Florida Attorney General

{{Short description|Chief legal officer of Florida}}

{{Infobox official post

| post = Attorney General

| body = Florida

| insignia = Office of the Attorney General, State of Florida official seal (cropped).png

| insigniasize = 120px

| insigniacaption = Seal of the attorney general of Florida

| image = Official portrait of Attorney General James Uthmeier, 2025 (cropped).jpg

| incumbent = James Uthmeier

| department = Department of Legal Affairs

| style = The Honorable

| incumbentsince = February 17, 2025

| termlength = Four years, renewable once

| formation = 1845

| inaugural = Joseph Branch

| website = {{Official}}

| seat = Tallahassee, Florida

| appointer = Popular vote

| type = Chief legal officer

| constituting_instrument = Constitution of Florida

| succession = Second

| member_of = Florida Executive Branch
Florida Cabinet

}}

The Florida attorney general is an elected cabinet official in the U.S. state of Florida. The attorney general serves as the chief legal officer of the state, and is head of the Florida Department of Legal Affairs.

The office is one of Florida's three elected state cabinet posts, along with the chief financial officer and agriculture commissioner. The office is held by James Uthmeier, who was appointed by Governor Ron DeSantis following the resignation of Ashley Moody to become a United States Senator. {{Cite web |last=Caputo |first=Liv |date=2025-01-16 |title=DeSantis' Chief of Staff James Uthmeier to be the Next Florida Attorney General |url=https://floridianpress.com/2025/01/desantis-chief-of-staff-james-uthmeier-to-be-the-next-florida-attorney-general/ |access-date=2025-01-27 |website=The Floridian |language=en-US}}

Qualifications and Term of Office

Article IV, Section 4, of the Constitution of Florida establishes the cabinet and the position of the attorney general. As with other elected statewide offices in Florida, the attorney general is limited to serving two consecutive four-year terms.[http://www.leg.state.fl.us/Statutes/index.cfm?Mode=Constitution&Submenu=3&Tab=statutes&CFID=143655674&CFTOKEN=1197218eac43d116-98C82042-9348-4132-9E088286BC4CD50A#A6S04 Fla. Const. art. VI, § 4] The attorney general must meet the following qualifications to be eligible for the office:

  • A registered elector;
  • Not be less than 30 years old;
  • Have resided in the State for the preceding 7 years; and
  • Have been a member of the Florida Bar for 5 years.

The attorney general is second (behind the lieutenant governor) in the line of succession to the office of Governor of Florida.{{cite web|url=http://www.leg.state.fl.us/Statutes/index.cfm?Mode=Constitution&Submenu=3&Tab=statutes#A4S03|title=Constitution of Florida: Article IV, Section 3|work=Florida Legislature|access-date=August 22, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081208105533/http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?mode=constitution&submenu=3&tab=statutes#A4S03|archive-date=December 8, 2008|url-status=dead}}{{cite web|url=https://www.lawserver.com/law/state/florida/statutes/florida_statutes_14-055|title=Florida Statutes 14.055|work=Law Server|access-date=August 22, 2019}}

= Removal from office =

The Florida attorney general can be impeached for committing a "misdemeanor in office" by the State House of Representatives, and then convicted and thereby removed from office by a two-thirds vote of the State Senate.[http://www.leg.state.fl.us/Statutes/index.cfm?Mode=Constitution&Submenu=3&Tab=statutes&CFID=143655674&CFTOKEN=1197218eac43d116-98C82042-9348-4132-9E088286BC4CD50A#A3S17 Fla. Const. art. III, § 17]

Powers and duties

Title IV, Chapter 16 of the Florida statutes establish the general duties of the office. The general duties of the attorney general are as follows:{{Cite web |title=FL Stat § 16.01 (2023) |url=https://law.justia.com/codes/florida/2023/title-iv/chapter-16/section-16-01/ |access-date=2025-01-29 |website=Justia Law |language=en}}

  • Issue official opinions on any question of law when requested in writing by a state officers or legislator;
  • Appear on behalf of the State in any civil suit or criminal prosecution, and in the Supreme Court of Florida and its appellate courts;
  • Act as co-counsel of record in capital collateral proceedings;
  • Other duties incident or usual to the office; and
  • Request the opinion of the justices of the supreme court as to the validity of any initiative petition circulated pursuant to Section 3 of Article XI of the Florida constitution.

The Florida solicitor general is appointed by and serves at the pleasure of the attorney general. The current solicitor is Henry C. Whitaker.{{Cite web |title=Florida Attorney General - Solicitor General |url=http://www.myfloridalegal.com/pages.nsf/Main/D0B34FAEB8C543B285256CC60079E42A |access-date=2023-04-08 |website=www.myfloridalegal.com}}

List of Florida attorneys general

class=wikitable style="float:right;margin:0 0 0.5em 1em;"

|+Attorneys general by party affiliation

! colspan=2 | Party

! Attorneys general

{{party shading/Democratic}}

| colspan=2 | Democratic

|align=right| 27

{{party shading/Republican}}

| colspan=2 | Republican

| align=right | 11

{{party shading/Whig}}

| colspan=2 | Whig

| align=right | 1

class="wikitable sortable"

! #

! Image

! Name

! Term of service

! Political party

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|1

|60px

|Joseph Branch

|1845–1846

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|2

|60px

|Augustus Maxwell

|1846–1848

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|3

|60px

|James T. Archer

|1848

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Whig}}

|4

|60px

|David P. Hogue

|1848–1853

|Whig

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|5

|60px

|Mariano D. Papy

|1853–1861

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|6

|60px

|John B. Galbraith

|1861–1868

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|7

|60px

|James Westcott III

|1868

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|8

|

|A. R. Meek

|1868–1870

|Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|9

|

|Sherman Conant

|1870–1871

|Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|10

|60px

|J. B. C. Drew

|1871–1872

|Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|11

|60px

|Horatio Bisbee Jr.

|1872

|Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|12

|

|J. P. C. Emmons

|1872–1873

|Republican

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|13

|60px

|William A. Cocke

|1873–1877

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|14

|60px

|George P. Raney

|1877–1885

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|15

|60px

|Charles Merian Cooper

|1885–1889

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|16

|60px

|William Bailey Lamar

|1889–1903

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|17

|60px

|James B. Whitfield

|1903–1904

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|18

|60px

|W. H. Ellis

|1904–1909

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|19

|60px

|Park Trammell

|1909–1913

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|20

|60px

|Thomas F. West

|1913–1917

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|21

|60px

|Van C. Swearingen

|1917–1921

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|22

|60px

|Rivers Buford

|1921–1925

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|23

|60px

|J. B. Johnson

|1925–1927

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|24

|60px

|Fred Henry Davis

|1927–1931

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|25

|60px

|Cary D. Landis

|1931–1938

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|26

|60px

|George Couper Gibbs

|1938–1941

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|27

|60px

|J. Thomas Watson

|1941–1949

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|28

|60px

|Richard Ervin

|1949–1964

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|29

|60px

|James W. Kynes

|1964–1965

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|30

|60px

|Earl Faircloth

|1965–1971

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|31

|60px

|Robert L. Shevin

|1971–1979

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|32

|60px

|James C. Smith

|1979–1987

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Democratic}}

|33

|60px

|Bob Butterworth

|1987–2002

|Democratic

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|34

|60px

|Richard E. Doran

|2002–2003

|Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|35

|60px

|Charlie Crist

|2003–2007

|Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|36

|60px

|Bill McCollum

|2007–2011

|Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|37

|60px

|Pam Bondi

|2011–2019

|Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|38

|60px

|Ashley Moody

|2019–2025

|Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

| --

|

| John Guard
{{small|Acting}}

| 2025

| Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

|39

|60px

|James Uthmeier

|2025-present

|Republican

{{Party shading/Republican}}

See also

References

{{reflist}}