Anne GerwigAnne Millington Gerwig is a Representative for District 93 in the Florida House of Representatives. She previously served as the 6th mayor of Wellington, Florida.
Personal lifeAnne Gerwig is married to Alan Gerwig. The pair has three adult children as well as three grandchildren.[1] She is currently serving as the Director of Client Communications at her husband's engineering firm, Alan Gerwig and Associates, Inc.[2] She is also an active member of the Wellington Chamber of Commerce. Wellington Village Council (2010 – Present)Councilwoman (2010 – 2016)Gerwig was initially elected in 2010.[2] On August 11, 2015, the Village Council voted 4–1 on an LGBT civil rights ordinance.[3] 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)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.[4] Leading into the 4th of July, 2019, the mayor worked with the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office on a plan to combat illegal fireworks.[5] Gerwig was the first Wellington mayor to be re-elected without any opposition.[6] In 2023, she decided not to seek a third term as mayor. Instead, Gerwig would attempt to run for the Florida legislature. Allegations of Elections Code ViolationsIn 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.[7] She was cleared of any wrongdoing shortly after.[8] Opposition to Conversion Therapy BanOn June 27, 2017, the Wellington Village Council voted 3–2 to ban conversion therapy on minors. Gerwig was one of the two votes against the measure.[9] When asked about the reason for her vote, Gerwig stated that she believed that minors and their guardians should have self-determination.[10] The mayor argued that banning the practice would take this self-determination away. George Floyd ProtestsIn June 2020, in response to local protests regarding George Floyd's death, Mayor Gerwig posted a statement to Facebook.[11]
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.[12] Bellissimo ControversyIn November 2023, the Wellington Village Council met to vote on a plan presented by equestrian entrepreneur Mark Bellissimo.[13] 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.[14] 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. Mayor Gerwig's term will end before any recall proposals can take effect. 2024 Florida House CampaignAnne Gerwig filed to run for District 93 in the Florida House of Representatives in the 2024 Election.[1] The seat was occupied by first-term Representative Katherine 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.[15] 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.[16] The race against Waldron came down to a 358-vote margin, close enough to trigger a recount.[17][18] In the end, Gerwig flipped the seat with 50.19% of the vote.[19] AwardsIn 2021, Gerwig received the Global Statesman Award.[1] External LinksReferences
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