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<p>Impact Party candidates and supporters celebrate after winning 34 out of 50 senate seats at the Fall 2015 Senate elections Sept. 30, 2015.</p>

Impact Party candidates and supporters celebrate after winning 34 out of 50 senate seats at the Fall 2015 Senate elections Sept. 30, 2015.

After a battle of chomps and cheers, Impact Party took the majority of seats up for grabs in the Student Government elections Wednesday night.

Despite Access Party’s success in the Spring elections, it was newly founded Impact that took 34 seats compared to Access Party’s 16 seats.

A total of 10,229 students voted, with 6,427 ballots cast the first day of elections and 3,802 ballots cast Wednesday. Last Fall saw a record-low turnout, with only 6,733 ballots cast over the course of two days.

Wednesday was the culmination of a contentious election season, vastly different from last Fall when the unopposed Swamp Party took 49 of the 50 Senate seats, and Spring 2014’s election when Swamp took all 50 seats with 7,919 ballots cast. Swamp was not present in this election.

Impact took all but one district, sweeping 24 of 37 off-campus residential seats. Access took all of District D, the homes in ZIP code 32608, holding on to 13 seats.

Impact took 10 of the 13 on-campus residential seats while Access clung to Hume, Murphree and Tolbert Hall seats.

Both parties were reprimanded for complaints, with each party submitting three complaints against the other during a meeting Monday night at the UF Levin College of Law. Access was reprimanded for a published BuzzFeed article, which explained campaign questions, because it was not registered as campaign material, according to Election Commissions Chair Joshua Gehres. Impact was reprimanded for campaigning before Sept. 1, the official beginning of elections.

Five election complaints were received Wednesday. These will be heard Friday at 8 a.m. in the law school by Gehres and the rest of the election commission.

Access supporters arrived in a crowd just after 9:30 p.m. In a sea of blue, about 40 supporters came together with Mango, a 1-year-old fluffy white Samoyed dog, in tow. When Impact arrived just before the announcement of elections, it became a war of chants — Access’s "Blue" against Impact’s "Orange" — with Impact supporters hoisting a 9-month-old orange Pomeranian, named Luke, in the air.

"We have a lot of sweaty tired people out here," said Access spokesman Michael Christ amid chants and Gator Chomps before the results. "We’re ready for results."

"I’m not a betting man. I’ll leave it to the polls," Christ said.

Impact spokesman Chris Boyett felt the election results would be positive.

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"No matter what happens," he said, "we’re going to do great work on campus."

And for Impact, they were — even if some seats were won by a narrow margin.

"One vote, one vote," chanted Impact members, jumping up and down as they celebrated winning the Keys Residential Complex seat by one vote.

Impact campaign manager Blake Murphy said he wasn’t surprised by the results.

"The next step is going to reach across the aisle to start figuring out our projects to compromise so we can get back to work," he said.

Access members hugged and wiped away tears, comforting each other.

Christ said the party will continue to work for change.

"As you’ve seen all throughout history, change comes slowly, but it does come," he said.

Yet, despite the tears from her party members, Access President Kalyani Hawaldar was still enveloped in a hug by Murphy and Impact founder Susan Webster after results were announced.

Hawaldar said Access will come back bigger and better in Spring.

"It doesn’t matter whether we win seats or we lose seats," Hawaldar said. "It’s all worth it."

Staff Writers Caitlin Ostroff, Ariana Figueroa, Emily Cochrane, Brooke Baitinger and Alyssa Fisher contributed to this report.

Beaty TowersAnna Bensoussan - Impact

Broward

Jackie Phillips - Impact

District A - 10 seats

Austin Champoux - Impact

Haley Smith - Impact

Jenny Clements - Impact

Carter Long - Impact

Smith Meyers - Impact

Kylie Werk - Impact

Jason Richards - Impact

Susan Webster - Impact

Ben Weiner - Impact

Max Klein - Impact

District B - 7 seats

Jacob Halloway - Impact

Avery Smith - Impact

Jake Felder - Impact

Briggs Noun - Impact

Sean Titus - Impact

Wilson Trawick - Impact

Will Worth - Impact

District C - 6 seats

Anthony Close - Impact

Jordan Folkes - Impact

Dakota Stanford - Impact

Kailey Kynast - Impact

Octavious Buiey - Impact

Roshelle Twymon - Impact

District D - 13 seats

Anthony J. Black - Access

Jessica Valdez - Access

Pinal Patel - Access

Yen Le - Access

Hurara Khan - Access

Dwayne Fletcher - Access

Lillian Rozsa - Access

Donald (DJ) Fontenot - Access

Yuchen Wang - Access

Praveen Varanasi - Access

Brittany Munyer - Access

Ricardo Sabater - Access

Margaret Patterson - Access

District E

Taylor Kennedy - Impact

Family Housing

Nicki Baldwin - Impact

Graham Area

Sara Daou - Impact

Hume Area

Preston Jones - Access

Jennings Area

Wayne Selogy - Impact

Keys Residential Complex

Cole Gabriel - Impact

Lakeside Residential Complex

Omarely Spence - Impact

Murphree Area

Jasmine Haddaway - Access

Rawlings Area

Emily Robb - Impact

Reid-Yulee-Mallory Area

Sara Goff - Impact

Springs Residential Complex

Zach Kravetz - Impact

Tolbert Area

Kevin Rivera - Access

Impact Party candidates and supporters celebrate after winning 34 out of 50 senate seats at the Fall 2015 Senate elections Sept. 30, 2015.

Impact Party walks into the Reitz breezeway shouting “I-M-P-A-C-T, Impact is for you and me.”

Cole Gabriel, an Impact senator, celebrates after learning he won the Keys Residential Complex Senate seat by one vote.

Access Party members link arms and hold hands as they wait for results Wednesday night.

Impact Party campaign manager, Blake Murphy (left), and Impact Party co-founder Susan Webster (right) embrace Access Party President Kalyani Hawaldar after hearing the results of the Fall Senate elections.

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