Arnhilda Gonzalez-Quevedo

Arnhilda Badia Gonzalez-Quevedo is an American politician in the state of Florida. She served in the Florida House of Representatives between 1984 and 1988.

Early life
Gonzalez-Quevedo grew up in Havana, Cuba, before moving to the United States as a teenager. She was fifteen when she had a son with her husband, Benito Gonzalez-Quevedo. She received a doctoral degree in linguistics from the University of North Carolina. She worked as an administrator at Florida International University, serving as the vice president for academic affairs.

Political career
Gonzalez-Quevedo ran as a candidate for the Florida House of Representatives in the 1984 general election for the 112th district. She was one of four Republicans in the primary, all Cuban Americans, which went to a run-off in October. She ran and won against the incumbent, Democrat John F. Cosgrove, in the general election. She was a member of the children and youth ad hoc committee, the health and rehabilitative services committee, the higher education committee, and the tourism and economic development committee.

During her first term, she proposed the Quality Assurance Act, to fund summer classes for Florida state universities and community colleges to allow students to graduate on time, and the Management Training Act, to train minority staff at the institutions. She helped pass two childcare amendments during the legislative special session. Gonzalez-Quevedo sponsored the Florida Small and Minority Business Assistance Act in 1985 and the following year, proposed a commission to develop programs for teenage mothers. In September 1987, she presented the administrator of the Bay of Pigs Museum with $75,000 from the state for its construction.

Gonzalez-Quevedo changed parties from Republican to Democratic on May 19, 1988, stating that it was due to the Reagan administration's policies regarding Fidel Castro in Cuba and the Sandinista government in Nicaragua. She was asked by the Speaker of the House, Jon Mills, to join the budget committee but declined the appointment. Following her decision, fellow Democratic legislators passed a bill to repeal a state law banning candidates from changing parties within six months of an election. She ultimately decided not to run for re-election.