senate. The Senate had the power to insist on map-drawing that respected the Fair Districts Amendment — and chose not to exercise it.

Rural Florida voters: Albritton’s constituents in Hardee, DeSoto, and rural Polk counties are represented by a Senate president who prioritized DeSantis’s national political objectives over independent legislative scrutiny. His constituents may not be the targets of this redistricting — but they are also not served by a Senate president who has abrogated the chamber’s independent role.

National Electoral Implications

Florida’s role in the national redistricting campaign:

  • +4 potential Republican House seats — the second largest state contribution after Texas
  • Albritton’s Senate guaranteed the Florida piece of the campaign would pass, without independent review, in 48 hours
  • A 24-4 Republican Florida delegation would give Republicans from one of the nation’s largest states a near-supermajority within the House Republican caucus
  • Combined with other states: a potential 12–14 seat national Republican gain, creating a durable House majority through 2028

Legal Record

Albritton is named as a defendant in the Redistricting Foundation lawsuit and related federal challenges:

  • His April 24 statement confirming the Senate would “file the Governor’s map” is documented evidence of the legislature’s deference to the executive
  • Courts examining the separation of powers in redistricting will find Florida’s governor-draws / legislature-ratifies model a critical case study

Truth and Reconciliation Relevance

Ben Albritton represents the Senate institutional counterpart to Daniel Perez’s House role: two legislative leaders who presided over the formal abdication of legislative independence in the redistricting process.

His specific accountability contribution:

  1. Announced the Senate’s deference to the governor before the map was even released
  2. Ensured a 48-hour legislative process for a decade-defining redistricting decision
  3. Approved a map that contradicts a 63%-supermajority voter constitutional mandate
  4. Named as a defendant in litigation that will test whether the governor-draws / legislature-ratifies model survives constitutional scrutiny

A future TRC examining Florida’s institutions will find that both chambers of the legislature — under Perez and Albritton — functioned as extensions of the executive rather than independent democratic bodies during the 2026 redistricting.

For Trump Supporters: Questions Worth Considering

Ben Albritton, as Florida Senate President, confirmed his chamber was “awaiting a communication from the Governor’s Office regarding congressional redistricting” three days before DeSantis released his map — meaning the Senate announced it would file whatever the governor produced before it had even seen the map. The Senate then approved the 24-4 map two days after receiving it. Florida voters passed the Fair Districts Amendment in 2010 with 63% support, specifically to prohibit maps drawn to favor a political party. Albritton presided over the chamber that approved a map challenged as violating exactly that constitutional protection. He is named as a defendant in the Redistricting Foundation lawsuit.

Here’s a question worth sitting with: In 2010, 63% of Florida voters — a supermajority that almost certainly included a substantial portion of Republican voters — amended the state constitution to specifically prohibit maps drawn to favor a political party. They wrote that rule directly into the Florida Constitution. Albritton’s Senate approved a map that critics say violates exactly that constitutional mandate, in a 48-hour process where the Senate announced its deference before it had even read the map. Those 2010 voters voted to tie the hands of future legislatures on this specific issue. What does it mean for constitutional self-governance when a legislative chamber approves a map over the objection of a constitutional amendment the voters themselves passed?

A second question about the institutional structure: Albritton’s Senate didn’t draw a map — it ratified a map the governor drew. That’s a reversal of the normal constitutional order in most states, where the legislature draws maps and the governor may sign or veto them. In Florida’s 2026 process, the executive drew the maps and the legislature approved them in 48 hours. That collapse of legislative independence — a chamber whose leader announced it would approve whatever the executive produced — has implications beyond this specific redistricting. If you believe the legislature is supposed to be an independent check on executive power, what does this institutional abdication tell you about Florida’s separation of powers?

Key Sources

  • Redistricting Foundation lawsuit complaint (May 2026) — Albritton named as defendant; direct quotes about “awaiting Governor’s map”
  • Ballotpedia: “Redistricting in Florida ahead of the 2026 elections”
  • Florida Politics: 2026 redistricting coverage
  • Ben Albritton official bio (benalbritton.com)
  • LobbyTools legislator profile — career background, religious affiliations, education
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