Florida’s purple reign is over. After midterm elections, it’s solidly MAGA red | Editorial
To understand what Republicans pulled off — and Democrats allowed to happen — in the midterm elections, let’s let the numbers tell the story.
In 2016, Hillary Clinton carried Miami-Dade, Florida’s largest county, by 29 points.
In 2018, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis lost the county by 21 points.
In 2020, Joe Biden won it by a mere 7 points.
DeSantis flipped Miami-Dade and made gains in other Democratic strongholds on Tuesday, including deep-blue Broward County.
The last Republican to win Miami-Dade was former Gov. Jeb Bush in the early 2000s. If Democrats cannot win it back in future elections, they can kiss goodbye ever winning statewide elections again.
Back in 2016, Clinton lost the Sunshine State to Donald Trump by a razor-thin margin typical of a “swing,” or “battleground” or “purple” state. DeSantis beat Democrat Charlie Crist by nearly 20 points. U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio won reelection almost as easily.
These results seem like they could have just as easily happened in a deep-red bastion and that’s what Florida might as well be called at least for now.
In the following days, pundits, political consultants and journalists will ponder: Is Florida still a swing state? Which way Florida leans can change in a couple of election cycles. Miami-Dade still has more registered Democrats than Republicans. But it will be hard to keep the state colored in purple in the next presidential election electoral map. Florida stands as an outlier of Republican strength when a predicted red wave didn’t materialize in other states.
National Democratic donors all but abandoned the state this year, spending their money in states where they could get more bang for their buck, like Georgia or Arizona. The math to win presidential elections becomes harder for Democrats without Florida’s 30 electoral votes, and easier for Republicans.
“Florida tonight becomes the MAGA red center of the political universe, sadly,” Miami-based Democratic pollster Fernand Amandi told the Herald Editorial Board.
For a governor who squeezed in a victory in 2018, DeSantis has proven that his confrontational style of politics, his obsession with culture wars about race, gender and sexual orientation and his approach to the COVID-19 pandemic are a winning formula. Expect more of it in his next term, as he’s expected to run for president in 2024. Expect the GOP to export this model to other states with a large Hispanic voting base.
BEHIND THE STORY
MOREWhat's an editorial?
Editorials are opinion pieces that reflect the views of the Miami Herald Editorial Board, a group of opinion journalists that operates separately from the Miami Herald newsroom. Miami Herald Editorial Board members are: opinion editor Amy Driscoll and editorial writers Isadora Rangel and Mary Anna Mancuso. Read more by clicking the arrow in the upper right.
What's the difference between an op-ed and a column?
How does the Miami Herald Editorial Board decide what to write about?
The Editorial Board, made up of experienced opinion journalists, primarily addresses local and state issues that affect South Florida residents. Each board member has an area of focus, such as education, COVID or local government policy. Board members meet daily and bring up an array of topics for discussion. Once a topic is fully discussed, board members will further report the issue, interviewing stakeholders and others involved and affected, so that the board can present the most informed opinion possible. We strive to provide our community with thought leadership that advocates for policies and priorities that strengthen our communities. Our editorials promote social justice, fairness in economic, educational and social opportunities and an end to systemic racism and inequality. The Editorial Board is separate from the reporters and editors of the Miami Herald newsroom.
How can I contribute to the Miami Herald Opinion section?
The Editorial Board accepts op-ed submissions of 650-700 words from community members who want to argue a specific viewpoint or idea that is relevant to our area. You can email an op-ed submission to oped@miamiherald.com. We also accept 150-word letters to the editor from readers who want to offer their points of view on current issues. For more information on how to submit a letter, go here.
No surprises
It can be hard to draw conclusions based on the results of a midterm election. The party holding the White House traditionally loses seats, Biden is facing low approval ratings and inflation is at a historic high. But the GOP’s expansion of its dominance and Democrats’ shrinking footprint in a state so crucial to national elections is no surprise to anyone who’s been following state and local politics.
“This is like Mike Tyson boxing with a 90 year old man in a nursing home. The outcome is not unexpected,” tweeted Rick Wilson, a former GOP consultant and co-founder of the anti-Trump Lincoln Project.
The Democratic Party infrastructure is a skeleton of what it used to be when Barack Obama won the state in 2008 and 2012. Back then, Democrats thought they had figured out how to crack the code with Hispanic voters in Miami-Dade. The common complaint from Democratic consultants and candidates is that instead of building on that success, the party picked up and left, returning only when it needed votes and often too late. They dismissed, instead of disproved, the “socialist” label Republicans attached to every candidate with a “D” next to their name. Democrats lost ground with Hispanics, not only among conservative-leaning Cubans, but Latinos of other backgrounds.
Republicans played the long game. They closed the Democratic advantage in voter registration, and then surpassed it. They remained engaged in communities important to them year-round. They built infrastructure like a Hispanic center in Miami-Dade that hosts a U.S. citizenship exam prep clinic for soon-to-be voters. Those efforts paid off on Tuesday when DeSantis won roughly 65% of the vote in majority Hispanic precincts in Miami-Dade, the Herald reported.
Republicans have a unified message and follow the script, unlike Democrats who struggle conveying their vision in a succinct, direct way, like “Make America Great Again” did. Republicans quickly rallied behind Trump and then DeSantis — there’s no room for dissent in the GOP, as Republicans who went head-to-head with Trump and DeSantis have learned. Such muzzling is not healthy for democracy, but it sure can pull in the votes.
The moral of the story is that no party should take Florida for granted. If Democrats can teach us anything, it’s that you snooze, you lose.
“Do I think [Florida] is lost forever? No, but we need a game-changer of a candidate,” Democratic consultant Evan Ross told the Editorial Board.
Andrew Gillum could’ve been that candidate in 2018, but his political baggage, thanks to an FBI investigation into Tallahassee City Hall, sank him. He lost to DeSantis by 32,000 votes. Gillum was arrested this year on charges of conspiracy and fraud.
Crist, a former Republican governor turned independent and then Democrat, who lost in 2014, was anything but exciting. To be fair, not even the second coming of Obama could’ve likely beaten the popular DeSantis.
If Democrats are going to wait for the next charismatic leader to save them from doom, that’s a big gamble. But politics is driven by hype. If donors don’t think Florida Democrats have the right candidates, they will take their money elsewhere. Without money, Democrats cannot have basic infrastructure to groom and support candidates.
It’s a self-fulling prophecy that will likely continue to haunt them in the Sunshine State.
This story was originally published November 8, 2022 at 9:36 PM.