Florida 21st Congressional District — Palm Beach
The Florida 21st Congressional District covers a stretch of southeastern Palm Beach County, including the cities of West Palm Beach, Delray Beach, Boynton Beach, and portions of unincorporated Palm Beach County. During the 2022 redistricting cycle, the district's boundaries were redrawn by the Florida Legislature following the 2020 census, shifting its composition and altering its partisan character.[1] The district is represented in the U.S. House of Representatives by Democrat Lois Frankel, who has held the seat since 2013.[2] It sits within the Palm Beach County metropolitan statistical area, which had an estimated population of approximately 1.5 million as of the 2020 census. The area functions as a distinct metropolitan region rather than a satellite of Miami or Fort Lauderdale.[3]
The district holds political significance at both state and federal levels, reflecting its demographic diversity and the presence of active advocacy and lobbying organizations. According to U.S. Census Bureau data, the district's population includes a substantial share of retirees alongside a growing base of younger professionals drawn by the region's expanding technology and financial sectors.[4] Issues such as environmental conservation, education funding, affordable housing, and coastal infrastructure have dominated recent congressional campaigns, including those of 2018, 2020, and 2022. The 21st Congressional District has been rated as a safe Democratic seat in recent election cycles by the Cook Political Report, though its historical partisan trajectory tells a more complicated story.[5]
History
The history of the Florida 21st Congressional District is deeply intertwined with South Florida's broader development. Originally part of Seminole Nation territory, the area was the site of the Second and Third Seminole Wars in the 19th century. The Second Seminole War, which lasted from 1835 to 1842, was among the longest and most costly Indian wars in American history, ultimately displacing thousands of Seminole people from their homelands across the Florida peninsula, including the coastal lowlands that now form Palm Beach County.[6] The Third Seminole War, from 1855 to 1858, further reduced the remaining Seminole population in Florida, though a small number of Seminole communities survived in the Everglades region and their descendants make up the Seminole Tribe of Florida, which is federally recognized today. These conflicts opened the land to American settlement and established the legal and physical conditions for the development that followed.
Early pioneers established agricultural and trade enterprises along the coastal plain, growing crops such as pineapples and tomatoes for northern markets. By the late 1800s, the region had begun attracting wealthy Northerners seeking relief from industrialized cities, leading to the construction of exclusive winter estates and resort hotels.
That trend accelerated sharply in 1894, when Henry Flagler extended the Florida East Coast Railway to West Palm Beach, connecting the area directly to Jacksonville and the northeastern United States.[7] Flagler's railway didn't just carry passengers. It determined which settlements would grow into cities and which would remain backwater communities. West Palm Beach was incorporated in 1894, Palm Beach in 1911, and Delray Beach in 1911 as well, with Boynton Beach following in 1920. These incorporations marked the beginning of sustained municipal growth that would define the district's modern character.
The early 20th century brought a real estate boom to Palm Beach County, peaking in the mid-1920s before the collapse of the Florida land bubble in 1926 and the onset of the Great Depression in 1929 sharply curtailed development. Recovery came gradually, accelerated by federal investment during World War II and the postwar suburbanization that reshaped much of South Florida. The construction of Interstate 95 through Palm Beach County during the 1960s and 1970s deepened the connection between the region and broader Florida growth corridors, drawing new residents from the Northeast and Midwest.
Congressional representation of the Palm Beach County region has shifted considerably through successive redistricting cycles. Florida gained congressional seats following the 1990, 2000, and 2010 censuses, each time prompting legislative remapping that altered district boundaries, partisan composition, and represented communities. The district now designated as the 21st took its current form through the 2012 redistricting process, which followed the 2010 census. At that time, demographic and electoral trends had already moved the district toward consistent Democratic margins.
Political evolution here mirrored Palm Beach County's broader transformation. During the mid-20th century, the area functioned as a stronghold for conservative Republicans, a pattern common to affluent coastal Florida counties of that era. That changed substantially by the 2000s. Demographic shifts, including the growth of a more racially and ethnically diverse population and an influx of registered Democrats, reshaped the district's competitiveness. The 1990s and early 2000s saw increased electoral competition in local and federal races, with candidates from both major parties contesting a district that had previously delivered reliable Republican margins. By 2012, redistricting and demographic change had made FL-21 a reliably Democratic seat, a status it has held through the 2022 election cycle.[8]
The 2022 redistricting cycle brought renewed controversy. Governor Ron DeSantis rejected the Legislature's initial congressional map and proposed his own, which the Florida Supreme Court ultimately allowed to take effect pending further litigation. The revised maps altered several South Florida districts, though FL-21's core constituency in coastal Palm Beach County remained largely intact. Critics argued that the DeSantis-backed maps were designed to reduce Black voter influence in North Florida, a claim that spurred ongoing legal challenges in federal court.[9] The net effect on FL-21 was modest in terms of partisan composition, but the cycle illustrated how statewide redistricting decisions can ripple into even relatively stable districts.
Current Representative
Lois Frankel (D) has represented the Florida 21st Congressional District since January 2013. Before her election to Congress, Frankel served as Mayor of West Palm Beach from 2003 to 2011 and as a member of the Florida House of Representatives from 1986 to 1992 and again from 1994 to 2003.[10] In Congress, she has served on the House Appropriations Committee, where her subcommittee assignments have given her influence over federal spending on transportation, housing, and environmental programs. She has prioritized legislation related to coastal resilience, women's economic security, and healthcare access.
Frankel has won reelection by comfortable margins in each cycle since first taking office. In 2016, she ran unopposed. In 2018 and 2020, she won with more than 60 percent of the vote in a district where Republican turnout remained competitive at the county level. In 2022, she won reelection with approximately 65 percent of the vote against Republican challenger Daniel Franzese.[11] Following the November 2024 election, Frankel was returned to the 119th Congress, continuing her tenure as the district's representative.
Among her legislative accomplishments, Frankel has secured Appropriations Committee funding for Army Corps of Engineers coastal resilience studies in Palm Beach County and has been a consistent supporter of federal investment in the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan. She was also a co-founder of the Democratic Women's Caucus in the House and has introduced or co-sponsored legislation addressing pay equity, domestic violence prevention, and access to reproductive healthcare.
Electoral History
FL-21 has delivered consistent Democratic margins since the 2012 redistricting cycle, though the size of those margins has varied with national political conditions. In 2012, Frankel defeated Republican Adam Hasner with approximately 53 percent of the vote in a newly drawn district. By 2016, the race was uncontested. The 2018 midterm wave strengthened her margin to roughly 67 percent against Republican Brian Mast's former aide. In 2020, she won with 63 percent against Republican Guido Weiss. The 2022 cycle, against Franzese, returned approximately 65 percent for Frankel, consistent with the district's pattern of solid but not overwhelming Democratic performance in competitive national environments.[12]
Voter registration data from the Florida Division of Elections shows that registered Democrats outnumber Republicans in the district by a consistent margin, with a substantial share of no-party-affiliation voters whose behavior tends to track national Democratic preferences in federal races. That registration gap, combined with the district's demographic composition, has made FL-21 one of the more predictable seats in Florida's congressional delegation from a forecasting standpoint.
Demographics
According to the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey 2018-2022 five-year estimates, the Florida 21st Congressional District is one of the more economically diverse districts in the state, despite its reputation for affluence. The median household income in Palm Beach County was approximately $67,000 as of those estimates, though significant variation exists between coastal municipalities like Palm Beach, where median household income exceeds $150,000, and inland communities where incomes fall well below the county average.[13] The district's racial and ethnic composition reflects broader South Florida trends, with a substantial Hispanic population, a significant Black or African American community, and a large proportion of non-Hispanic white residents, many of them retirees.
Age distribution within the district is notably skewed toward older residents. Palm Beach County consistently records among the highest median ages of any Florida county, a product of decades of retirement migration from Northeastern states. That demographic weight has shaped congressional priorities, with Social Security, Medicare, and prescription drug pricing consistently ranking among constituent concerns in Frankel's town halls and correspondence data reported by her office.
Affordable housing is a documented pressure point. The Palm Beach County Housing Authority has identified a persistent gap between housing supply and demand, particularly for residents earning below 80 percent of the area median income.[14] This shortage has shaped congressional-level debates about HUD funding allocations and federal housing voucher programs, issues that Frankel has engaged with during her tenure on the Appropriations Committee. Educational attainment in the district is mixed: a high share of residents hold bachelor's degrees or higher, consistent with the professional and managerial workforce that has grown in Palm Beach County's financial sector, but significant portions of the district's working population, particularly in service industries, hold no post-secondary credential.
Geography
The Florida 21st Congressional District is characterized by a complex geography that includes barrier islands, coastal plains, urban centers, and suburban development. The district's eastern edge runs along the Atlantic Ocean, with the Intracoastal Waterway forming a natural boundary between the barrier islands of Palm Beach and Singer Island and the mainland cities of West Palm Beach and Lake Worth Beach. This coastal geography shapes both the district's economy and its environmental vulnerabilities.
The northern portion of the district transitions into more inland areas, where residential neighborhoods and commercial corridors dominate. The St. Lucie River and the Caloosahatchee River lie to the north and west respectively, and while they fall largely outside district boundaries, they influence regional water management policy that directly affects district constituents.[15] Both rivers are part of the Lake Okeechobee watershed system, and discharges from Lake Okeechobee during high-water events have repeatedly caused harmful algal blooms in coastal estuaries, drawing congressional attention to Army Corps of Engineers water management protocols.
The region faces well-documented challenges from rising sea levels and increased storm surge flooding. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has recorded measurable sea level rise at the Lake Worth Pier tide gauge station, with projections estimating continued increase through mid-century.[16] These projections have prompted both local and federal infrastructure investments, including Army Corps of Engineers coastal resilience studies commissioned in part through appropriations Frankel has supported. Low-lying neighborhoods in West Palm Beach and Lake Worth Beach are among the most exposed to tidal flooding in the district, and city-level infrastructure planning has increasingly incorporated federal flood risk data in permitting and zoning decisions.
Culture
The culture of the Florida 21st Congressional District is a complex mix of its historical roots, contemporary influences, and the diverse communities that call the area home. The district has long been associated with wealth and exclusivity, a legacy visible in institutions such as the International Polo Club Palm Beach in Wellington, which hosts the Winter Equestrian Festival and draws competitors and spectators from across the country.[17] The Kravis Center for the Performing Arts in West Palm Beach serves as the region's primary venue for theater, opera, and orchestral performance, with the Palm Beach Symphony and visiting Broadway productions filling its calendar annually.[18]
Beyond established institutions, the district has a growing arts community. The West Palm Beach Warehouse District has emerged as a hub for working artists, independent galleries, and creative businesses, part of a broader effort by the city to attract a younger professional demographic. Cultural diversity is reflected in the district's culinary offerings, from Haitian cuisine in Lake Worth Beach's historically Caribbean neighborhoods to high-end dining along Palm Beach's Worth Avenue. That range of influence, old money and new arrivals, is what defines the district's cultural identity today.
Community documentation and social photography have also emerged as notable forms of civic engagement in West Palm Beach, with local residents and photographers creating records of the city's diverse neighborhoods and communities. These efforts reflect a broader interest in how the district's identity is recorded and represented.
Notable Residents
The Florida 21st Congressional District has been home to numerous notable residents whose contributions have shaped the region and the nation. Henry Flagler, the industrialist and railroad builder who extended the Florida East Coast Railway to West Palm Beach in 1894, built the Royal Poinciana Hotel and Whitehall, his Palm Beach winter estate, which now operates as the Henry M. Flagler Museum.[19] His development decisions directly determined where cities formed and which areas became accessible to outside investment, a legacy still visible in the district's built environment.
Marjorie Stoneman Douglas, the environmental writer and activist, lived much of her life in South Florida and dedicated decades to the preservation of the Everglades. Her 1947 book The Everglades: River of Grass reshaped public understanding of the ecosystem and contributed to the creation of Everglades National Park that same year.<ref>[https://www
- ↑ "2022 Congressional Redistricting Maps", Florida Senate Reapportionment Committee, 2022.
- ↑ "Congresswoman Lois Frankel", U.S. House of Representatives, 2024.
- ↑ "Palm Beach County QuickFacts", U.S. Census Bureau, 2020.
- ↑ "American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates, 2018-2022", U.S. Census Bureau, 2023.
- ↑ "House Race Ratings, FL-21", Cook Political Report, accessed November 2024.
- ↑ "The Seminole Wars", Florida Memory, State Library and Archives of Florida, 2023.
- ↑ "Flagler's Florida", Henry M. Flagler Museum, 2023.
- ↑ "Florida Election Results Archive", Florida Division of Elections, 2023.
- ↑ "DeSantis signs congressional redistricting map into law", Palm Beach Post, April 22, 2022.
- ↑ "Biography of Congresswoman Lois Frankel", U.S. House of Representatives, 2024.
- ↑ "2022 General Election Results", Florida Division of Elections, 2022.
- ↑ "Precinct-Level Election Results", Florida Department of State, Division of Elections, 2023.
- ↑ "American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates, 2018-2022, Palm Beach County", U.S. Census Bureau, 2023.
- ↑ "Housing and Community Development", Palm Beach County Board of County Commissioners, 2023.
- ↑ "Water Management", South Florida Water Management District, 2023.
- ↑ "Sea Level Trends, Lake Worth Pier", NOAA Tides and Currents, 2023.
- ↑ "International Polo Club Palm Beach", International Polo Club, 2024.
- ↑ "About the Kravis Center", Kravis Center for the Performing Arts, 2024.
- ↑ "Henry M. Flagler Museum", Flagler Museum, 2024.