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Florida Electoral College Voters Back Trump

State Sen, Joe Gruters, chair of the Republican Party of Florida.
News Service of Florida
State Sen, Joe Gruters, chair of the Republican Party of Florida.

TALLAHASSEE --- Florida鈥檚 Electoral College voters Monday cast their 29 ballots for President Donald Trump with hopes the Republican incumbent can still find a way to overturn election results in other states.

State Sen. Joe Gruters, a Sarasota Republican who is chairman of the Republican Party of Florida, said he鈥檒l support the president 鈥渦ntil we exhaust all options to make sure that every legal vote counts.鈥

鈥淚 think there are still options available for the president,鈥 Gruters told reporters before casting his ballot. 鈥淲e've been encouraging him here in Florida to do everything you possibly can to make sure that all legal and valid votes are counted. And at the end of the day, I think, hopefully, the president will win a second term. But if not, we'll move on.鈥

The Florida electors gathered on the same day that electors held similar meetings across the country and were expected to give Democrat Joe Biden more than the 270 electoral votes he needed to defeat Trump and move into the White House next month.

Biden was lined up to receive 306 votes to 232 for Trump, whose campaign has lost dozens of legal challenges to the voting process and election results. Trump won Florida鈥檚 29 electoral votes by beating Biden by more than three percentage points in the state on Nov. 3.

Rep. Randy Fine, R-Palm Bay, acknowledged if Trump isn鈥檛 successful in reversing the outcome of the national election, Monday鈥檚 action by the Florida electors will be 鈥渁 bit anticlimactic.鈥

鈥淚 can't speak to other states, but in Florida, the president tripled his margin from four years ago,鈥 Fine said. 鈥淐learly, people in Florida are happy with the job that he did. And they're clearly happy with the Republican method of governance.鈥

Florida鈥檚 electors weren鈥檛 willing to publicly declare Monday鈥檚 actions as final, as the electoral votes will go before a joint session of Congress on Jan. 6.

Asked about people who don鈥檛 accept the election results, Sen. Jeff Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, replied, 鈥淭here will be some closure for some. I'm sure for many others, there is still going to be this desire to continue to press on.鈥

Brandes wouldn鈥檛 say if he considered the contest over with Monday鈥檚 vote.

Monday鈥檚 event in the Florida Senate chamber was mostly ceremonial. Missing from four years ago were protesters chanting outside the chamber and throughout the Capitol grounds.

Amid the coronavirus pandemic, few visitors were allowed into the Capitol, other than the news media and people tied to the event.

Nobody was seated in the Senate gallery. And with Secretary of State Laurel Lee presiding, electors were required to wear face masks, with a couple donning masks declaring 鈥淭rump.鈥 Electors were allowed to take off their masks when they signed the ballots for Trump and Vice President Mike Pence.

One last-minute change to Monday鈥檚 schedule was the approval of Brandes to replace Senate President Wilton Simpson, R-Trilby, as an elector. That came after Simpson tested positive for COVID-19 on Sunday.

Brandes said he talked to Simpson on Monday and 鈥渉e's in good spirits.鈥

鈥淗e thought he had the flu and got tested,鈥 Brandes said.

All the electors had to be tested before Monday鈥檚 event.

The electors, made up of party stalwarts and elected officials, came from a list submitted by the Republican Party of Florida because Trump won the state.

DeSantis attended the vote, with the group of electors also including Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nunez, Attorney General Ashley Moody, House Speaker Chris Sprowls, R-Palm Harbor, Sen. Keith Perry, R-Gainesville, Sen. Kathleen Passidomo, R-Naples, and Sen. Ray Rodrigues, R-Estero.

Moody drew headlines last week when she joined 16 Republican attorneys general in backing an unsuccessful Texas lawsuit that sought to reverse the results of the election in four swing states that went for Biden.

Jim Turner / News Service of Florida
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