FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. ā Voters in Fort Lauderdale elected the city's first openly gay mayorĀ Tuesday.
Dean Trantalis defeated Bruce Roberts in a runoff election to replace longtime Mayor Jack Seiler.
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Trantalis received more than 5,800 votes than Roberts.
Trantalis, 64, has been serving as a city commissioner since 2009 and is a longtime champion of equal rights.
Roberts, a former Fort Lauderdale police chief, is the current vice mayor. The 70-year-oldĀ was first elected commissioner in 2009 but is facing term limits.
Democratic gubernatorial candidates Gwen Graham and Philip Levine took to Twitter to congratulate Trantalis, as did U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Florida.
Congratulations Mayor-Elect Dean Trantalis!
— Gwen Graham (@GwenGraham) March 14, 2018
As mayor, Dean will be a voice for the citizens of #FortLauderdale. I look forward to working with him from the Governorās Office to strengthen South Floridaās infrastructure and implement smarter growth in our state. pic.twitter.com/zMUB76HDJe
Congratulations to the new Mayor Dean Trantalis! The city of Fort Lauderdale couldn't be in better hands! pic.twitter.com/CN9XVDjxnU
— Mayor Philip Levine (@MayorLevine) March 14, 2018
Congratulations to Dean Trantalis on making history in Ft. Lauderale tonight! Mayor-Elect Trantalis has a true passion for public service and fighting for civil rights. This is a massive victory for Broward County and the LGBT community nationwide.
— Debbie Wasserman Schultz (@DWStweets) March 14, 2018
A decade ago, then-Fort Lauderdale Mayor Jim Naugle made headlines after he said the city needed to buy single-occupancy public toilets on the beach to "reduce homosexual sex in bathrooms." He also opposed a plan to put a collection of gay and lesbian literature in a public library. It was ultimately approved.
Naugle's comments drew the ire of gay residents, including Trantalis, who becameĀ the city's first openly gay elected official in 2003. TrantalisĀ decided not to seek re-election in 2006, but he was an outspoken opponentĀ of Naugle'sĀ anti-gay message.
TrantalisĀ previously ran for mayor in 2009 but lost to Seiler.
Steven Glassman, who is also openly gay, handily defeated opponent Tim Smith forĀ one of the city's two open commission seats.
GlassmanĀ is a former teacher who previously lost out in a 2009 commission bid.
Smith is a former cityĀ commissioner and vice mayor.
In the race between Benjamin Sorensen and Warren Sturman, Sorensen had a slight lead.
Lauderdale-by-the-Sea
In nearby Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, Chris Vincent narrowly led Mark Brown in the race to replace Scot Sasser as mayor.
Vincent is a town commissioner who is facing term limits. A native of New York, the building contractor moved to Broward County in 1987.
Brown served as a town commissioner for nearly six years before resigning in December to run for mayor.
Sasser announced in October that he wouldn't seek re-election.
Florida Keys
Voters in two Florida Keys cities were presented with ballot questions.
Key West voters were asked to determine whether they wanted to raise the maximum height for affordable workforce housing projects on College Road.
In Key Colony Beach, voters received two ballot questions related to the election process. The first asked voters if city commissioners should serve four-year terms instead of two-year terms.
The other asked voters whether they wanted a tie between two candidates to be decided by the city clerk instead of a runoff election.
Voter turnout for Tuesday's election was slightly more than 16 percent. The low turnout could be attributed to residents who are still struggling to get their lives back in order after Hurricane Irma.
A Monroe County elections supervisor said three precincts still didn't have working telephones.
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