Florida’s Election Results Certified After Tumultuous Recounts

PALM BEACH, FL - NOVEMBER 18: Election ballot trays  at the Supervisor of Elections Service Center on November 18, 2018 in Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Saul Martinez/Getty Images)
PALM BEACH, FL - NOVEMBER 18: Election ballot baskets sit on tables at the Supervisor of Elections Service Center on November 18, 2018 in Palm Beach, Florida. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) trailed his Republican challenger... PALM BEACH, FL - NOVEMBER 18: Election ballot baskets sit on tables at the Supervisor of Elections Service Center on November 18, 2018 in Palm Beach, Florida. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) trailed his Republican challenger for senate, Governor Rick Scott by less than a quarter of a percentage point after the first recount, requiring a hand recount of ballots that a machine could not read. Officials had until 12pm Sunday to conclude the recount. (Photo by Saul Martinez/Getty Images) MORE LESS
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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Florida’s election results were certified Tuesday, two weeks after close races for governor, U.S. Senate and a Cabinet position set up an unprecedented three statewide recounts.

The Elections Canvassing Commission finalized the results shortly after 9 a.m., two weeks after the Nov. 6 election, after which candidates traded allegations of uncounted ballots and voter fraud.

Official results turned in Sunday showed Republican U.S. Rep. Ron DeSantis defeated Democratic Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum in the governor’s race by 32,463 votes out of more than 8 million cast.

Republican Gov. Rick Scott defeated Democratic U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson by 10,033 votes.

The closest race was for the Cabinet position of agriculture commissioner. Democrat Nikki Fried defeated Republican state Rep. Matt Caldwell by 6,753 votes.

All three of the trailing candidates had conceded the races.

Results were presented to the commission by Secretary of State Ken Detzner in a short ceremony void of fanfare. The meeting lasted a mere five minutes.

By law, the commission is made up of the governor and two of the three Cabinet members. But Scott said during the middle of the recount with Nelson that he wouldn’t participate in the certification. Instead, Republican Sen. Rob Bradley, Attorney General Pam Bondi and Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam, who lost the Republican primary for governor to DeSantis, served as the commission. Bondi and Putnam participated by phone.

In 2014, Scott and all three Cabinet members declined to serve because each was on the ballot.

The recounts after this year’s election were reminiscent of the 2000 presidential balloting, when Florida took more than five weeks to declare George W. Bush the victor over Vice President Al Gore by 537 votes. Florida became the laughingstock of the world during the chaotic recount that decided the presidency.

Florida was under scrutiny this year as elections officials in Palm Beach and Broward counties struggled to count the vote. Scott and President Donald Trump suggested there was fraud in the largely Democratic counties, and several lawsuits were filed during the process.

Lawmakers have said they will look at election laws during the 2019 legislative session to avoid future problems.

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  1. Lessons for Dems:

    • Don’t leave votes on the table. Get your voters who hold absentee ballots to turn them the f***k in early. FL ballots have to be received on e-day. You can’t mail them on e-day. You can’t even mail them 3 days before e-day because you know the post office will mess it up. They need to turn in those ballots in person, mail them a week earlier or just vote in person. Also, sort out the relationships with the election boards to sort out ballot format, EV locations, voter hotlines and other voting logistics well beforehand.
    • HRC is popular in South Florida. She got the best Dem performance in South FL in history. If you want to win Latino voters there, use her and her playbook. The two members of Congress who flipped seats there did campaign with her and their campaigns differed from the statewide races as they sounded much more like our congressional campaigns elsewhere. Use the formulas that work.
    • GOP share in Miami Dade and in Palm Beach Co have to be at 37% or below.
    • Go right after the GOP in the I-4 exurbs. Stop ignoring those areas. Every gain that the Dems have made in Jacksonville and St. Petersburg has been offset by GOP gains in the I-4 exurbs.

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