Background
Ingram was born in Pensacola, Florida.
Ingram was born in Pensacola, Florida.
Clay Ingram attended Florida State University and played football under legendary coach Bobby Bowden.
He served as Chairman of the Escambia County Republican Party from 2005 to 2008 and has also served on the Executive Board of the Republican Party of Florida. He has taught and previously coached football at J. M. Tate High School in Gonzalez. Ingram was a long snapper for the Seminoles and played on the 1999 undefeated National Championship team
When Republican State Representative Dave Murzin was unable to seek another term due to term limits, Ingram ran to succeed him.
He defeated David M. Karasek in the Republican primary and was unopposed in the general election. When the districts were reconfigured in 2012, Ingram was drawn into the 1st District, and ran for re-election there.
In the Allied Veterans of the World scandal, in which a supposedly non-profit organization was reportedly operating a "$300 million criminal enterprise and which resulted in the resignation of Lieutenant Governor of Florida Jennifer Carroll in 2013, Ingram has come under fire for accepting campaign contributions from the group in question. While serving in the legislature, Ingram sponsored legislation with Republican State Senator Rob Bradley to propose legislation "that would permanently outlaw several banned substances commonly found in synthetic marijuana."
Running for re-election in 2014, Ingram faced Gloria Robertson-Wiggins, the Democratic nominee, in the general election.