After a Florida judge heard oral arguments in the ousted prosecutor’s lawsuit against Gov. Ron DeSantis, State Attorney Andrew Warren, of the 13th Judicial Circuit, will not get his job back. The start for proceedings was scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. before Judge Robert Hinkle of the U. S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida, and according to a release sent by Warren, each side was given 30 minutes to address the court.
It is claimed in the lawsuit that DeSantis’ suspension violated Warren’s right to free speech under the U.S. Constitution and exceeded DeSantis’ authority as governor under Florida law. Following the oral arguments, an attorney for Warren said in a press conference that “Mr. Warren is an elected official and his speech is protected by the first amendment.”
The judge is being asked by the lawsuit to compel the governor to cancel the suspension, put Warren back in office, and prohibit the governor from taking similar actions against him in the future, stated WFLA.
It is expected that a trial on the First Amendment claim will happen in roughly four to 12 weeks. “We look forward to a trial where the governor can come in and explain to the court why he thinks what he did is in compliance with federal law and state law,” said Warren.
His attorney also added that “the judge is clearly and rightfully so interested in what the governor would say in a judicial forum and the trial would be that opportunity.”
The governor’s office, in a statement to WFLA, said: “We are pleased that the court denied Andrew Warren’s request for a preliminary injunction. The Governor is entrusted by the people of Florida to utilize his constitutional powers and may suspend elected officials in Florida who refuse to enforce the law.”
This story syndicated with licensed permission from Frank who writes about political news stories. Follow Frank on Facebook.