With Florida Amendment 3 going several percentage points short of passage on Election Day, the hopes of weed users and companies went up in smoke.
This isn’t unusual or unexpected, as the nation’s most populous state is consistently among the slowest to report all its election results. Compare it to a state like Florida, the third-largest, which finished counting its votes four days after Election Day.
Let the game of dominoes begin. President-elect Donald Trump is quickly filling top roles in his administration. And, as expected, prominent positions are going to Floridians. Trump is expected to nominate Sen.
More than 6 million Florida voters, representing 57% of the vote, cast their ballot in favor of Amendment 4 on Election Day Tuesday. Yet, the abortion measure failed to pass despite 1.5 million more Floridians voting "yes" on the amendment rather than "no."
Florida voters failed to make abortion a constitutional right in the state despite a majority of Florida voters casting a ballot in favor of the amendment.
Florida on Tuesday became the first state to reject an abortion rights amendment since Roe v. Wade was overturned, but backers of the measure decried that a minority of voters was able to prevail.
Democrats hoped the state was "in play," but Tuesday's results left them with more questions than answers after another crushing general election defeat.
The president-elect is the first Floridian elected to the White House. He’s bringing some of his neighbors along with him.
With 99 percent of votes tabulated, here's how Florida voters felt about six proposed amendments on the ballot.
Former President Trump cemented Florida’s status as a deep-red state on Tuesday, flipping multiple counties up and down the state. Miami-Dade County saw a Republican win at the presidential