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Augustus Sol Invictus

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Augustus Sol Invictus
Image of Augustus Sol Invictus
Elections and appointments
Last convention

August 24, 2020

Augustus Sol Invictus (Republican Party) ran for election for President of the United States. He lost as a write-in in the Republican convention on August 24, 2020.

The Senate race in Florida was considered a race to watch by USA Today.[1] Although three-term incumbent Sen. Bill Nelson (D) won re-election in 2012 by a margin of 13 points, his position as the only Democrat elected to statewide office in Florida was seen as evidence of his vulnerability in the state heading into 2018.[2]

Invictus was a 2016 Libertarian candidate who sought election to the U.S. Senate from Florida.[3]

Elections

2018

General election

General election for U.S. Senate Florida

Rick Scott defeated incumbent Bill Nelson in the general election for U.S. Senate Florida on November 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Rick Scott
Rick Scott (R)
 
50.1
 
4,099,505
Image of Bill Nelson
Bill Nelson (D)
 
49.9
 
4,089,472
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.0
 
1,028

Total votes: 8,190,005
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for U.S. Senate Florida

Incumbent Bill Nelson advanced from the Democratic primary for U.S. Senate Florida on August 28, 2018.

Candidate
Image of Bill Nelson
Bill Nelson

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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Republican primary election

Republican primary for U.S. Senate Florida

Rick Scott defeated Roque De La Fuente in the Republican primary for U.S. Senate Florida on August 28, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Rick Scott
Rick Scott
 
88.6
 
1,456,187
Image of Roque De La Fuente
Roque De La Fuente
 
11.4
 
187,209

Total votes: 1,643,396
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

2016

See also: United States Senate election in Florida, 2016

The race for Florida's U.S. Senate seat was one of nine competitive battleground races in 2016 that that helped Republicans maintain control of the Senate. Incumbent Sen. Marco Rubio (R) defeated U.S. Rep. Patrick Murphy (D), Iraq war veteran Paul Stanton (L), and nine independent and write-in candidates in the general election, which took place on November 8, 2016. According to Politico, Rubio was “the first Republican senator from the Sunshine State ever to win reelection in a presidential election year.”[4][5]

Rubio called Murphy "hyper-partisan," "a rubber stamp for, God forbid, a Clinton presidency," and accused him of fabricating his qualifications.[6][7][8][9] Murphy criticized Rubio, saying, "Sen. Rubio has the worst vote attendance record of any Florida senator in nearly 50 years." Murphy's spokeswoman Galia Slayen said, "Marco Rubio is willing to abandon his responsibility to Floridians and hand over our country's national security to Donald Trump, as long as it advances his own political career."[10]

In his victory speech, Rubio said, “[I] hope that I and my colleagues as we return to work in Washington D.C. can set a better example how political discourse should exist in this country. And I know people feel betrayed and you have a right to. Every major institution in our society has failed us — the media, the government, big business, Wall Street, academia — they have all failed us. So people are so frustrated and angry. But we must channel that anger and frustration into something positive. Let it move us forward as energy to confront and solve our challenges and our problems.”[11]

U.S. Senate, Florida General Election, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngMarco Rubio Incumbent 52% 4,835,191
     Democratic Patrick Murphy 44.3% 4,122,088
     Libertarian Paul Stanton 2.1% 196,956
     Independent Bruce Nathan 0.6% 52,451
     Independent Tony Khoury 0.5% 45,820
     Independent Steven Machat 0.3% 26,918
     Independent Basil Dalack 0.2% 22,236
     N/A Write-in 0% 160
Total Votes 9,301,820
Source: Florida Division of Elections


U.S. Senate, Florida Republican Primary, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.pngMarco Rubio Incumbent 72% 1,029,830
Carlos Beruff 18.5% 264,427
Dwight Young 6.4% 91,082
Ernie Rivera 3.2% 45,153
Total Votes 1,430,492
Source: Florida Division of Elections
U.S. Senate, Florida Democratic Primary, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.pngPatrick Murphy 58.9% 665,985
Alan Grayson 17.7% 199,929
Pam Keith 15.4% 173,919
Roque De La Fuente 5.4% 60,810
Reginald Luster 2.6% 29,138
Total Votes 1,129,781
Source: Florida Division of Elections
U.S. Senate, Florida Libertarian Primary, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.pngPaul Stanton 73.5% 2,946
Augustus Invictus Sol 26.5% 1,063
Total Votes 4,009
Source: Florida Division of Elections

Campaign themes

2016

The following issues were listed on Invictus' campaign website. For a full list of campaign themes, click here.

  • Ending the Drug War: The War on Drugs is a failure and an embarrassment. It is a failure, not because the cartels have won, but because it is not the Government’s role to regulate vice. It is an embarrassment, not because the American people continue to consume drugs, but because we have spent countless billions of dollars trying to cure the world of substances once revered by our ancestors. It is not crime, but an obsession with vice, that has destroyed the community of our country. We must repeal the Controlled Substances Act, abolish the Drug Enforcement Administration, and stop militarizing the police against its own citizens in the name of morality.
  • Non-Interventionist Foreign Policy: For the past hundred years, the United States has involved itself in the wars of the world, justifying its greed with dubious talk of peace and brotherhood. Our Government has assumed the mantle of the world’s policeman, dedicated to interfering with the Governments of other nations in other parts of the globe. This has cost us an extraordinary amount of American lives, countless trillions of dollars, and untold embarrassment. We must embrace a policy of non-intervention without becoming isolationist; we must lead the world without becoming the monsters we swore to fight; we must decline to waste billions of dollars protecting reckless allies and laying waste to sovereign countries in the name of humanity.
  • Sound Monetary Policy: Spending by the Federal Government has been out of control for generations. If we are to avoid a total collapse, we must make drastic changes to the federal financial structure. We must balance the budget; shrink the size of the Government; cease reckless Government spending; deregulate American businesses. We must repeal the individual income tax, abolish the Internal Revenue Service, and recreate the tax code so that the American people can understand what they are being asked to pay to their Government.
  • Abolish the Federal Reserve: Few Americans are aware that our money is printed not by the Federal Government but by the Federal Reserve. Few Americans are aware that the Federal Reserve is not a branch of our Government but is actually a group of private banks; or that the Federal Reserve lends money to our government at interest; or that this usurpation of power by private banks is intended to make the banks richer, not to help the public good. It is a force inimical to the American people, and it is the foremost cause of economic ruin in our country. We must repeal the Federal Reserve Act and abolish the Federal Reserve.
  • Civil Liberties: Whether an American marries a member of the same sex or of the opposite sex is not the concern of the Government. Whether an American speaks with his wife or his mistress is not the concern of the NSA. Whether an American consumes alcohol or marijuana is not the concern of the DEA. Whether an American owns one firearm or three is not the concern of the ATF. We must restore our civil liberties and limit the power of the Government to interfere with the private affairs of our citizens.

[12]

—Augustus Sol Invictus' campaign website, http://www.invictusforsenate.com/platform.html

Recent news

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See also

External links

Footnotes


Senators
Representatives
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Neal Dunn (R)
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Anna Luna (R)
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Republican Party (22)
Democratic Party (8)