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The Latest: Manual recount ordered for Florida Senate race

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Florida’s secretary of state has ordered a manual recount in the hotly contested U. S. Senate race there.
The Latest on Florida’s election recount (all times local):
5:15 p.m.
Florida’s secretary of state has ordered a manual recount in the state’s hotly contested U. S. Senate race.
Department of State spokeswoman Sarah Revell said in a news release Thursday evening that unofficial returns from a machine recount had triggered a second recount in the Senate race and the state agriculture commissioner’s race.
The release said the results of the manual recounts are due by noon Sunday.
Unofficial recount results on the secretary of state’s website show Republican Gov. Rick Scott with a.15 percentage point lead over Democratic incumbent U. S. Sen. Bill Nelson. State law requires a hand recount of races with margins of 0.25 percentage points or less.
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5 p.m.
Unofficial Florida election results show that the governor’s race seems to be settled after a machine recount but the U. S. Senate race is likely headed to a hand recount.
Unofficial results posted on the Florida secretary of state’s website show that Republican Ron DeSantis is virtually assured of winning the nationally watched governor’s race over Democrat Andrew Gillum. Florida finished a machine recount Thursday that showed Gillum without enough votes to force a manual recount.
The margin between U. S. Sen. Bill Nelson and Gov. Rick Scott is still thin enough to trigger a second review. State law requires a hand recount of races with margins of 0.25 percentage points or less.
Counties have until Sunday to inspect the ballots that did not record a vote when put through the machines. Those ballots are re-examined to see whether the voter skipped the race or marked the ballot in a way that the machines cannot read but can be deciphered.
The election will be certified Tuesday.
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4 p.m.
The Associated Press will not declare winners in the races for Florida governor and Senate until state officials certify the results next week.
In the race for governor, Republican Ron DeSantis leads Democrat Andrew Gillum by 33,684 votes of more than 8.2 million votes counted.
In the race for Senate, Republican Rick Scott leads Democratic incumbent Bill Nelson by 12,562 votes.
Both races were the subject of machine ballot recounts due Thursday afternoon, and results were pending.
Gillum initially conceded the governor’s race on election night but later said he wanted to see every vote counted once a state-mandated recount was initiated.
Florida counties have until Sunday to report final vote tallies, and state officials would certify those results next Tuesday.
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3 p.m.
Florida counties have reached the deadline for submitting the results of their election recounts.
A federal judge earlier rejected a request to give counties more time beyond the 3 p.m. Thursday deadline to finish their recounts. Palm Beach County’s election supervisor had warned that the county would not be able to complete the recount on time.
The election will be certified Tuesday.
The state’s 67 counties were required to do machine recounts of more than 8 million ballots cast in the contentious midterms. The U. S. Senate and governor’s races were among the three within the vote margin to trigger a machine recount.
Several lawsuits have been filed by Democrats and Republicans in the wake of the close election.
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2 p.m.
A federal judge is refusing to suspend looming election recount deadlines in the battleground state of Florida.
U. S. District Judge Mark Walker on Thursday rejected a request by U. S. Sen. Bill Nelson and Democrats to give counties more time to finish recounts. All 67 counties are required to submit the results of a machine recount by 3 p.m.
Palm Beach County’s election supervisor has already warned that the county will not be able to finish on time.
In his ruling, Walker said he was concerned that some counties may not complete their work by the deadline. But he said there is a lack of information on when Palm Beach County would wrap up its work.
Walker said he cannot «fashion a remedy in the dark.»
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Noon
The supervisor of elections in Florida’s Palm Beach County said the likelihood of her office completing the recount by the state-mandated 3 p.m. deadline is «very slim.»
Susan Bucher defended her office Thursday morning, saying the incomplete recount wasn’t «for lack of human effort.»
Bucher explained that the elections office in Riviera Beach shut down Wednesday night because «when you work about 45 hours in a row, you have to let people sleep.»
Bucher says she believes her office did everything it could despite not completing the U. S. Senate race recount.
She blames aging equipment for the delays in meeting Thursday’s deadline for machine recount results.
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10:15 a.m.
A federal judge is sharply criticizing Florida legislators and elections officials in Palm Beach County for the state’s chronic recount issues.
During a hearing on whether to extend the 3 p.m. Thursday deadline in the state’s recount for a U. S. Senate seat the governor’s race, U. S. District Judge Mark Walker noted that Florida has a history of «razor thin» elections, yet Palm Beach County delayed purchasing enough voting machines to handle a recount.
Walker said Florida has been «the laughing stock of the world election after election and we chose not to fix this.»
The judge also said that the recount procedure in Florida law is written in a way that doesn’t allow for possible problems. He suggested that runs against past federal court rulings, including the Bush v. Gore ruling that decided the 2000 presidential recount.
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7:45 a.m.
A federal judge is giving thousands of Florida voters until this weekend to fix their ballots if they haven’t been counted because of mismatched signatures.
U. S. District Judge Mark Walker ruled early Thursday that current Florida law on mail-in ballots places a substantial burden on voters. The ruling comes as Florida is wrapping up a recount in three statewide races.
Walker did not go along with a request from Democrats to count all ballots with mismatched signatures. Instead he ordered that local election officials give voters until 5 p.m. Saturday to correct the problem so that their ballots can be counted.
State officials testified in court that nearly 4,000 ballots have already been rejected because local canvassing boards decided the signature that was mailed-in doesn’t match the signature on file.

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