Florida’s last two holdouts on impeachment signaled in the last 24 hours that they intend to side with their respective parties when the U.S. House decides whether to impeach President Donald Trump later today.

It means Florida’s representatives are likely to split on impeachment, with 13 Democrats voting for it and 14 Republicans against — a delegation just as divided as the state it represents. Half of Florida voters oppose impeachment, according Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategies latest survey, while 46 percent support it, within the margin of error.

RELATED: Impeach Trump? Tampa Bay is divided, just like everywhere else.

Any chance it wouldn’t end that way resided in the consciences of two of Florida’s most moderate lawmakers, Democrat Rep. Stephanie Murphy of Winter Park and Republican Rep. Francis Rooney of Naples. Neither, it seems, intends to buck their party.

In an op-ed published this morning, Murphy recalled her upbringing in a family that fled communist Vietnam and her career working in the Pentagon after 9/11. All of this was on her mind when she decided she would vote to impeach Trump.

“It’s a vote I will cast with great reluctance, but with even greater resolve," Murphy wrote in the Orlando Sentinel. “In a sense, the president has violated the principles that my own life has led me to hold most dear.”

Before I take any hard vote, I ask myself 3 questions: Is this good for my country? Is this the right thing for my constituents, even if some will disagree with me? And is this consistent with my conscience? Because I can answer “yes” to all, I will vote to impeach the President. https://t.co/fvDeqLZ7v4 — Rep. Stephanie Murphy (@RepStephMurphy) December 18, 2019

Rooney, meanwhile, told his hometown NBC station, WBBH-TV, that he is leaning toward voting against impeaching Trump. However, he notably skipped House floor action this morning, perhaps signaling he has not fully made up his mind.

Despite siding with Republicans on key impeachment votes leading up to today, Rooney has remained critical of Trump’s posture on Ukraine. The pressure Trump and his lawyer Rudy Giuliani put on the country’s leader to launch an investigation into Vice President Joe Biden and his son was “bothersome” and “a big deal,” Rooney said.

Hundreds of Rooney’s constituents rallied outside his Naples office yesterday, a last minute plea for the former ambassador to switch sides. Whether Rooney agrees with their framing will be determined some time in the late afternoon or early evening, when the House is expected to vote.

Most of Florida’s representatives, like much of Congress, have long decided to stand behind their party banner. Some have made that clear from the front lines of the impeachment investigation.

Trump ally U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz made a spectacle by storming a closed-door hearing and peppering witnesses with questions designed to undermine the case for impeachment. U.S. Rep. Val Demings, a mainstay during the hearings both on the Hill and cable news, emerged as a rising Democratic star and one of Trump’s most pointed critics.

Today, we will not win the vote, but we have won the argument.



Our country has been divided and distracted with no crime, no victim, and a terrible process. #ImpeachmentDay @SteveScalise pic.twitter.com/ZS0AGxB6n7 — Rep. Matt Gaetz (@RepMattGaetz) December 18, 2019

“The interests of the nation must always come before any personal considerations.”



– Richard Nixon, Resignation Speech #DefendOurDemocracy pic.twitter.com/QGDKuYmblf — Rep. Val Demings (@RepValDemings) December 18, 2019

There was little doubt how U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the former Democratic National Committee chairwoman, would vote. The same goes for freshman U.S. Rep. Greg Steube, who has quickly established himself as one of Trump’s fiercest defenders in Congress.

Some have taken more time to come to what many assumed was a foregone conclusion. U.S. Rep. Al Lawson, a Tallahassee Democrat, didn’t immediately support launching an impeachment investigation. He eventually did and on Tuesday told his local WFSU that he will stand by his Democratic colleagues on Wednesday.

"Trump used government resources for personal gain and put himself above the law - and no person or president is above the law." Today I laid out to @SoFlaOpinion why I'll vote to impeach this President. https://t.co/fvImep08ZZ — Debbie Wasserman Schultz (@DWStweets) December 17, 2019

And while U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist said yesterday he came to “grave conclusion” to impeach Trump, the former Republican governor had given little indication over the past few months he would break from his new home in the Democratic Party.

“This is a sad, painful, and divisive situation for our nation," Crist said. "But impeachment is the direct result of the President’s own words and actions. And we have a duty to our oath of office and the constitution to not stand silent.”

I take no joy in my decision to vote to impeach President @realDonaldTrump. But given the facts presented, I’ve come to the grave conclusion that he abused his position of power to such a degree that we have no choice but to act. — Charlie Crist (@CharlieCrist) December 17, 2019