District 2 Indian River County Commission · Nov 3, 2026

Not a Politician.

A trucker. An Army vet. One of us.

Robbie has lived in Indian River County his whole life, and for years he's watched the same few people make every call for it. He's running for County Commission because the folks who live and work here deserve someone who answers to them, not the next developer with a checkbook.

Robbie Hardingham, candidate for Indian River County Commission District 2
Still drives today
Truck DriverClass A CDL since 1998
U.S. ArmyVeteran, 1994 to 1996
Vero '94Born and raised here
District 2On the ballot Nov 3
01 Robbie's Story
Robbie Hardingham as a boy growing up in Vero Beach
Growing up in Vero
Robbie Hardingham in U.S. Army uniform at the Army Quartermaster Center and School
U.S. Army, 1994 to 1996
Robbie Hardingham after his U.S. Army service in the 1990s
Back home for good

Robbie Hardingham is not a politician.

He is a truck driver, a U.S. Army veteran, and a lifelong Indian River County resident who is running for County Commission because he is tired of watching a commission that does not reflect the people it governs.

Hardingham graduated from Vero Beach High School in 1994 and enlisted in the Army the same summer. He served as a Petroleum Supply Specialist and was honorably discharged in 1996. He came home, waited tables at Indian River Crab and Claw, lifeguarded for the City of Vero Beach, and got his Class A CDL from the Truck Driver Institute of Florida in 1998. He has been behind the wheel ever since.

For more than 15 years, Hardingham drove over the road, hauling freight coast to coast for carriers like Covenant Transport, Continental Express, Heartland Express, and US Express. He also worked as an AT&T U-verse technician in Vero Beach and studied culinary arts at Indian River Community College. In 2015, he came off the road for good, taking local delivery routes with Ryder out of the CVS warehouse in Vero Beach and later with Penske Logistics, where he still drives today. He has worked since he was a teenager. He has never stopped.

That lifetime behind the wheel is exactly what he would bring to the county commission. He has driven these roads, crossed these bridges, and run these freight routes in every kind of weather, so traffic, drainage, paving, and getting things actually delivered are not talking points to him. They are the work. He knows what a bad intersection costs in real time, where the water pools when it rains, and why a permit that drags on for months keeps real people from doing real jobs. A trucker plans the route, carries the load, and answers for it when he pulls in. That is exactly how he would treat this county. Show up, do the work, and be accountable for what you were trusted to deliver.

The rest of it he learned in uniform. His Army service taught him to put the mission first, keep his word, and work shoulder to shoulder with every kind of American to get the job done. Those are not Democrat values or Republican values. They are just real ones. Hard work. Service. Country. Looking out for your neighbors. He is a neighbor who has earned his living with his hands and never asked for credit. He still lives in Vero Beach. He still drives truck. He still has the sublime green Dodge Challenger.

02 The Race

An open seat.
A choice that should worry you.

Commissioner Joe Flescher is retiring, and for the first time in over a decade the District 2 seat is wide open. That should be good news, because this seat is about real things. The lagoon. Our roads. Drainage that holds when it rains. Insurance you can actually afford. A tax bill that stops climbing every single year. None of it is glamorous. The only question that matters is whether the person who wins that chair shows up and works on what is right in front of us.

Then you look at who wants to take his place, and you see two versions of the same problem. One has been a fixture around these offices for decades, circling one seat after another, with nothing built and nothing fixed to point to. Years in the room, and the room looks exactly the same. The other would rather chase the loudest fight on the news than do a single thing about a flooded road, a busted culvert, or your property taxes. This is a county commission. It is roads and water and drainage and permits. It is not a stage, and it is not a show. One had the time and wasted it. The other treats the whole thing like a circus. More of the same, or a sideshow, and folks here deserve better than both.

Robbie isn't running to add a title to a collection or to score points in somebody else's war. He's running because the people who live and work here deserve a commissioner who is actually focused on Indian River County. On us. On the roads we drive, the water we fish, and the bills that land on the kitchen table. The unglamorous things that shape your day are the whole job, and he's ready to do them.

No developer owns him. No outside fight distracts him. He just wants to do the job. That's the whole point.

Robbie Hardingham talking with a resident at a community event in Vero Beach

Out in the community. Indian River County.

03 Where I Stand

Five fights worth showing up for.

01

Save the Indian River Lagoon

The Problem

The lagoon is why we live here, and it is still being nickel-and-dimed to death. Thousands of old septic systems keep leaking into it. Stormwater from every new development keeps coming. And the board keeps handing out variances that pave over the land that used to filter the water.

What Robbie Will Do
  • Make septic-to-sewer conversion a condition of new development approval.
  • Raise stormwater retention requirements above the bare legal minimum.
  • Fund dedicated compliance officers and a local lagoon restoration trust fund.
02

Housing People Who Work Can Afford

The Problem

The median home is around $367,000 and insurance keeps climbing. A truck driver, a teacher, or a nurse earning $40,000 to $55,000 is priced out of the county they keep running. New construction is aimed at luxury and retirement, not working families.

What Robbie Will Do
  • Use zoning, density bonuses, and impact-fee relief to get workforce housing built.
  • Streamline permitting for genuinely affordable projects.
  • Update the county's housing plan for the families who actually live here.
03

Take Care of Our Veterans

The Problem

More than 6,400 veterans call Indian River County home. The new Vero Beach VA clinic is a real step forward, but it is still a clinic, not a hospital, and too many veterans fall through the cracks of the VA bureaucracy.

What Robbie Will Do
  • Push for veteran-specific housing and expanded transportation to VA facilities.
  • Fund local matches for federal veteran programs.
  • Bring a veteran's voice to a board that does not have one.
04

A Real Answer on Homelessness

The Problem

The county opens a section of the jail to homeless residents during cold snaps. That is not a plan, it is a symptom. There is no dedicated shelter and no housing-first strategy, so the same crisis repeats every winter.

What Robbie Will Do
  • Back a county emergency shelter and a housing-first pilot program.
  • Expand mental health and crisis services at the county level.
  • Dedicated case management for homeless veterans.
05

Open the Books

The Problem

Commission meetings are broadcast but barely watched, the minutes are dense, and the development deals that change your daily life often get decided before most people ever hear about them.

What Robbie Will Do
  • Put a public dashboard online for how county dollars get spent.
  • Require plain-language summaries of every commission vote.
  • Widen notice for zoning changes, so neighbors hear about it before the bulldozers do.
04 Get On Board

Put somebody
real on the board.

This campaign runs on neighbors, not big checks. Add your name, and we'll let you know how to help: a yard sign, a few doors, or just showing up. No spam. No nonsense.

You're on board. Welcome to the crew.

By signing up you agree to receive updates from the campaign. We never sell your information.