Florida's Republicans feel brunt of
hurricane in upcoming election
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[October 19, 2018]
By Terray Sylvester
PORT ST. JOE, Fla. (Reuters) - Two days
after Katherine Shimonis returned to her home in the Florida Panhandle
to find it destroyed by Hurricane Michael, she went to her local post
office, which was empty and without power, and shouldered her way
through the front door.
To her shock, the 69-year-old retired teacher found her mail-in absentee
ballot sitting in her post office box in the town of Port St. Joe.
"It was like gold to me; it really was," said Shimonis, who like many in
storm-ravaged northwest Florida worried she might miss out on a chance
to vote in November's congressional and gubernatorial elections.
With much of the region still working to secure basic services like
electricity, passable roads and phone service after one of the strongest
hurricanes ever to hit the United States, election officials in the
Panhandle are scrambling to ensure tens of thousands of people are able
to vote.
The concern is not just local. In Florida, the ballot includes one of
the country's most closely watched races for the U.S. Senate, pitting
Democratic incumbent Bill Nelson against Republican Governor Rick Scott.
Opinion polls show the contest is essentially tied.
The race to succeed Scott, who is prevented by law from seeking a third
term as governor, is also drawing intense national interest. Republican
former U.S. Representative Ron DeSantis is facing off against
Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum, a Democrat seeking to become the
state's first black governor, in another close contest.
While it has a relatively sparse population, the Panhandle is one of
Florida's most reliably Republican areas, and lower voter turnout in the
area could hurt both Scott and DeSantis.
There are nearly half a million registered voters in the 12 counties
eligible for federal emergency aid after Michael. All but two of those
counties were carried easily by Republican Donald Trump in the 2016
presidential election.
"It's certainly going to impact the turnout a little bit," said Brad
Coker, managing director of Jacksonville, Florida-based Mason-Dixon
Polling & Strategy. "Who knows, it might be the difference."
In some affected Florida counties, regular polling sites housed in
schools and community centers were severely damaged or destroyed after
Michael smashed ashore on Oct. 10.
Residents who planned on voting by mail may have seen their ballots
washed away by the storm; others have left the state and cannot receive
absentee ballots by mail.
Many voters in the area said they were focused on recovery, not
politics.
"I haven't even thought about it that much," said Kenneth Williams, 58,
a retired U.S. Air Force mechanic, who was at a Red Cross shelter in
Honeyville, Florida.
Williams, who said he would like to vote for DeSantis but had not made a
decision in the Senate race, said he still had to register his changed
residency after moving recently and was not sure whether he could do so
in time for the election.
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atherine Shimonis, 69, carries a box of cleaning supplies into her
house damaged by Hurricane Michael in Port Saint Joe, Florida, U.S.,
October 18, 2018. REUTERS/Terray Sylvester
At stake in the Nov. 6 election is control of Congress. Democrats
need a net gain of two seats to take control of the 100-seat Senate,
but they are defending 26 seats, including 10 in states like Florida
where Trump won in 2016. They have a better shot at winning the
House of Representatives, where they need a net gain of 23 seats to
take the majority.
EXPANDING VOTING ACCESS
Florida officials have taken steps to expand voting access to people
hit by the storm but face difficulties in communicating changes,
since many people have no power and no ability to receive mail.
Scott issued an executive order on Thursday permitting election
officials in affected counties to extend early voting days,
designate additional voting locations and make it easier for
displaced voters to obtain vote-by-mail ballots.
Early voting starts as soon as Oct. 22 in some counties.
In badly hit Gulf County, John Hanlon, the elections supervisor,
said had set up two voting "super centers" that will open on Oct. 27
and remain open through Election Day, replacing polling sites too
damaged to be used.
"Every voter in my county is going to have an opportunity to vote if
I have anything to say about it," he said.
In neighboring Bay County, with 120,000 registered voters, officials
will open five "mega-voting sites" for 12 hours a day starting Oct.
27 through Election Day, in lieu of regular polling sites, said Mark
Andersen, the county's supervisor of elections.
"We won't fail," said Andersen during a phone interview, while his
driver asked police to allow them through a blockade to deliver 400
vote-by-mail ballots to the county's only operating post office.
Karla McGhee, 55, a nurse from Panama City in Bay County, said the
election was hardly a priority for her since the storm.
"I think that's the last thing on our minds at the moment," said
McGhee, who was at a site that was providing free hot food to storm
victims in Blountstown. McGhee, who voted for Trump, said she had
not yet decided how to vote in November.
(Reporting by Terray Sylvester; Additional reporting by Joseph Ax
and Barbara Goldberg in New York; Writing by Joseph Ax; Editing by
Frances Kerry)
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