Lawmakers approved FSU Election Law Center, but funding vanishes for 2025-26
As Florida State's College of Law is finding out, the Legislature gives – and the Legislature takes away.
Even though lawmakers preliminarily approved funding for the Election Law Center at Florida State University to be codified in statute, the organization won't be receiving any money in the state budget for 2025-26.
The House of Representatives originally set aside $950,000 for the center, but the Senate left it totally unfunded. As budget talks near to a close, the House adopted the Senate's position, and now the center is left without state money for next fiscal year. The state's budget year runs July 1-June 30.
"We are grateful to the Florida Legislature for passing the first part of the bill that puts the Election Law Center in statute, and we are hopeful it will pave the way for future funding," said Suzi Baugh, communications director for the College of Law. How the center will be funded going forward was not immediately clear.
As previously reported, a bill on the "Florida State University Election Law Center" (SB 892), sponsored by Sen. Corey Simon, R-Tallahassee, allowed the center to be funded directly by the state. It was a way to make sure the center got recurrent state funding and remain in existence indefinitely.
"The bill provides that the center will be funded through appropriations in the General Appropriations Act, charitable donations and grants, and other university funds," a staff analysis said.
The FSU Election Law Center – spearheaded by law professor Michael Morley – conducts nonpartisan research to provide evidence-based analyses of issues in election laws, which govern the way elections are conducted.
The center also helps FSU law students understand how to enhance the public's understanding of the electoral system. It also offers the student learners scholarships, externships and research fellowships to support careers in election law – a field that includes topics such as political spending, voting rights, ballot propositions, redistricting, gerrymandering and campaign finance.
The center opened in 2023 and received a nonrecurring appropriation of $1 million that year.
While Simon's bill passed unanimously in the House and Senate, it has not yet been sent to Gov. Ron DeSantis' desk for signature.
Ana Goñi-Lessan, state watchdog reporter for the USA TODAY Network – Florida, can be reached at agonilessan@gannett.com.
This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: Florida Legislature backed FSU Election Law Center—just not with cash
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Starmer confident Trump will back Aukus pact after US launches review
Sir Keir Starmer said he is confident Donald Trump will back a nuclear submarine pact with the UK and Australia after America launched a review of the multibillion-pound deal. Speaking to reporters ahead of the G7 summit in Canada, the Prime Minister said he did not have 'any doubt' that the agreement would progress. The trilateral Aukus partnership, believed to be aimed at countering China, involves building a new fleet of nuclear-powered attack submarines and co-operating in other areas of defence. Australia would also get its first subs from the US under the deal. Asked what his message to the US president would be on the importance of the pact, Sir Keir, who is due to meet Mr Trump in Kananaskis next week, said: 'Aukus is really important. We're fully committed to it.' Sir Keir added it was 'not unusual for an incoming government to do a review of a project like that', and that Labour had done similar. 'We, of course, looked into the issue when we came into government.. But I'm 100% committed to it. I'm really clear about that.' Asked if he was confident Mr Trump would back it, he said: 'Yeah, I think so. It's a really important project. So I don't have any doubt that this will progress.' Confirming the review on Thursday, the White House said it wanted to make sure the pact was 'aligned with the president's America First agenda.'

Associated Press
39 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Photos of anti-Trump ‘No Kings' demonstrations across the US
Demonstrators gathered in parks and plazas across the U.S. to protest against President Donald Trump. The 'No Kings' rallies were organized in nearly 2,000 locations nationwide, including cities, towns, and community spaces. These protests followed recent unrest over federal immigration raids and Trump's deployment of the National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles, where tensions escalated with protesters blocking a freeway and setting vehicles on fire. ___ This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.
Yahoo
41 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Senator Involved In DHS Dust-Up: Imagine What's Happening To Normal People If This Happened To Me
Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) has some questions in the wake of his scuffle at Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's Los Angeles press conference on Thursday. Padilla was pushed out of the room and then detained after trying to confront Noem about the aggressive uptick in ICE raids currently sweeping across Southern California as she addressed reporters. And during a Sunday appearance on CNN's 'State of the Union,' he wondered how authorities are treating everyday people if they were willing to manhandle and handcuff a sitting senator in full view of cameras. 'If that's how they treat a senator trying to ask a question ―' he told Dana Bash. 'Then imagine, not what they can do, what they are doing to so many people without titles.' While DHS claims Padilla 'lunged' at the secretary, none of the footage from the incident appears to show that happening. During his appearance on 'State of the Union,' the senator also shut down DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin's suggestion that he was trying 'to manufacture a viral moment' during Thursday's event. Telling Bash how he was 'escorted' into the room by a National Guard member and an FBI agent while already at the federal building for a separate briefing, Padilla said, 'It was an opportunity to ask a question and do my job as a senator, do my job as a senator in questioning the cabinet secretary.' Watch the senator's full appearance on 'State of the Union' here: Democrats Push Republicans For Kristi Noem Testimony On Alex Padilla Incident GOP Strategist Warns Republicans Alex Padilla Incident Sets 'Dangerous Precedent' Sen. Alex Padilla Manhandled, Handcuffed, Forcibly Removed From Kristi Noem Presser