Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Anne Gerwig

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician (born 1963)
Anne Gerwig
Member of theFlorida House of Representatives
from the 93rd district
Assumed office
November 5, 2024
Preceded byKatherine Waldron
Mayor ofWellington, Florida
In office
2016–2024
Personal details
Born (1963-12-04)December 4, 1963 (age 61)
Political partyRepublican
SpouseAlan Gerwig
Children3
ResidenceWellington, Florida

Anne Millington Gerwig is an American politician currently serving as state representative for District 93 in theFlorida House of Representatives.[1] She previously served as the 6th mayor ofWellington, Florida.

Personal life

[edit]

Anne Gerwig is married to Alan Gerwig. The pair has three adult children as well as three grandchildren.[2]

She is currently serving as the Director of Client Communications at her husband's engineering firm, Alan Gerwig and Associates, Inc.[3] She is also an active member of the Wellington Chamber of Commerce.

Wellington Village Council (2010 – 2024)

[edit]

Councilwoman (2010 – 2016)

[edit]

Gerwig was initially elected in 2010.[3]

On August 11, 2015, the Village Council voted 4–1 on anLGBT civil rights ordinance.[4] Councilwoman Gerwig was the sole council member to vote against it. After, she was persuaded to support the ordinance during a later vote. That time, it passed unanimously.

Mayor of Wellington (2016 – 2024)

[edit]

One of Anne Gerwig's top priorities as mayor is education. She helped implement a summer internship program for rising seniors to help them become ready for the workforce.[5]

Leading into the4th of July, 2019, the mayor worked withthe Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office on a plan to combat illegal fireworks.[6]

Gerwig was the first Wellington mayor to be re-elected without any opposition.[7]

In 2023, she decided not to seek a third term as mayor. Instead, Gerwig would attempt to run for theFlorida legislature.

Allegations of Elections Code Violations

[edit]

In May 2017, Mayor Gerwig came under investigation for potentially violating the elections code during her Village Council re-election campaign from 2014. She was accused of 12 counts that ranged from miscalculating her spending by 20 cents to omitting two contributions totaling nearly $1000 from her campaign's financial report.[8] She was cleared of any wrongdoing shortly after.[9]

Opposition to Conversion Therapy Ban

[edit]

On June 27, 2017, the Wellington Village Council voted 3–2 to banconversion therapy on minors. Gerwig was one of the two votes against the measure.[10] When asked about the reason for her vote, Gerwig stated that she believed that minors and their guardians should have self-determination.[11] The mayor argued that banning the practice would take this self-determination away.

George Floyd Protests

[edit]

In June 2020, in response tolocal protests following themurder of George Floyd, Mayor Gerwig posted a statement to Facebook.[12]

The mayor expressed skepticism over the protests: "While I understand the point here, it is not entirely accurate. No peaceful protest was organized by the village or the property owner (theMall at Wellington Green). It is highly suspect that a group with good intentions would organize a peaceful protest at a retail establishment after the destruction that happened last night, including out own community. Protest by being kind to your neighbor, giving to a food bank, helping those that need it. Gathering during a pandemic which could endanger everyone to protest something that happened very far from here is not helpful at this time."

In response to her statement, a group of protesters gathered outside of the Wellington Village Hall. Gerwig thanked them for turning out and stated that in the post, she was actually referring to a different group of protesters. She later apologized for her comments.[13]

Bellissimo Controversy

[edit]

In November 2023, the Wellington Village Council met to vote on a plan presented by equestrian entrepreneur Mark Bellissimo.[14] The entrepreneur called his vision "Wellington 3.0". This plan would remove land from Wellington's equestrian preserve in order to make room to build two luxury communities.

During the first reading of the proposal, Gerwig voted in favor alongside council members Michael Drahos, John McGovern and Tanya Siskind.[15] This move drew criticism from some of the village's residents. The Coalition to Protect Wellington began collecting signatures to recall all four council members who voted in favor of the Bellissimo proposal. Gerwig's term ended before any recall proposals could take effect.

Political campaigns

[edit]

2024 Florida House Campaign

[edit]
Main article:2024 Florida House of Representatives election

Anne Gerwig filed to run for District 93 in theFlorida House of Representatives in the2024 Election.[2] The seat was occupied by first-term RepresentativeKatherine Waldron, who was running for re-election. In the Republican primary, she faced off against Brandon Cabrera and Chris Mitchell. Within the first 25 days of filing for the seat, Gerwig raised over $80,000, personally contributing $60,000 of that total.[16]

Some of Gerwig's proposals included establishing a Florida insurance bill of rights, the creation of an insurance fraud task force, and making holiday sales taxes permanent.[17]

The race against Waldron came down to a 358-vote margin, close enough to trigger a recount.[18][19] In the end, Gerwig flipped the seat with 50.19% of the vote.[20]

2026 Florida House Campaign

[edit]
Main article:2026 Florida House of Representatives election

In December 2024, following her 2024 election to the Florida House, Anne Gerwig filed to run for re-election.[21] So far, her only opposition is Democrat August Mangeney, who has raised $36,540 from contributions.[22]

Florida House of Representatives (2025 – Present)

[edit]

2025 Florida legislative session

[edit]

Prior to the 2025 Florida legislative session, Gerwig filed a bill regarding school start times.[23] The state legislature previously passed a law in 2023 that mandated an earliest possible start time for schools across the state; under the bill, middle schools could not begin before 8:00 AM and high schools could not begin before 8:30 AM. The new law was set to go into effect on July 1, 2026. Gerwig's bill would repeal these changes. Gerwig's bill passed both chambers of Congress and was signed byGovernorRon DeSantis.[24]

Additionally, Gerwig filed a bill to annually observe Fentanyl Awareness & Education Day on August 21.[25] The bill unanimously passed both chambers of Congress and was later signed by Governor DeSantis.

Awards

[edit]

In 2021, Gerwig received the Global Statesman Award.[2]

In 2025, the Florida League of Cities awarded Gerwig the 2025 Legislative Appreciation Award.[26]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Anne Gerwig".Florida House of Representatives. RetrievedJanuary 30, 2025.
  2. ^abc"Wellington Mayor Anne Gerwig To Run For State Representative".The Town Crier. June 16, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  3. ^ab"About Mayor Gerwig".The Village of Wellington: A Great Hometown. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  4. ^Joseph, Chris (September 11, 2015)."Wellington Unanimously Passes LGBT-Inclusive Civil Rights Ordinance".New Times Broward-Palm Beach. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  5. ^Marcellus, Kelley (August 2, 2023)."Meet the Women in Seats of Power".Palm Beach Illustrated. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  6. ^Sczesny, Matt (July 3, 2019)."Wellington trying fireworks crackdown".WPTV. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  7. ^Geggis, Anne (June 7, 2023)."Wellington Mayor makes it a 3-person Republican Primary for HD 93 seat".Florida Politics. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  8. ^Lofholm, Andrew (May 15, 2017)."Wellington Mayor Anne Gerwig under investigation for possible election code violations".WPTV. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  9. ^Lofholm, Andrew (May 17, 2017)."Wellington Mayor Anne Gerwig cleared of state agency probe".WPTV. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  10. ^Whitney, Burbank (June 29, 2017)."Mayor talks about opposition of controversial conversion therapy ban".WPBF 25 News. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  11. ^Matt, Morgan (June 28, 2017)."Councilman flips vote, but Wellington bans conversion therapy 3-2".The Palm Beach Post. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  12. ^Wilson, Todd (June 9, 2020)."Protesters confront Wellington mayor about Facebook comments".WPTV. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  13. ^Ryan, Hughes (June 16, 2020)."Wellington Mayor Anne Gerwig apologizes for Facebook comments".WPTV. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  14. ^Palm, Valentina (November 14, 2023)."Decision week in Wellington: Mark Bellissimo's equestrian preserve plan heads to a vote".The Palm Beach Post. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  15. ^Kallergis, Katherine (January 16, 2024)."Wellington coalition seeks ousting of mayor, council over Bellissimo vote".The Real Deal: Real Estate News. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  16. ^Geggis, Anne (July 19, 2023)."Anne Gerwig bets $60K on moving from Wellington Mayor's seat to Tallahassee".Florida Politics. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2024.
  17. ^Scheckner, Jesse (November 8, 2024)."Recount underway in tight HD 93 race between incumbent Democrat Katherine Waldron, GOP challenger Anne Gerwig".Florida Politics. RetrievedNovember 15, 2024.
  18. ^Geggis, Anne (November 7, 2024)."Likely recount in PBC statehouse race doesn't stop House speaker from 'designating' winner".The Palm Beach Post. RetrievedNovember 15, 2024.
  19. ^Iz, John (November 8, 2024)."Close race for Florida House District 93 triggers recount".WPBF 25 News. RetrievedNovember 15, 2024.
  20. ^Manning, Joshua (November 15, 2024)."Gerwig To Represent District 93 After Unseating Waldron".The Town Crier. RetrievedNovember 15, 2024.
  21. ^"Candidate Tracking System - 2026 General Election (Anne Millington Gerwig)".Florida Department of State. RetrievedJuly 17, 2025.
  22. ^Scheckner, Jesse (July 10, 2025)."August Mangeney adds $41K in first 40 days running for HD 93".Florida Politics. RetrievedJuly 17, 2025.
  23. ^"A Florida bill would repeal changes to school start times".WMNF. January 27, 2025. RetrievedJuly 17, 2025.
  24. ^"Governor signs repeal of later school start times".Florida Politics. May 21, 2025. RetrievedJuly 17, 2025.
  25. ^"HB 259 - Special Observances".Florida House of Representatives. RetrievedJuly 17, 2025.
  26. ^"Gerwig Honored With FLC's 2025 Legislative Appreciation Award".The Town-Crier. July 11, 2025. RetrievedJuly 17, 2025.

External links

[edit]
Speaker
Daniel Perez (R)
Speakerpro tempore
Wyman Duggan (R)
Majority Leader
Tyler Sirois (R)
Minority Leader
Fentrice Driskell (D)
  1. Michelle Salzman (R)
  2. Alex Andrade (R)
  3. Nathan Boyles (R)
  4. Patt Maney (R)
  5. Shane Abbott (R)
  6. Philip Griffitts (R)
  7. Jason Shoaf (R)
  8. Gallop Franklin (D)
  9. Allison Tant (D)
  10. Chuck Brannan (R)
  11. Sam Garrison (R)
  12. Wyman Duggan (R)
  13. Angie Nixon (D)
  14. Kimberly Daniels (D)
  15. Dean Black (R)
  16. Kiyan Michael (R)
  17. Jessica Baker (R)
  18. Kim Kendall (R)
  19. Sam Greco (R)
  20. Judson Sapp (R)
  21. Yvonne Hayes Hinson (D)
  22. Chad Johnson (R)
  23. J.J. Grow (R)
  24. Ryan Chamberlin (R)
  25. Taylor Yarkosky (R)
  26. Nan Cobb (R)
  27. Richard Gentry (R)
  28. Bill Parrington (R)
  29. Webster Barnaby (R)
  30. Chase Tramont (R)
  31. Tyler Sirois (R)
  32. Brian Hodgers (R)
  33. Monique Miller (R)
  34. Robbie Brackett (R)
  35. Erika Booth (R)
  36. Rachel Plakon (R)
  37. Susan Plasencia (R)
  38. David Smith (R)
  39. Doug Bankson (R)
  40. RaShon Young (D)
  41. Bruce Antone (D)
  42. Anna V. Eskamani (D)
  43. Johanna López (D)
  44. Rita Harris (D)
  45. Leonard Spencer (D)
  46. Jose Alvarez (D)
  47. Paula Stark (R)
  48. Jon Albert (R)
  49. Jennifer Kincart Jonsson (R)
  50. Jennifer Canady (R)
  51. Josie Tomkow (R)
  52. Vacant
  53. Jeff Holcomb (R)
  54. Randy Maggard (R)
  55. Kevin Steele (R)
  56. Brad Yeager (R)
  57. Adam Anderson (R)
  58. Kim Berfield (R)
  59. Berny Jacques (R)
  60. Lindsay Cross (D)
  61. Linda Chaney (R)
  62. Michele Rayner (D)
  63. Dianne Hart (D)
  64. Susan Valdes (R)
  65. Karen Gonzalez Pittman (R)
  66. Traci Koster (R)
  67. Fentrice Driskell (D)
  68. Lawrence McClure (R)
  69. Danny Alvarez (R)
  70. Michael Owen (R)
  71. Will Robinson (R)
  72. Bill Conerly (R)
  73. Fiona McFarland (R)
  74. James Buchanan (R)
  75. Danny Nix (R)
  76. Vanessa Oliver (R)
  77. Tiffany Esposito (R)
  78. Jenna Persons-Mulicka (R)
  79. Mike Giallombardo (R)
  80. Adam Botana (R)
  81. Yvette Benarroch (R)
  82. Lauren Melo (R)
  83. Kaylee Tuck (R)
  84. Dana Trabulsy (R)
  85. Toby Overdorf (R)
  86. John Snyder (R)
  87. Vacant
  88. Jervonte Edmonds (D)
  89. Debra Tendrich (D)
  90. Vacant
  91. Peggy Gossett-Seidman (R)
  92. Kelly Skidmore (D)
  93. Anne Gerwig (R)
  94. Meg Weinberger (R)
  95. Christine Hunschofsky (D)
  96. Dan Daley (D)
  97. Lisa Dunkley (D)
  98. Patricia Hawkins-Williams (D)
  99. Daryl Campbell (D)
  100. Chip LaMarca (R)
  101. Hillary Cassel (R)
  102. Michael Gottlieb (D)
  103. Robin Bartleman (D)
  104. Felicia Robinson (D)
  105. Marie Woodson (D)
  106. Fabián Basabe (R)
  107. Wallace Aristide (D)
  108. Dotie Joseph (D)
  109. Ashley Gantt (D)
  110. Tom Fabricio (R)
  111. David Borrero (R)
  112. Alex Rizo (R)
  113. Vicki Lopez (R)
  114. Demi Busatta (R)
  115. Omar Blanco (R)
  116. Daniel Perez (R)
  117. Kevin Chambliss (D)
  118. Mike Redondo (R)
  119. Juan Carlos Porras (R)
  120. Jim Mooney (R)
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anne_Gerwig&oldid=1317221469"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp