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Where Is Bowling Green Florida

Bowling Green, Florida Cities by state

Bowling Green is a city in Hardee County, Florida. The city had 2,405 residents as of 2020, according to the United States Census Bureau.[1]

Federal officials

The current members of the U.S. Senate from Florida are:

Office title Officeholder name Date assumed office Party affiliation

U.S. Senate Florida

Marco Rubio

January 3, 2011

Republican Party

U.S. Senate Florida

Rick Scott

January 3, 2019

Republican Party

To view a map of U.S. House districts in Florida and find your representative, click here.

State officials

The following is a list of the current state executive officials from Florida:

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To view a list of state legislators from Florida, click here.

Ballot measures

See also: List of Florida ballot measures and Hardee County, Florida ballot measures

To view a list of statewide measures in Florida, click here.

To view a list of local ballot measures in Hardee County, Florida, click here.

Local recalls

See also: Laws governing recall in Florida

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Florida allows the following grounds for recall: malfeasance, misfeasance, neglect of duty, drunkenness, incompetence, permanent inability to perform official duties, and conviction of a felony involving moral turpitude.[2]

From the time that the recall petition is approved for circulation, signatures must be collected within 30 days. The number of signatures required depends on the number of registered voters in the jurisdiction. A minimum of 50 signatures are required in jurisdictions with fewer than 500 registered voters. In jurisdictions with 500 to 24,999 registered voters, a minimum of 100 to 1,000 signatures are required, or 10% of registered voters, whichever is higher. In jurisdictions with 25,000 or more registered voters, the number of signatures required is 1,000 or 5% of registered voters, whichever is higher.[3] The officeholder then has a chance to file a defensive statement. In the second round of signature collection, organizers have 60 days to collect signatures equal to 15% of registered voters from the officeholder’s district.[3]

See also

Local Politics Other Florida Content Elections in Florida

City government Local courts School boards Local ballot measures Local recalls

Florida congressional delegation Florida state executives Florida State Legislature Florida statewide ballot measures Florida courts Florida counties Florida cities Florida school boards

Who is on my ballot? U.S. Congress State executives State legislatures State courts Ballot measures Municipal government School boards

Footnotes

State of FloridaTallahassee (capital)Elections

What’s on my ballot? | Elections in 2024 | How to vote | How to run for office | Ballot measures

Government

Who represents me? | U.S. President | U.S. Congress | Federal courts | State executives | State legislature | State and local courts | Counties | Cities | School districts | Public policy

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