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  2. Voter Guide for Florida Appellate Court District 5

    bluevoterguide.org/district/FL/Florida_Appellate_Court...

    Voter Guide for Florida Appellate Court District 5 FL: General Election on November 5th 2024. Actual ballot may show races in a different order. Blue Voter Guide helps you make quick, informed, pro-democracy choices of candidates and propositions by showing what's on your ballot, with endorsements from trusted, forward-looking organizations.

  3. Judicial Voter Guide Recommendations - Florida Votes Values

    www.flvotesvalues.com/voter-guides/judicial-voter-guide...

    Judicial Voter Guide and Recommendations. Of all the branches of government, the judicial branch has done the most damage to the constitution, life, and the rule of law. In Florida though, voters have the right to kick judicial activists out of office when their retention vote comes up.

  4. Voter Guide for Florida Appellate Court District 2 FL ...

    bluevoterguide.org/district/FL/Florida_Appellate_Court...

    Susan Rothstein-Youakim. Received a NO endorsement from conservative Florida Family Action, the advocacy and lobbying arm of Florida Family Policy Council, which claims credit for defunding Planned Parenthood and forcing the state board of education to teach students evolution is merely a theory, not a fact. At the same time, Judge Voter Guide ...

  5. The Vote’s in YOUR COURTThe Florida Bar

    www.floridabar.org/public/faircts/votes010

    It includes answers to frequently asked questions about judicial and merit retention elections, judicial candidate voluntary self-disclosure statements, and information about District Court of Appeals judges and Florida Supreme Court justices up for merit retention. 2024 Election Dates. Primary: Aug. 20, 2024; General: Nov. 5, 2024

  6. Florida District Courts of Appeal - Ballotpedia

    ballotpedia.org/Florida_District_Courts_of_Appeal

    The Florida District Courts of Appeal (DCAs) are the intermediate appellate courts in Florida. There are six districts, each encompassing multiple counties. The courts were established in 1957. This marked the first intermediate appellate courts in the state.

  7. The Florida Bar launches ‘The Vote’s In Your Court’ website ...

    www.floridabar.org/the-florida-bar-news/the-florida-bar...

    This year, Supreme Court Justices Renatha Francis and Meredith Sasso and 23 district court of appeal judges have qualified for merit retention on the November 5 general election ballot. Key features of the updated Bar resources include: Commonly asked questions about Florida merit retention.

  8. Your guide to the 2022 Florida judicial retentions - WUSF

    www.wusf.org/politics-issues/2022-11-02/your-guide-to-the...

    Here's what you need to know ahead of the 2022 general election for the Florida Supreme Court, appointed judges, and appeals court judges. Voters don’t pick Florida Supreme Court and appellate judges, but they can fire them through a nonpartisan “merit retention vote” in the November general election. Lower-level county court and circuit ...

  9. Florida Bar offers voters guide for judges on ballot for ...

    www.palmbeachpost.com/story/news/politics/elections/2022/...

    Seven judges on the West Palm Beach-based 4th District Court of Appeal and five on the Florida Supreme Court face merit retention votes Tuesday.

  10. Florida Voter Guide

    files.floridados.gov/media/705796/final-voterregvoting...

    The FWAB is available online at fvap.gov as an online assisted request or a document download. To use a FWAB in Florida, you must first be a registered voter and have already submitted a request for a regular Vote-by-Mail Ballot. The FWAB ballot can be used to vote in any federal, state, or local races.

  11. IDE OR LOIDA OTES - The Florida Bar

    www-media.floridabar.org/uploads/2022/06/Voter-Guide-2022...

    A.Florida law requires Florida Supreme Court justices and appeals court judges to be placed on the ballot in nonpartisan elections every six years so voters can determine whether they should remain on their courts for another six-year term. These are called “merit retention” elections. This year, five Supreme Court justices and 28 appeals