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Florida lawmakers set to not have budget done by Day 60 as $1.4B gap remains

  • March 10, 2026

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (WCTV/Gray Florida Capital Bureau) – Florida lawmakers will not pass a state budget by Friday’s scheduled end of the legislative session, House Speaker Daniel Perez confirmed, as the House and Senate remain $1.4 billion apart on their competing proposals.

“It is abundantly clear to all of you, we will not complete the 2026–2027 state budget by the end of this week,” Perez said.

For the budget to receive a final vote by Friday, it needed to be ready for passage by the end of Tuesday. The two chambers have not yet entered conference committee negotiations, which cannot begin until the $1.4 billion gap between their proposals is closed.

Senate President Ben Albritton has not been available to the press. Appropriations Chair Ed Hooper said a week ago that the Senate had sent several offers to the House, each of which was rejected.

Perez said the disagreement goes beyond the overall spending figure.

“We have a fundamental disagreement on what the budget should look like,” Perez said. “I don’t think I’m very flexible on spending more money. It’s not just about the overall number. It’s also about how it’s spent.”

Florida Politics

House Minority Leader Fentrice Driskell blamed Republicans for the impasse, saying affordability issues are being left unresolved.

“Republicans control the House, they control the Senate, they control the governor’s office, and yet they can’t stop fighting long enough to do anything serious to tackle the affordability crisis that Floridians are struggling with every day,” Driskell said.

Rep. Kelly Skidmore, D-Boca Raton, said the situation is unlike anything she has seen.

“We have one constitutional requirement, and that is to pass a balanced budget. And I know we’ll get there. I just don’t know when,” Skidmore said.

Last year’s session was one of the longest in recent Florida history, lasting 105 days after multiple extensions. This year, lawmakers began the session in January, ahead of the July 1 start of the new fiscal year.

Lawmakers are already scheduled to return to Tallahassee in April for a special session on congressional redistricting. It remains unclear whether budget negotiations could be added to that session.

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