Florida Democrat Lois Frankel wins 5th term in Congress
Curt Anderson | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years AGO
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Democrat Lois Frankel has been reelected to Congress for a fifth term, defeating far-right media personality Laura Loomer.
Frankel beat the Republican in a heavily Democratic district that includes President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate. Democrats typically carry the district by 20 percentage points or more.
Loomer, 27, is a rising celebrity on the far right and raised more than $2 million compared with Frankel’s $1.4. She has been barred from Facebook, Twitter and other social media sites because of her anti-Muslim speech and calls herself “the most banned woman in the world.”
Attendees at Loomer’s victory party after the August primary included Roger Stone, whose prison sentence for lying to Congress was recently commuted by Trump.
Frankel, 72, is a political fixture in Palm Beach County, serving in various posts for decades.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Republican state Rep. Byron Donalds has been elected to the U.S. House seat now held by Florida Republican Francis Rooney.
Donalds defeated Democrat Cindy Lyn Banyai in the heavily Republican southwest Florida district. He will become only the third Black Republican to represent the state in the U.S. House. The first was Josiah Walls, elected in 1870 when Florida had only one House seat. The other was Allen West, who served from 2011-2013.
Rooney is retiring from the House after two terms.
Donalds, a financial adviser, was first elected to the state House in 2016 and served as chairman of the Insurance and Banking Subcommittee.
Banyai is a former professional boxer who runs a community development consulting firm.
Other high-profile races were yet to be decided early Tuesday evening. Most incumbents, including Democrats Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, Kathy Castor, Val Demings and Alcee Hastings, and Republicans John Rutherford and Bill Posey, won reelection handily.
The main races were in the Miami area: first-term Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell vs. Republican Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez, and freshman Democrat Donna Shalala in a rematch against GOP Spanish-language TV personality Maria Elvira Salazar.
Shalala defeated Salazar by about 6 percentage points two years ago in District 27 and has broad name recognition from her time as President Bill Clinton's secretary of Health and Human Services and president of the University of Miami. Salazar appealed to the Hispanic voters in the district, which includes Little Havana and the more liberal Miami Beach area.
Mucarsel-Powell, the first person from Ecuador to serve in the U.S. Congress, won the District 26 seat two years ago over then-incumbent GOP Rep. Carlos Curbelo. The district, which stretches from the Miami suburbs to Key West, has flipped between parties over several elections.
Gimenez, a Cuban-American retired firefighter, has served as county mayor since 2011 and is term-limited this year. Although he is well-known across the district, polls have shown a close race with Mucarsel-Powell in a slight lead.
Republicans currently have a 14-13 edge in the state's 27 House seats.
Beyond South Florida, most congressional incumbents were in safe seats or have newcomers running in their districts. But a few races were seen as potentially close.
One is an open seat in District 15, in the Tampa Bay area, created when GOP Rep. Ross Spano was defeated by Scott Franklin, a former Navy aviator and insurance company executive. His challenger is Democrat Alan Cohn, a former television reporter who unsuccessfully ran for the same seat in 2014.
Another possibly close race is in District 16, in the heavily Republican Sarasota area, where Democrats have sought in vain to defeat incumbent GOP Rep. Vern Buchanan several times. This year, his challenger is state Rep. Margaret Good, a lawyer originally from Savannah, Georgia, who has raised significant campaign cash.
A few others to watch are District 18, north of West Palm Beach, currently represented by Republican Brian Mast, and the Palm Beach County District 21 where Democrat Lois Frankel is the incumbent. Frankel is being challenged by conservative favorite Laura Loomer, but the district is firmly Democratic and Frankel is well-known in the area as a former mayor and state legislator.
Otherwise, GOP conservative star Rep. Matt Gaetz has a challenge in his Panhandle District 1 from Democrat Phil Ehr. Although it is a GOP stronghold — Gaetz won last time with two-thirds of the vote — Ehr had a long military career in an area where that is highly valued.
Back in South Florida, GOP Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart has already effectively won another term because he has no Democratic or write-in opposition in District 25.
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