Florida orders recount in contentious senate, governor races
The 'swing state' will hold a machine recount of votes in its neck-and-neck races amid allegations of fraud.
Authorities in Florida have ordered a machine recount of votes in its
neck-and-neck race for the US senate seat and governor's office amid
allegations of fraud from the candidates.
State Secretary Ken Detzner said Florida's 67 counties will submit
unofficial totals by 17:00 GMT on Saturday, while the results will be
declared by 20:00 GMT on Thursday.
The announcement was made after unofficial results in both races fell
within the margin that triggers a recount, according to the state's law.
In the race for governor, former US Representative Ron DeSantis led his
Democrat rival and Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum by a margin of 0.41
percent.
For the senate seat, Florida's current Republican Governor Rick Scott
has seen his lead narrow over incumbent Senator Bill Nelson, a Democrat,
to about 12,500 votes, or 0.15 percent.
Trump alleges corruption
US President Donald Trump was not amused by the development, tweeting on
Saturday: "Trying to STEAL two big elections in Florida! We are
watching closely!"
Trump had accused Democratic election officials in Florida's Broward and
Palm Beach Counties of corruption. "What's going on in Florida is a
disgrace," he said.
Scott had filed a lawsuit against the Democratic election officials in
the two counties, accusing them of violating election law and demanding
access to their vote tallies.

Nelson also filed a motion in federal court, asking that provisional and absentee ballots not be rejected.
The two contests, along with those for governor in Georgia and for the
senate in Arizona, are the most high-profile races still undecided after
Tuesday's midterm elections.
'Swing state'
The close calls will require a hand recount of ballots from tabulation
machines that could not determine which candidate got the vote.
Florida is the country's third-largest state. It is also an important
"swing state" in the US, especially in presidential elections.
The "sunshine state" has never been a sure constituency for either the
Republicans or the Democrats, resulting in presidential candidates
spending considerable time campaigning here.
The move conjured memories of Florida's 2000 presidential recount when
the winner hung in the balance for weeks before the Supreme Court
stopped the counting, and Republican George W Bush triumphed over
Democrat Al Gore.
In Tuesday's elections, Democrats won a majority in the US House of
Representatives after eight years in the minority, while Republicans
expanded their two-seat advantage in the Senate.
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