Bio & Background

Ashley Moody

Ashley Moody

R · Republican

Attorney General

Term: Jan 10, 2023Jan 9, 2027

Ashley Moody served as Florida's Attorney General from January 2019 until her appointment to the U.S. Senate in January 2025. She previously served as a circuit court judge and as a federal prosecutor, and was the first woman elected Attorney General of Florida.

(850) 414-3300
The Capitol PL-01, Tallahassee, FL 32399
Last updated: Nov 1, 2025Source: Official government records

Public Positions

Criminal Justice

Keeping Floridians safe is my top priority. We will prosecute criminals to the fullest extent of the law and hold accountable those who prey on Florida families.

Source: press release · Apr 25, 2023

Immigration

Florida law enforcement will not stand aside while federal immigration policy creates conditions that endanger our communities. The Attorney General's office will use every legal tool to protect Floridians.

Source: press release · May 15, 2023

Last updated: Nov 1, 2025Source: Official statements, press releases, speeches

Voting Record

Immigration

Position on record

SB 1718: Immigration Enforcement and Employment Verification Act

Requires employers with 25 or more employees to use the federal E-Verify system to confirm work authorization for new hires beginning July 2023. The bill also requires state-licensed hospitals to collect patient immigration status data, increases penalties for transporting undocumented individuals, and invalidates driver's licenses issued by other states to unauthorized immigrants.

May 10, 2023

Yes

Infrastructure

No stated position

HB 1: Property Insurance Reform Act

Implements comprehensive reforms to Florida's property insurance market following years of insurer insolvencies. Key provisions include eliminating one-way attorney fee provisions in property insurance litigation, reducing the assignment of benefits statute of limitations, and establishing a new reinsurance assistance program funded by a $2 billion state appropriation.

Mar 24, 2023

Yes

Healthcare

No stated position

SB 300: Reducing Fetal and Infant Mortality Act

Prohibits abortion after six weeks of pregnancy, replacing the prior 15-week restriction enacted in 2022. The bill provides exceptions for rape, incest, human trafficking, and the life or health of the pregnant person, with documentation requirements for each exception. Performing an abortion after six weeks is classified as a third-degree felony.

Apr 13, 2023

Yes
Last updated: Nov 1, 2025Source: OpenStates API, official legislature records