Florida's 13th District: A Crowded Democratic Field in a Competitive Open Seat
Florida's 13th Congressional District, covering parts of Pinellas County including St. Petersburg and Clearwater, presents one of the more fluid open-seat contests in the 2026 cycle. With no incumbent seeking reelection, the race has drawn a sizable field of candidates across party lines. OppIntell's research universe tracks 1,373 candidates across eight race categories in Florida alone, with a party mix of 484 Republicans, 424 Democrats, and 465 others. Within this state-level landscape, the FL-13 Democratic primary is a crowded-field contest, and Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout is one of several candidates seeking to build a coalition capable of winning the nomination and holding the seat for Democrats. The district's partisan lean, shaped by shifting suburban demographics in Pinellas County, means that primary voters may weigh electability alongside policy alignment when evaluating endorsement signals from local labor unions, environmental groups, and national Democratic organizations.
OppIntell's analytical approach begins with the full candidate universe rather than isolating a single contender. For FL-13, that means comparing Aguerjout's source-backed profile against every other candidate in the race, not just her primary opponents. The within-race research-depth rank for Aguerjout stands at 133 out of 499 tracked candidates across all FL-13 races, placing her in the middle tier of research depth relative to the field. This rank reflects the number of source-backed claims OppIntell has identified for her—26 total, of which 3 are auto-publishable—and the breadth of cross-platform identifiers available. By contrast, the most-researched candidates in Florida, such as Kathy Castor, Darren Soto, and Lois J. Frankel, each have hundreds of source-backed claims, reflecting longer public trajectories and more extensive media coverage. For campaigns and journalists comparing the field, Aguerjout's developing research depth signals that her public profile is still being enriched, and that coalition research may require additional primary-source verification beyond what is currently machine-accessible.
Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout: Candidate Profile and Public-Record Posture
Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout is a Democrat running for the U.S. House in Florida's 13th district. OppIntell's research signature for her includes a source-backed claim count of 26, all of which are valid citations drawn from public records such as FEC filings, candidate statements, and news coverage. Her cross-platform identification status is listed as 'other,' meaning she lacks verified entries on Wikidata and Ballotpedia—two platforms that OppIntell uses to triangulate candidate identities across the web. The absence of a Wikidata entry and a Ballotpedia page is honestly acknowledged as a research gap, not a reflection of campaign viability. Many first-time candidates or those with limited prior public exposure have similar gaps, and OppIntell's methodology flags these so that users can adjust their research expectations accordingly. For a campaign researching Aguerjout, these gaps mean that some coalition signals—such as past endorsements from local elected officials or organizational support—may not yet be captured in structured databases and would require direct outreach or manual news archive searches to confirm.
Aguerjout's cohort tags include 'fec-registered' and 'crowded-field,' both of which are computed from public data. The FEC registration tag confirms she has filed a statement of candidacy with the Federal Election Commission, placing her among the 316 FEC-registered candidates in Florida out of 1,373 tracked. The crowded-field tag is derived from OppIntell's race-level analysis, which counts multiple candidates in the same contest and flags races where the number of contenders exceeds a threshold. For FL-13, this tag indicates that voters and researchers should expect a competitive primary where endorsements could play an outsize role in differentiating candidates. Nationally, OppIntell tracks 21,804 candidates across 54 states for the 2026 cycle, with 5,688 FEC-registered and 16,116 state-SoS-only. Only 1,526 candidates are cross-platform-verified across FEC, Wikidata, and Ballotpedia, underscoring how rare it is for a candidate to have a fully triangulated digital footprint. Aguerjout's current status as 'other' for cross-platform IDs places her in the majority of candidates whose public profiles are still being built.
Endorsement Signals and Coalition Research Methodology
Endorsement research on OppIntell's platform is grounded in source-backed claims rather than speculation or rumor. For Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout, the 26 public source claims currently in her profile include any publicly reported endorsements, but the developing research depth means that the endorsement section may not yet be comprehensive. OppIntell's methodology prioritizes claims that can be traced to a verifiable source—a news article, a campaign press release, an FEC filing, or a candidate's official website. Claims that are auto-publishable (3 in Aguerjout's case) meet a confidence threshold that allows them to appear in public-facing profiles without manual review. The remaining 23 claims require analyst verification before they are published, which is standard for candidates in the developing tier. For campaigns monitoring Aguerjout's coalition, the key question is which groups and individuals have publicly committed to her campaign, and whether those endorsements signal broader institutional support from the Democratic Party establishment, labor unions, or progressive organizations.
OppIntell's competitive research framework would examine endorsements not as isolated data points but as signals of coalition strength. A candidate who secures endorsements from local elected officials, county Democratic parties, and issue-advocacy groups may be building a ground-game advantage that could translate into primary turnout. Conversely, a candidate who lacks any public endorsements at this stage may still be in the early phase of coalition-building, or may be relying on self-funding and name recognition rather than organizational support. For FL-13, where the open seat has attracted multiple candidates, the endorsement race could be especially consequential. Researchers would compare Aguerjout's endorsement portfolio against those of her primary opponents, looking for patterns in geographic distribution, ideological alignment, and organizational density. Because OppIntell tracks all candidates in the race, users can filter by party, district, and endorsement type to see which candidates have the most source-backed coalition signals.
Party Comparison: Democratic and Republican Coalition Dynamics in FL-13
Florida's 13th district is not a safe seat for either party, which makes the endorsement race a proxy for broader strategic priorities. On the Democratic side, the primary field includes candidates who may appeal to different wings of the party—from progressive activists to moderate swing-seat strategists. Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout's endorsement trajectory, as captured by OppIntell's 26 source-backed claims, would be analyzed alongside the endorsement patterns of other Democratic candidates to assess whether the party is coalescing around a single contender or remaining fragmented. Nationally, the Democratic Party has 424 tracked candidates in Florida across all races, compared to 484 Republicans and 465 others. The party's infrastructure for endorsements—including the DCCC, EMILY's List, and labor affiliates—tends to concentrate resources in competitive open seats like FL-13, meaning that early endorsements could signal which candidates are being vetted for national support.
On the Republican side, the endorsement landscape may look different. Republican candidates in Florida often draw endorsements from conservative advocacy groups, gun-rights organizations, and anti-tax coalitions. OppIntell's data shows that Florida has 484 Republican candidates tracked, the largest party cohort in the state. For a Democratic candidate like Aguerjout, understanding the Republican endorsement race is useful for general election positioning: if Republicans coalesce early around a single candidate, the Democratic primary winner may face a well-funded and unified opponent. Conversely, a fractured Republican primary could create opportunities for the Democratic nominee to define the general election narrative. OppIntell's platform allows users to compare endorsement counts and source-posture across parties, providing a bird's-eye view of coalition strength on both sides of the aisle. For FL-13 specifically, researchers would want to know whether any candidate in either party has secured endorsements from high-profile figures or organizations that could shift the race's dynamics.
Source-Readiness Gap Analysis: What Researchers Would Examine Next
The source-readiness gap for Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout is defined by the discrepancy between her current source-backed claim count (26) and the state average of 78.73 claims per candidate. This gap is not unusual for a candidate in the developing research depth tier, and it does not imply that Aguerjout's campaign is weak or under-resourced. Rather, it indicates that the public record on her candidacy is still thin relative to more established candidates. Researchers using OppIntell's platform would note the honestly acknowledged gaps: no Wikidata entry and no Ballotpedia page. These absences mean that automated cross-referencing of her biographical details, past political activity, and media coverage is limited. To close the gap, a researcher would need to conduct manual searches of local news archives, county election records, and social media platforms to identify any endorsements, statements, or public appearances that have not yet been captured in structured databases.
OppIntell's methodology flags these gaps transparently so that users can calibrate their confidence in the profile. For a campaign researching Aguerjout as an opponent, the developing depth tier signals that there may be undiscovered vulnerabilities or strengths in her coalition. For example, if she has received endorsements from local community organizations that are not widely reported, those endorsements could be a sign of grassroots support that is not yet reflected in the source-backed claim count. Conversely, if she has made public statements or taken policy positions that could be used against her in a primary or general election, those positions may not yet be indexed. The gap analysis is not a judgment on Aguerjout's candidacy—it is a research roadmap for anyone who wants to understand her coalition more deeply before the campaign enters its most active phase.
Competitive Research: How OppIntell Enables Campaigns to Anticipate Attacks and Narratives
OppIntell's value proposition for campaigns is straightforward: by tracking source-backed claims for every candidate in a race, campaigns can anticipate what opponents and outside groups may say about them before those messages appear in paid media, earned media, or debate prep. For a candidate like Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout, whose research depth is developing, the platform provides a baseline of public-record signals that opponents could use to frame her candidacy. If an opponent's research team discovers a gap in her endorsement portfolio—for instance, a lack of support from a key local union—they could use that gap to question her coalition-building ability. By monitoring OppIntell's profiles, Aguerjout's campaign could see which of her claims are publicly visible and which gaps opponents might exploit, and then take proactive steps to fill those gaps with new endorsements or public statements.
The platform's within-race research-depth rank of 133 out of 499 for FL-13 means that Aguerjout's profile is more developed than about 73% of candidates in the race, but less developed than the top quartile. This middle-tier position is common for candidates who are not yet household names but have enough public activity to generate a moderate number of source-backed claims. For journalists and researchers comparing the field, the rank provides a quick heuristic for how much public information is available on each candidate. A candidate in the top decile, by contrast, would have hundreds of claims spanning endorsements, voting records, policy positions, and personal background—making them easier to research but also more vulnerable to opposition research. Aguerjout's developing tier means that her public narrative is still being written, and early endorsements could shape that narrative significantly.
Conclusion: The Role of Endorsement Research in a Crowded Open-Seat Primary
Endorsement research for Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout in Florida's 13th district is a work in progress, as reflected by OppIntell's 26 source-backed claims and developing research depth tier. The crowded-field primary, combined with the open-seat dynamics, makes coalition signals particularly valuable for voters, journalists, and opposing campaigns trying to understand which candidates have organizational support. OppIntell's platform provides a transparent view of what is publicly known about each candidate's endorsements, along with honest acknowledgment of research gaps. For Aguerjout, the next phase of research would involve filling those gaps—securing additional endorsements, updating her cross-platform identifiers, and generating more source-backed claims that can be published automatically. As the 2026 cycle progresses, OppIntell's profiles will be updated to reflect new public records, and the research depth tier for Aguerjout may shift from developing to well-sourced as her campaign matures.
For campaigns, journalists, and political researchers, the key takeaway is that endorsement intelligence is most useful when it is comparative, source-backed, and transparent about its limitations. OppIntell's candidate-intelligence platform delivers all three, enabling users to see not just what is known about Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout, but also what is known about every other candidate in the race, across parties, and across the state. By grounding analysis in public records and verifiable claims, the platform helps users separate signal from noise in a crowded election cycle.
Questions Campaigns Ask
How many endorsements does Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout have?
OppIntell currently tracks 26 source-backed claims for Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout, of which 3 are auto-publishable. The total includes any publicly reported endorsements, but because her research depth tier is developing, the endorsement count may not yet be comprehensive. Researchers should supplement OppIntell's data with manual searches of local news and campaign materials.
What is Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout's research depth rank in Florida?
Within Florida, Aguerjout's research-depth rank is 143 out of 1,373 tracked candidates. Within the FL-13 race specifically, her rank is 133 out of 499 candidates. These ranks reflect the number of source-backed claims and cross-platform identifiers OppIntell has identified for her relative to other candidates.
Why does Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout lack a Wikidata or Ballotpedia entry?
OppIntell honestly acknowledges that Aguerjout has no Wikidata entry and no Ballotpedia page as research gaps. This is common for candidates who are new to federal office-seeking or have limited prior public exposure. The absence does not indicate campaign viability but does mean that automated cross-referencing of her biography and media coverage is limited.
How can campaigns use OppIntell to research Fatima Ezahra Aguerjout's endorsements?
Campaigns can use OppIntell's platform to view all source-backed claims for Aguerjout, compare her endorsement count and research depth against other FL-13 candidates, and identify gaps that opponents might exploit. The platform's transparent methodology allows users to see which claims are auto-publishable and which require manual verification, enabling proactive campaign strategy.