U.S. Term Limits Slams Brevard County Commissioner Curt Smith’s ‘Sneak Attack’ on Term Limits
By Space Coast Daily // August 4, 2022
Smith announced the plan late in the evening on Tuesday with zero public notice
WATCH: Governor Ron DeSantis weighed in on term limits by expressing his support for 8-year term limits over 12 years and writing “no elected office, whether federal or local, is ever better off when run by career politicians.”
BREVARD COUNTY • MELBOURNE, FLORIDA – U.S. Term Limits, the nation’s oldest and largest pro-term limits group, is calling on all Brevard County residents to oppose Commissioner Curt Smith’s new plan to lengthen county commissioner term limits from 8 years to 12.
Smith announced the plan late in the evening on Tuesday with zero public notice. The Board will vote on the matter in its meeting on Thursday, Aug. at 5 p.m.
“It is just shameful to launch a sneak attack on the people’s term limits with no notice whatsoever,” said Nick Tomboulides, a Cocoa resident who also serves as Executive Director of U.S. Term Limits.
“Gutting term limits benefits no one except politicians who are drunk on power. If Commissioner Smith has any respect remaining for the voters who elected him, he will rescind this self-serving proposal immediately.”

In May, the 15-member Brevard Charter Review Commission – which exists to make recommendations on topics like term limits – voted down a proposal that was identical to Smith’s. This raises the novel question of why the county has boards like Charter Review if commissioners ultimately do not listen to them.
Also, a 2022 poll conducted by respected pollster Remington Research found that 82% of Brevard voters support keeping the Commission’s current 8-year term limit in place while rejecting any proposal which would modify the limit to 12 years.
Governor Ron DeSantis has also weighed in on this issue by expressing his support for 8-year term limits over 12 years and writing “no elected office, whether federal or local, is ever better off when run by career politicians.”
“It is not only absurd but quite insulting for local officials to claim they need more time in power than the president of the United States,” added Tomboulides. “If eight years is good enough for the leader of the free world, it is certainly good enough for Brevard County.”