ĢĒŠÄvlog

Skip to content
NOWCAST ĢĒŠÄvlog News at 6pm Weekday Evening
Watch on Demand
Advertisement

GOP sweeps Florida congressional special elections

GOP sweeps Florida congressional special elections
Voters in two states are headed to the polls today in races that will serve as *** likely early indicator on how people view the new Congress and White House. Voters near Daytona Beach and Pensacola, Florida will choose representatives to fill Matt Gates' and Mike Waltz's seats. Gates resigned to become President Trump's attorney general but withdrew due to *** lack of support amid an ethics scandal. Waltz also left Congress to become national security adviser. Neither of these Republican seats are expected to flip, but they will likely give Speaker Mike Johnson more breathing room. That is something Republicans are concerned about. They tried to enact President Donald Trump's agenda last week. The president pulled his nomination of New York congresswoman Elise Stefanik for United Nations ambassador amid those tight margins, and ahead of today's special elections, Republicans have 5 more seats than Democrats in Wisconsin, we're watching *** race that's gaining national attention. Whoever wins that will likely determine the ideological makeup of the state's Supreme Court. Voters in the swing state will decide whether the court will keep its 4 to 3 liberal control or flip conservative. Liberal Susan Crawford or conservative Brad Schimmel will likely weigh in on *** number of national issues like abortion rights, unions, and congressional redistricting, which could ultimately decide control of the House. President Trump endorsed Schimmel and yesterday said. Crawford is quote *** radical left lunatic who will be very bad. Wisconsin had the closest margin of all the battleground states in the 2024 election. Staying in Wisconsin, the contest there has attracted *** lot of outside money. We know that Elon Musk has contributed more than $21 million to back the Republican candidate Schimmel. Similar to his lottery payments in last year's presidential election, Musk awarded $1 million each to two Wisconsin voters after legal challenges to stop the scheme were unsuccessful. Musk says he was exercising free speech and not supporting *** candidate, but backing *** grassroots. Movement in opposition to activist judges. The Crawford campaign blasted the payments, calling them an illegal way of buying influence. This is, by the way, the most expensive judicial election in US history, totaling more than $81 million. Reporting in Washington, I'm Amy Lowe.
Advertisement
GOP sweeps Florida congressional special elections
Republican Jimmy Patronis won a special election Tuesday in Floridaā€™s 1st Congressional District, bolstered by President Donald Trumpā€™s endorsement to fill a vacant seat in reliably Republican northern Florida and despite national Democrats pouring millions into the race.Patronis, the stateā€™s chief financial officer, fended off a challenge from Democrat Gay Valimont even though she far outraised and outspent him. He will fill the northwest Florida seat vacated by former Rep. Matt Gaetz, who was chosen to be Trumpā€™s attorney general but withdrew from consideration amid allegations of sexual misconduct, which he has denied.Valimont benefited from the outrage of national donors alarmed by the early months of Trumpā€™s second term but was ultimately not able to pull off what would have been a massive upset in a district both Trump and Gaetz won by more than 30 points last year.The mood was celebratory at a waterfront restaurant in Pensacola, where congratulatory text messages were already lighting up Patronisā€™ phone as early results were posted Tuesday night. Patronis worked the crowd of about 100 people shaking hands and giving hugs, his wife Katie and two sons in tow.In Florida's 6th Congressional District, Republican state Sen. Randy Fine won his race against Democratic challenger Josh Weil.Fine was on track for a much narrower victory than the 33-point margin by which Mike Waltz won the district in November, according to early returns.The narrowing margins may signal a shift in public sentiment, driven by unusually strong Democratic enthusiasm in a traditionally Republican stronghold. Itā€™s happening less than five months since the presidential election and following a strong fundraising surge among Democrats worried about the aggressive overhaul of government initiated by Trump in his first few months in office.Fine had faced growing pressure during the raceā€™s final days as some Republicans publicly criticized his campaign and fundraising efforts. His victory ends Democratic hopes to score a huge upset in a district that was heavily supportive of Trump in November.The race to fill the seat vacated by Waltz when he was tapped to become Trumpā€™s national security adviser received national attention. Democrats poured money into Weilā€™s campaign to outraise Fine by nearly tenfold, attempting to flip a seat where the president won by more than 30 points.Fine, a self-described ā€œconservative firebrand,ā€ ran with Trumpā€™s endorsement.On social media, Trump congratulated Fine for ā€œa great WIN against a massive CASH AVALANCHE.ā€National Republican operatives worried in the weeks leading up to the election that Fine needed more money to combat Weilā€™s eye-popping $9 million compared to Fineā€™s $1 million, which drew national attention from political operatives questioning whether this race would embarrass Republicans less than 100 days into Trumpā€™s administration.Yet that wasnā€™t the case for Democrats. For weeks, national leaders have attributed Weilā€™s fundraising success to what they characterized as widespread outrage about the Trump administrationā€™s overhaul of the federal government. That outrage failed to materialize in large enough numbers to overturn the outcome in the reliably Republican district, foiling Democratsā€™ hope to pull off a huge upset that would have buoyed their party.Fine was first elected to the Florida House in 2016 and ran each year as a representative until 2024 when he successfully won his election to the Florida Senate. He is known for his support of Israel and his efforts to restrict LGBTQ+ rights.

Republican Jimmy Patronis won a special election Tuesday in Floridaā€™s 1st Congressional District, bolstered by President Donald Trumpā€™s endorsement to fill a vacant seat in reliably Republican northern Florida and despite national Democrats pouring millions into the race.

Patronis, the stateā€™s chief financial officer, fended off a challenge from Democrat Gay Valimont even though she far outraised and outspent him. He will fill the northwest Florida seat vacated by former Rep. Matt Gaetz, who was chosen to be Trumpā€™s attorney general but withdrew from consideration amid allegations of sexual misconduct, which he has denied.

Advertisement

Valimont benefited from the outrage of national donors alarmed by the early months of Trumpā€™s second term but was ultimately not able to pull off what would have been a massive upset in a district both Trump and Gaetz won by more than 30 points last year.

The mood was celebratory at a waterfront restaurant in Pensacola, where congratulatory text messages were already lighting up Patronisā€™ phone as early results were posted Tuesday night. Patronis worked the crowd of about 100 people shaking hands and giving hugs, his wife Katie and two sons in tow.

In Florida's 6th Congressional District, Republican state Sen. Randy Fine won his race against Democratic challenger Josh Weil.

Fine was on track for a much narrower victory than the 33-point margin by which Mike Waltz won the district in November, according to early returns.

The narrowing margins may signal a shift in public sentiment, driven by unusually strong Democratic enthusiasm in a traditionally Republican stronghold. Itā€™s happening less than five months since the presidential election and following a strong fundraising surge among Democrats worried about the aggressive overhaul of government initiated by Trump in his first few months in office.

Fine had faced growing pressure during the raceā€™s final days as some Republicans publicly criticized his campaign and fundraising efforts. His victory ends Democratic hopes to score a huge upset in a district that was heavily supportive of Trump in November.

The race to fill the seat vacated by Waltz when he was tapped to become Trumpā€™s national security adviser received national attention. Democrats poured money into Weilā€™s campaign to outraise Fine by nearly tenfold, attempting to flip a seat where the president won by more than 30 points.

Fine, a self-described ā€œconservative firebrand,ā€ ran with Trumpā€™s endorsement.

On social media, Trump congratulated Fine for ā€œa great WIN against a massive CASH AVALANCHE.ā€

National Republican operatives worried in the weeks leading up to the election that Fine needed more money to combat Weilā€™s eye-popping $9 million compared to Fineā€™s $1 million, which drew national attention from political operatives questioning whether this race would embarrass Republicans less than 100 days into Trumpā€™s administration.

Yet that wasnā€™t the case for Democrats. For weeks, national leaders have attributed Weilā€™s fundraising success to what they characterized as widespread outrage about the Trump administrationā€™s overhaul of the federal government. That outrage failed to materialize in large enough numbers to overturn the outcome in the reliably Republican district, foiling Democratsā€™ hope to pull off a huge upset that would have buoyed their party.

Fine was first elected to the Florida House in 2016 and ran each year as a representative until 2024 when he successfully won his election to the Florida Senate. He is known for his support of Israel and his efforts to restrict LGBTQ+ rights.