Geller was born in
The Bronx in
New York City in 1954, and moved to the state of
Florida in 1965. He attended
Northwestern University, but did not graduate, instead receiving his
bachelor's degree in history from the
Florida State University in 1975. After graduation, Geller then attended the
Florida State University College of Law, receiving his
Juris Doctor in 1979. In 1989, he was elected the Chairman of the
Miami-Dade County Democratic Party, serving in that capacity in 2000. During the
2000 presidential election, he played a prominent role as an attorney for the
Al Gore presidential campaign. During the
recount, Geller, seeking to confirm a theory that some Gore voters had accidentally punched the wrong hole in their ballots, requested a sample ballot from the Supervisor of Elections' office. After receiving the ballot from a clerk, Geller was accused of stealing a ballot, was mobbed by protesters, and had to be escorted to safety by police. "I requested [the sample ballot], which I'm entitled to do," Geller said. "It was clearly marked 'sample ballot for use by Democratic Party.' The whole transaction was out in the open and all very calmly done. This Republican observer — a woman with blond hair, a suit and clipboard — was watching the whole thing. But the moment I started to walk away, she sicced the crowd on me. She said I was stealing a ballot and they surrounded me. It was all orchestrated." Geller ran for Mayor of
North Bay Village, a small city in northeastern Miami-Dade County, in 2004. He faced Frank DiMaggio and was able to win narrowly, receiving 54% of the vote to DiMaggio's 46%. ==Florida House of Representatives==