As I sit to write, it's before 8:00 PM ET and polls all along the time zone are either shut down or getting ready to shut down. Florida has a section in the panhandle that's on central time, pretty much the 10 westernmost counties in the state but with one exception along the gulf coast, and as a general rule the state doesn't like to give the results out until after the central time results are done. The state got a well-deserved reaming after the Bush-Gore recounts in 2000, but it has almost gone completely unmentioned in TV coverage that the state dramatically improved after that and the votes will be completely counted soon. Around 7:30 I saw a news report that the state had around 66% of all ballots counted. Due to the time, I'd assume that excluded the Central Timezone counties.
I used to write much more about politics than I do now, so forgive me this
rant down this old road.
Early voting started in early October, but Mrs. Graybeard and I voted on Wednesday, October 30th. I won't get so boring as to list entirely who I voted for, but I voted for Trump/Vance, Voldemort -um, I mean Rick Scott, and pretty much what I consider a "conservatarian with Christian backing" approach. For example, the ballots we get for every statewide election have votes on whether judges in the various courts should be retained. This year I adopted a new algorithm for deciding who to keep: I looked up how long those judges have been on the benches and if they were there three terms (12 years) I instituted my own term limits. To my surprise, most of them were there less than 8 years and I said OK; ISTRC one judge had been there 15 years and I said "go home."
Our long time US representative, Bill Posey, decided not to run for reelection this year and in the primaries a former state senator ran to replace him and won. Posey was good, but I was getting uncomfortable with how long he was working up in DC with no term limits. Due to a roundabout story that I won't get into, the guy running for Posey's old job is in a "friend of a friend" of ours circle and got our votes. Note that's FOAF and not FAFO.
In general while I don't think term limits are ideal, I tend to like them. In
Florida law, we have term limits. The problem is that too many people
seemingly tend to vote on name recognition so office holders just kind of
rotate between jobs without ever getting off the government payroll and
becoming useful citizens again. It's not like after some number of years as a
representative they get a promotion to the senate, they go back forth.
As usual, there were a handful of state constitutional amendments to vote on as well as county and city charter issues. The two state constitution amendments that got talked about the most were the "Big Weed" amendment 3 and "Big Abortion" amendment 4; I voted against both - and primarily because they both favored the big powers and didn't seem to make either situation better.
I've read various estimates of what the marijuana industry pumped into #3 that would widen the uses of their products, but Open Secrets shows that by the middle of October, they had spent over $81 million. I'd guess they probably got close to $100 million in the last couple of weeks. Those opposed didn't quite get to the $20 million spent line, but perhaps by now. The bill looks to cause more problems while not solving anything I know of.
The other one, #4, looked like it allowed everything and used vague terminology where precise wording is called for. A glaring example is it didn't define who a "medical provider" is and yet they can approve anything. It doesn't say medical doctor, or any other state recognized term so I can envision a Haitian Voodoo practitioner, or worse, saying they're the provider. It totally removes parental rights to even know if their daughter is being sent for an abortion. I could easily see it harming women instead of helping them. In this case, Open Secrets shows the abortion industry spent $60.7 million while those opposed to it didn't even get to 1/6 of that; spending $9 million.
Interestingly, those two amendments had a total, in mid-October, of $171.9 million spent on them (for and against). Of the remaining amendments, Open Secrets shows nothing spent either way.
The county passed out these stickers instead of the American flag ones they've
been using for as long as I can remember.