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The Space Coast Rocket invited every qualified 2026 candidate to complete the same questionnaire. The responses below are published exactly as the candidate submitted them, unedited.
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Political, civic, or community experience
Young Democrats of Indian River treasurer for 2 years then Secretary, Florida Young Democrats and Young Democrats of America Delegate, voter registration volunteer, volunteer vote by mail canvasser and phone banker for the coordinated campaign, democratic precinct captain in precinct 16, paid and volunteer petitioning , protest organizer and safety volunteer/counter
1. Why are you running?
I am running because I am tired of watching politicians who have never missed a meal decide who deserves help and who does not. I am running on the basic idea that the people who represent working families should actually be one
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2. What are your top three priorities if elected?
Protecting Home Rule: I believe that counties and cities should be able to make their own decisions about whats best for the community, not suits in Tallahassee. I would oppose blanket preemption bills, like the ones authored by Robert Brackett, that strip power from counties and cities trying to protect their residents, especially around growth management, environmental protections, and tenant rights.
I also believe that places like Gifford should have a path to incorperate and represent themselves, so I would sponsor a referendum to do just that.
Securing housing that lets local workers stay without causing unreasonable growth:
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I would prioritize restoring and reusing vacant and abandoned properties for affordable homes instead of rubber-stamping high-rent megacomplexes that drive uncontrolled growth.
Protect and expand truly affordable options, including workforce housing, so that the people who keep this county running can actually afford to live in it.
Restoring and protecting the Lagoon:
I would expand state investment in lagoon restoration through innovative, proven solutions: mangrove planting, living shorelines, and stormwater infrastructure that treats the problem at its source rather than downstream. I would also use existing state appropriations to fund septic-to-sewer conversions so that the cost falls on the state budget, not on individual homeowners who had no say in the system that was installed before they moved in.
3. What is the single biggest problem facing the people this office serves, and how would you address it?
The cost of living, the cost of everyday goods and services like Septic to sewer. I would address it by letting local govnment made up of the community decide what’s best for the community and insure state funds are made more available to the community so working family’s don’t bare the cost of our lack luster infrastructure finally being upgraded.
4. How will you keep constituents informed and involved in your decisions?
In person town halls in all parts of my district
Sending out monthly newsletters detailing all the work I’m doing to my constituents
Social media posts detailing present and future plans so the community can weigh in.
Phone banking to reach out and inform
5. Why are you a better choice than your opponents?
I come from a working family and I’m a local worker I feel the rise in costs when I go to the grocery store my worry isn’t how much I can fit in my cart but if I can put anything in my cart I feel the weight of prices in my wallet and health. I have actually lived my fight.
6. Is there anything in your past you’d like to address up front, in your own words?
No
7. Anything else you’d like voters to know?
If you would like more info for my campaign and a brief look at my policies/bio go to Jordynforfl.com
We don’t need anymore politicians in office we need activist and neighbors who fight and understand the struggles in their area because they live it.
Connect
Website: jordynforfl.com · Facebook: Facebook · Instagram: @jordynforfl
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