TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -- Beyonce, Tim Tebow or the Norse god Thor for prez? Those were some of Florida's more unusual picks for president this past election.
And the number of Florida voters who didn't cast a vote for either Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton or any other valid contender spiked in 2016, apparently in protest over the ballot choices.
A report released by state officials Wednesday showed more than 161,000 Florida voters who took part in the elections either at the polls or by mail didn't cast a valid vote for president.
The "non-valid votes" include those who wrote in such names as Mickey Mouse or Bernie Sanders and others who simply left the ballot blank. It also includes those who voted for more than one candidate.
All told, the invalid ballots outnumbered Republican Trump's margin of victory over Democrat Clinton of nearly 113,000 votes to clinch Florida's 29 electoral votes.
And the rate of invalid votes for president in 2016 - 1.69 percent overall - was more than double the rate it was in 2012 and 2008 when President Barack Obama won the state each time.
"There were some people who were very disgruntled," said Orange County Supervisor of Elections Bill Cowles, giving the read of some fellow election officials on the report.
Independently, he compiled a list showing his own Florida county had write-in votes for president including Beyonce, the former University of Florida quarterback Tebow, Thor of Norse mythology and even one vote for "We Can Do Better."
There also were a number of write-ins for Sanders, the senator who lost the Democratic nod to Clinton as well as for other Republican or independent candidates.
"I think it was a reflection of the election," said Cowles, who tracked the names and number of invalid write-in votes even though he was not required to.
Florida's report - compiled from data collected by all 67 counties - is required after every major election. It got its start after the chaotic 2000 presidential election, which hinged on a contentious recount in Florida famously involving "hanging chads" and more.
In the latest report, Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner's office concluded the spike in "non-valid votes" was not the result of voter confusion or problems with voting equipment.
The report found nearly 65,000 Florida voters left their ballot blank, also known as an "undervote," while more than 82,000 wrote the name of someone who did not qualify to run for president in Florida.
All told, more than 9.5 million Floridians voted in the election. The total of "non-valid votes" didn't include nearly 13,000 provision ballots that were also rejected.
Pasco County Supervisor of Elections Brian Corley echoed the view of other local election officials who said the invalid vote spike showed a segment of the electorate was unsatisfied with the two major candidates.
"I would attribute the spike in invalid undervotes to a highly combative presidential election with two polarizing candidates," Corley said. "I suspect the voter who wrote in an invalid write-in did so deliberately."