Politics & Government
Election 2020: Pasco County Primary Results
Some volunteer poll workers failed to show up. Those who did show up had to divvy the tasks among fewer people.

PASCO COUNTY, FL — President Donald Trump was the hands-down winner in the Republican primary, garnering 94.58 percent or 35,589 votes Tuesday.
Former Vice President Joe Biden garnered 56.73 or 22,071 in the Democratic primary while Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders came in second with 24.91 percent or 9,592 votes.
Nearly 51,000 of Pasco County's eligible 258,448 voters cast their ballots in the presidential preference primary, a 19.67 percent turnout.
Find out what's happening in New Port Richeyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Concerns about the coronavirus outbreak kept many Pasco County voters away from the polls for Tuesday's presidential preference primary. And voters who braved the trip to their the polling place said they were met with confusion.
Some volunteer poll workers failed to show up. Those who did show up had to divide the tasks among fewer people, slowing down the voting process.
Find out what's happening in New Port Richeyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Valrico resident Yvette Hammett described her polling place at the Hillsborough County Fairgrounds as a "ghost town."
"When I arrived a little before 9 a.m., there were only two other voters there," she said. "After I filled out my ballot, I couldn't see where to take it. A volunteer guided me and said, "We were supposed to have 12 people today, but only four showed up."
Other voters showed up at the wrong precinct due to last-minute shuffling of precincts at assisted living facilities, which now have restricted access.
Residents who were able to vote came to the polls armed with plenty of hand sanitizer and wipes.
Tampa Bay voters fared better than voters in other parts of the state, however. Delray Beach resident Phil Metzler said he never got the chance to vote.
"My precinct never opened up for voting," he said. "The reason given was that the person who has the ability to open the machines never showed up."
He blamed Florida Gov Ron DeSantis for failing to follow the example of governors in Georgia and Ohio, who postponed the primaries in their states.
"As our governor has said, we voted in the Civil War," said Metzler. "I think I would have survived better voting during that time period than I would have today. I feel my right to vote has been suppressed or, better yet, stolen."
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