Rick Scott (born December 1, 1952, Bloomington, Illinois, U.S.) is an American Republican politician who was elected to represent the state of Florida in the U.S. Senate in 2018. He had previously served as governor of the state (2011–19).
Scott was born Richard Lynn Myers, the second child of Gordon Myers and Esther (née Fry) Myers. His parents divorced shortly after his birth, and in 1954 his mother married Orba Scott, Jr., a truck driver. After graduating from high school in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1970, Scott attended community college for one year and then served for more than two years as a radar technician in the U.S. Navy. He subsequently attended the University of Missouri at Kansas City, receiving a bachelor’s degree in business administration in 1975. Scott earned a Juris Doctor degree from the law school of Southern Methodist University in University Park, Texas, in 1978. For a number of years afterward, he worked for a private law firm, Johnson & Swanson, in nearby Dallas.
In 1988 Scott founded the Columbia Hospital Corporation, which operated a chain of for-profit hospitals. Under Scott’s leadership, the company quickly expanded. In 1994 it merged with the Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) to form Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation, and Scott became the company’s chairman and chief executive officer. The company soon became the largest for-profit hospital chain in the United States. By 1997, however, Columbia/HCA had come under criminal investigation for alleged fraudulent charges by its hospitals to Medicare and Medicaid and other government health programs. Federal authorities raided the company’s offices and hospitals in July, and in the same month the company’s board of directors forced Scott to resign—though it granted him a generous retirement package consisting of approximately $10 million in cash and $300 million in company stock. Although Scott was not charged with any crime, Columbia/HCA eventually paid fines totaling $1.7 billion. In 2003 the U.S. Department of Justice characterized the settlement as “by far the largest recovery ever reached by the government in a health care fraud investigation.” Scott later moved to Florida, where he ran his own investment firm, Richard L. Scott Investments, and another health care company, Solantic Corporation, which he founded in 2001.
Scott ran as the Republican candidate for governor of Florida in 2010. With support from the right-wing Tea Party movement, he won the election by slightly more than 1 percent of the vote. He was reelected to the office in 2014. During his tenure as governor, Scott pursued a largely conservative agenda. He cut taxes and reduced regulations on businesses in the state. He also slashed funding for some government programs as part of an effort to lower the state’s debt. At times, however, Scott prompted criticism from fellow Republicans by changing his position on key issues. For example, although he originally opposed plans to expand access to Medicaid in the state under the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, he later supported a proposal for a three-year trial expansion of the program. The proposal was defeated in the Republican-led state legislature in 2015, and Scott thereafter abandoned the idea. In the wake of a deadly mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in February 2018, Scott also dropped his earlier resistance to stricter gun control laws. A month after the shooting he signed a bill into law that raised the minimum age to purchase firearms to 21 and established a mandatory three-day waiting period for gun purchases.
In April 2018 Scott announced his bid for the U.S. Senate. In the midterm elections held in November, he faced incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson in a remarkably competitive and closely watched race. On election night Scott maintained an extremely narrow lead over Nelson. Because of the closeness of the vote, machine and manual recounts of the ballots were completed. The official results gave Scott a victory by approximately 10,000 votes out of more than 8,000,000 cast. Among Scott’s campaign pledges were fiscal responsibility, private-sector job growth, and a push to impose term limits on members of Congress.
Soon after the general election of November 2020, Scott was elected chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, a position that eventually put him in charge of coordinating Republican efforts to retake control of the Senate from Democrats in 2022.
As a U.S. senator, Scott voted to acquit Republican Pres. Donald J. Trump at both of Trump’s Senate impeachment trials (the first in 2020 and the second in 2021). At a joint session of Congress convened on January 6, 2021, to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election, which Trump had lost to the Democratic candidate Joe Biden, Scott joined a handful of other Republican senators in supporting an objection to counting the electoral votes from Pennsylvania, which Biden had won by a narrow margin (the objection was defeated in the Senate by a vote of 92–7 and in the House of Representatives by a vote of 282–138). Scott also cosponsored a Senate bill that would have imposed a nationwide ban on abortions performed after 20 weeks of pregnancy (the bill failed a cloture vote in February 2020). During the first years of the Biden administration, Scott and other Republican senators blocked key voting rights legislation passed by the House of Representatives, including the Freedom to Vote Act. Scott also opposed several Democratic-sponsored bills that were eventually passed by Congress, including the Respect for Marriage Act (2022), which required all U.S. jurisdictions to recognize same-sex marriages legally performed in any other U.S. jurisdiction, and the Inflation Reduction Act (2022), which promoted the development of clean-energy technologies. In February 2022 Scott introduced what he called a “Plan to Rescue America,” a set of legislative proposals that included a requirement that “all Americans…pay some income tax to have skin in the game, even if a small amount.” Scott’s plan also called for the “sunsetting,” or planned lapsing, of all federal legislation, presumably including laws enacting Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. Scott’s proposals were publicly disavowed by the leader of the Senate Republicans, Mitch McConnell.
Following the midterm elections of November 2022, in which Republicans failed to retake control of the Senate from Democrats, Scott sought to replace McConnell as Senate Republican leader, a position that McConnell has held since 2007. In a vote held in mid-November, Scott lost to McConnell by a wide margin. In 2024 Scott comfortably won reelection against Democratic challenger Debbie Mucarsel-Powell.