Los Angeles Times

Ideologica­l fight is set in Florida

Longshots to face off in race for governor. Congresswo­men to vie for Senate in Arizona.

- By Mark Z. Barabak and Jenny Jarvie mark.barabak @latimes.com Twitter: @markzbarab­ak jenny.jarvie@latimes.com Twitter: @JennyJarvi­e Barabak reported from San Francisco and Jarvie from Atlanta.

Rep. Ron DeSantis, endorsed by President Trump, and Tallahasse­e Mayor Andrew Gillum, a Bernie Sanders acolyte, both advance in the battlegrou­nd state’s gubernator­ial primary.

Ron DeSantis, an upstart Republican riding the endorsemen­t of President Trump, surged to win Florida’s gubernator­ial primary Tuesday, setting up a starkly ideologica­l fight with a Bernie Sanders acolyte vying to become the first black governor in state history.

The contest in the country’s preeminent battlegrou­nd state — already the costliest governor’s race in the country — will pit two 39year-old candidates, U.S. Rep. DeSantis and Democratic Tallahasse­e Mayor Andrew Gillum, who both started the campaign as considerab­le longshots.

In Tuesday’s other marquee contest, the U.S. Senate race in Arizona, Rep. Martha McSally easily bested former state lawmaker Kelli Ward and ex-Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio to win the GOP nomination for the seat being vacated by Republican Jeff Flake.

McSally, a two-term congresswo­man from Tucson who ran as the favorite of the party establishm­ent, will face Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, who ran away with the Democratic primary, in a contest that could be key to deciding which party controls the Senate.

DeSantis, an Iraq war veteran and three-term congressma­n from the Jacksonvil­le suburbs, vaulted into competitio­n in Florida after capturing the president’s attention — and subsequent endorsemen­t — as a frequent guest on Fox News. He crushed Adam Putnam, Florida’s agricultur­al commission­er and the onetime favorite to succeed GOP Gov. Rick Scott, by a commanding 57% to 37%.

On the Democratic side, Gillum narrowly bested the more moderate Gwen Graham — the daughter of a former governor and longtime U.S. senator — who was vying to become Florida’s first female chief executive.

Gillum, the first member of his family to graduate from college, became the first African American to win a major-party nomination for Florida governor, edging Graham 34% to 31%.

Gillum ran with the support of Vermont Sen. Sanders and his liberal followers, embracing a wholeheart­edly progressiv­e platform calling for Medicare expansion, a higher minimum wage and welcoming policies to the state’s large immigratio­n population.

The victory by DeSantis, a down-the-line conservati­ve, extended Trump’s nearly unbroken streak of anointing favored primary candidates and helping lift them to victory, underscori­ng his hegemony over the GOP.

The question is whether the presidenti­al embrace will serve candidates as well in the general election.

Democrats are hoping a Trump loyalist will flop with the broader electorate in November — fewer than half the state’s voters approve of Trump’s performanc­e, according to polls — giving the party control of the governor’s mansion for the first time in nearly two decades.

More than $120 million has been spent in the contest — the bulk of it by losing candidates and their supporters.

In other Florida contests, three-term Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson won his primary without opposition and will face Gov. Scott, who easily topped the GOP field, in November. The race is expected to be one of the nation’s hardest-fought and costliest Senate contests, as Nelson is considered among the most vulnerable Democrats seeking reelection.

The Democratic Party needs a gain of two seats to take control of the Senate, provided every one of their incumbents wins reelection — no small feat, given a number are running in states that Trump won overwhelmi­ngly.

Among a handful of competitiv­e House primaries, Donna Shalala, who was Health and Human Services secretary in the Clinton administra­tion, won her Democratic primary and will face Republican Maria Elvira Salazar, a former journalist and TV presenter, in an open-seat contest centered in Miami.

The district, represente­d by retiring GOP Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, is considered one of the Democrats’ best pickup opportunit­ies in the country. The party needs to gain 23 seats to win control of the House.

In Arizona, the Republican contest was a fight for the chance to succeed GOP incumbent Sen. Flake, whose criticisms of Trump made him persona non grata with the president’s base. It is one of two Republican-held seats considered a tossup in November; the other is Nevada.

McSally vied with Ward and Arpaio for the mantle of most Trump-worthy, a primary strategy that could prove troublesom­e in the general election in another state where the president is not widely popular beyond his core Republican supporters.

Despite entreaties from the candidates and their allies, Trump did not endorse anyone in Arizona’s contest.

On the Democratic side, three-term Rep. Sinema faced a challenge from civil rights attorney Deedra Abboud, who ran on a Sanderssty­le liberal agenda.

Even before the polls closed, McSally assailed the Phoenix-area lawmaker, calling Sinema a political chameleon who shed her past left-wing leanings to assume a more centrist persona.

But McSally’s ardent embrace of Trump marked a conversion of her own, from a skeptic who had criticized Trump’s proposed Muslim ban and vulgar comments about women and skipped his nominating convention. She refused to say whether she voted for the president, which was widely taken as an indication that she did not.

The final days of the race were overshadow­ed by the death of Arizona’s senior senator, Republican John McCain, and a suggestion by Ward that his family intended to harm her candidacy by announcing, the day before he died, that McCain was ceasing medical treatment.

The remark, widely criticized as insensitiv­e, was in keeping with years of scathing attacks from Ward. She unsuccessf­ully challenged McCain two years ago in what proved the last primary of his 30-year-plus political career.

In the race for Arizona governor, incumbent Republican Doug Ducey will face Democrat David Garcia, an education policy expert and professor at Arizona State University, who narrowly lost a 2014 bid for state superinten­dent of public instructio­n.

Ducey will appoint McCain’s successor, who — should he or she choose to run — will face voters in November 2020 for the right to finish a term ending in January 2023.

 ?? Joe Rondone Tallahasse­e Democrat ?? TALLAHASSE­E Mayor Andrew Gillum, Democrats’ nominee for governor in Florida, celebrates with supporters. From the Bernie Sanders wing of the party, he narrowly beat the more moderate Gwen Graham.
Joe Rondone Tallahasse­e Democrat TALLAHASSE­E Mayor Andrew Gillum, Democrats’ nominee for governor in Florida, celebrates with supporters. From the Bernie Sanders wing of the party, he narrowly beat the more moderate Gwen Graham.

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