BFF-03 Republican Rick Scott wins Florida Senate seat

348

ZCZC

BFF-03

US-VOTE-FLORIDA

Republican Rick Scott wins Florida Senate seat

MIAMI, Nov 19, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Florida’s outgoing Republican Governor Rick
Scott has narrowly won a US Senate seat in a bitterly contested race with
incumbent Bill Nelson, official results showed Sunday.

Nelson conceded the seat he has held for three terms since 2001 after a
machine and hand recount showed Scott had edged out the Democrat by just over
10,000 votes, or 50.05 percent to 49.93 percent, official final results
showed.

“Well, things worked out a little differently than Grace and I had hoped,”
Nelson said in a video message posted on social media.

“It has been a rewarding journey as well as a very humbling experience. I
was not victorious in this race, but I still wish to strongly reaffirm the
cause for which we fought. A public office is a public trust.”

He warned of a “gathering darkness” in current US politics.

A day earlier, Democrat Andrew Gillum conceded his hard-fought race to
become the Sunshine State’s first African American governor to his Republican
rival, Ron DeSantis.

That race had also gone to a recount.

And Stacey Abrams, who aimed to become America’s first black woman
governor, said Friday she will not win her race to lead the state of Georgia,
while still accusing her Republican rival Brian Kemp of voter suppression.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly charged that Florida’s elections
were marred by vote fraud, but state and local authorities have said there is
no evidence of wrongdoing.

Scott received warm congratulations from the American leader after his
win.

“From day one Rick Scott never wavered. He was a great Governor and will
be even a greater Senator in representing the People of Florida,” Trump
tweeted.

“Congratulations to Rick on having waged such a courageous and successful
campaign!”

Scott, who governed Florida for eight years, called for unity.

“We must do what Americans have always done: come together for the good of
our state and our country,” he wrote on his Facebook page.

“My focus will not be on looking backward, but on doing exactly what I ran
on: Making Washington Work.”

BSS/AFP/MSY/0829 hrs