The Denver Post

Gillum, Trump-backed DeSantis win Florida primaries

- By Julie Pace and Brendan Farrington

A liberal Florida Democrat pulled off an upset victory while President Donald Trump’s favored candidate cruised to an easy win Tuesday, setting up a fierce showdown for the governor’s mansion in the nation’s largest political battlegrou­nd.

Tallahasse­e Mayor Andrew Gillum, an unabashed progressiv­e, won the Democratic primary, moving him a step away from becoming the state’s first black governor. He will face off against Trump-backed Republican Rep. Ron DeSantis.

DeSantis gave Trump credit for his victory, saying that with one supportive tweet, the president “kind of put me on the map.” Gillum is his party’s third black gubernator­ial nominee this year, along with Stacey Abrams in Georgia and Ben Jealous in Maryland.

The results immediatel­y transforme­d the Florida race into one of the most closely watched gubernator­ial campaigns in the country. Gillum’s primary victory could help Democrats boost enthusiasm among minorities who often don’t vote in large numbers in years when a presidenti­al candidate isn’t on the ballot. Meanwhile, DeSantis will test Trump’s grip on a crucial state he won in 2016 and wants to keep in his column in 2020.

DeSantis was one of several Republican­s running in contests Tuesday in Florida and Arizona — another closely watched political battlegrou­nd — who hoped that cozying up to the president would be rewarded by voters. Trump has thrust himself into the forefront of the midterm campaign in hopes of motivating his supporters and offsetting Democratic enthusiasm.

In Arizona, primary contests were shadowed by the death of Sen. John McCain.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey planned to name a replacemen­t to fill McCain’s seat after his funeral.

Ducey bested former Secretary of State Ken Bennett, a more conservati­ve GOP candidate who had little funding and campaign resources, in Tuesday’s primary. Education professor and military veteran David Garcia beat state Sen. Steve Farley and Kelly Fryer, former CEO of the YWCA Southern Arizona, in Tuesday’s Democratic primary.

Also in Arizona, Rep. Martha McSally won the Republican primary for the open U.S. Senate seat and will face Rep. Kyrsten Sinema in November.

McSally defeated former state Sen. Kelli Ward and former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio in Tuesday’s primary.

Sinema defeated community activist Deedra Abboud in the Democratic primary.

Arizona has an open Senate seat this cycle after Republican Sen. Jeff Flake decided to not run for reelection.

Polls closed in Arizona at the end of a day that began with delayed openings at dozens of polling locations in the state’s largest county. Leaders in Maricopa County rejected calls to try to keep polls open later, saying it may confuse voters and delay returns. No problems were reported elsewhere in the state.

Elsewhere on Tuesday, GOP voters in reliably Republican Oklahoma backed mortgage company owner Kevin Stitt in a runoff for the gubernator­ial nomination. Stitt won in part by criticizin­g his opponent as insufficie­ntly supportive of Trump.

Trump surprised Florida Republican­s late last year with his endorsemen­t of DeSantis, and frequently tweeted about the lawmaker, one of his staunchest supporters in Washington. His backing helped push DeSantis past Agricultur­e Commission­er Adam Putnam, who has held elected office in Florida since 1996, quickly built up establishm­ent support and raised millions of dollars.

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