Republican Lt. Gov. Jay Collins formally entered Floridas 2026 gubernatorial race on Monday, positioning himself as the heir to Gov. Ron DeSantis conservative legacy and setting up a high-stakes intra-party showdown in the nations largest red state.
Collins, a state senator and decorated Army Green Beret, announced his bid in a post on X, emphasizing his combat-tested background and framing the governors office as an extension of his service to the country. According to the Daily Caller, his launch comes as DeSantis nears the end of his second and final term next year, leaving Tallahassees top job open and intensifying speculation over whom the governor will ultimately back as his successor.
DeSantis appointed Collins lieutenant governor in August to replace Jeanette Nuez after she resigned to become President of Florida International University, a move widely viewed by conservatives as a signal that Collins was being groomed for higher office. In his announcement, Collins leaned heavily into his military record and ethos, declaring,
Im running for Governor because leadership is forged under pressure, not in soundbites. I served over 23 years in the United States military, mainly as a Green Beret, where accountability is real, decisions have consequences, and service comes before self. That experience shaped how I lead and why I believe public office is a public trust, Collins wrote.
His entry follows months of mounting speculation over when he would step into a Republican primary field already reshaped by President Donald Trumps endorsement of Republican Rep. Byron Donalds. Trumps backing has given Donalds an early edge and underscored the ongoing tug-of-war inside the GOP between Trump-aligned populists and institutional conservatives who see DeSantis policy record as the model for Floridas future.
While Donalds appears to be in a strong position at this stage, political observers note that the real drama is unfolding in Tallahassee, where DeSantis has remained conspicuously silent about his preferred successor. Speculation has intensified that Collins, elevated to the lieutenant governors office by DeSantis, could enter the race with the governors blessing, potentially turning the contest into a proxy battle over the direction of Floridas conservative movement.
The Sunshine State now appears poised for a second major Republican civil war in less than three years, following DeSantis own challenge to Trump in the 2024 presidential primary. For many grassroots conservatives, the looming clash is not merely about personalities but about whether Florida will continue the aggressive, limited-government, culture-war agenda that has defined DeSantis tenure or pivot toward a more Trump-centric brand of populism under Donalds.
Polling suggests Donalds currently holds the upper hand, but the race remains fluid and far from settled. A Fabrizio, Lee & Associates survey of 600 likely Republican primary voters conducted Jan. 46 found Donalds leading a hypothetical four-way contest with 39%, followed by Florida First Lady Casey DeSantis at 26%, while James Fishback and former state House Speaker Paul Renner trailed in the low single digits and nearly a third of voters remained undecided.
In a separate four-way scenario that replaced Casey DeSantis with Collins, Donalds advantage widened considerably, underscoring both his current strength and Collins need to build name recognition statewide. In that matchup, Donalds drew 45% support, while Collins, Fishback, and Renner each registered only single-digit backing, suggesting that any DeSantis-aligned alternative would require a sustained campaign and clear endorsement to consolidate the conservative base.
The prospect of Collins entering the race has sharpened attention on DeSantis eventual endorsement and whether it will be guided more by ideological alignment and strategic calculation than by personal relationships. The Daily Caller has previously reported that tensions between the governor and Donalds have not fully healed, with some insiders arguing that if DeSantis refuses to back Donalds, it would signal his determination to chart an independent political course rather than simply defer to Trumps preferences.
Strains between Donalds and DeSantis first surfaced publicly in 2023 during a dispute over Floridas African American history standards, where Donalds broke with the administrations position. Those divisions deepened when Donalds endorsed Trump in the 2024 presidential race, a move he has acknowledged damaged his relationship with DeSantis and that many conservatives interpreted as a clear choice of Trump over the governors policy-driven conservatism.
Those tensions only grew as Donalds emerged as the early frontrunner in the governors race after Trump not only endorsed him but personally encouraged him to run in February. Donalds acted on that encouragement within days, quickly consolidating support among Trump loyalists and putting pressure on DeSantis-world to decide whether and how to respond.
Several sources say the unfolding dynamics could produce yet another proxy confrontation reminiscent of the earlier DeSantisTrump clashes, with Florida once again serving as the stage for a broader ideological struggle inside the GOP. They note that DeSantis has repeatedly signaled an interest in shaping his own succession and has publicly raised doubts about whether Donalds would be his preferred choice to carry forward the states conservative reforms.
Insiders suggest that any serious challenge to Donalds from the DeSantis camp would almost certainly come from Collins, who has delayed his formal gubernatorial launch while working behind the scenes to secure the governors endorsement. Many expected Collins to enter the race last fall, but a sluggish fundraising environment and uncertainty over DeSantis backing pushed his announcement back for months, even as conservative donors weighed whether to line up behind a DeSantis-aligned candidate.
Those close to Collins, however, dismiss talk that the endorsement is at risk, pointing to DeSantis recent joint teletown halls with the lieutenant governor as evidence of continued confidence in his leadership. At the same time, Fishback has quietly entered the race, siphoning off some anti-Donalds sentiment and adding another wrinkle to a contest that will test whether Florida Republicans prefer Trumps chosen candidate or a successor more closely tied to DeSantis record of conservative governance.
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