Boston Herald

Lessons on racial voting in Florida elections

- By STAR PARKER Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

Now that, finally, the elections in Florida have reached a conclusion, there are lessons worth learning. One is on the subject of race. There was a fateful anomaly in racial voting in the governor’s race between Democrat Andrew Gillum and Republican Ron DeSantis, now Florida’s governor-elect. Given that Gillum, formerly mayor of Tallahasse­e, was running to become the first black governor of Florida, we might have expected black enthusiasm for his candidacy. But it didn’t happen. Gillum received a lower percentage of the black vote than did Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson, who lost to Rick Scott in the Senate race. White Democrat Nelson got 90 percent of the black vote and Republican Scott got 10 percent. In the governor’s race, black Democrat Gillum got 86 percent of the black vote, four percentage points less than Nelson, against Republican DeSantis’ 14 percent. Given the razor-thin margins, that difference in black support meant a lot. When Gillum finally conceded the election, he was behind by 33,683 votes. Each 1 percent of the black vote equated to about 10,000 votes. So if Gillum had received 90 percent of the black vote, as did Bill Nelson, rather than 86 percent, he could well have had another 40,000 votes, which would have been enough for victory. Gillum was aggressive in his allegation­s of racism against DeSantis. “Now, I’m not calling Mr. DeSantis a racist, I’m simply saying the racists believe he is racist,” he said. He accused DeSantis of getting financial support from white supremacis­t groups and speaking at their events. DeSantis, a conservati­ve former Republican congressma­n, made his support of Trump a centerpiec­e of his campaign. So how does this all compute? One convincing line of speculatio­n is that DeSantis campaigned aggressive­ly on parental choice in education and keeping in place and expanding the taxcredit scholarshi­p program enacted under Gov. Jeb Bush. Gillum campaigned on closing down the program, which empowers parents to use these funds to send their children to charter and private schools. Polls consistent­ly show that blacks support parental choice in education. And for good reason. Black children are disproport­ionately trapped in failing, violent public schools. Black parents want alternativ­es for their kids. Gillum took the left-wing party line on education choice, against the sentiments of black constituen­ts. This could have made all the difference. The lesson here is that blacks care about issues more than they care about skin color. It’s an important lesson for Republican­s going forward. They need to tune in to black concerns, which often are not the same as those of whites, and explain how the best solutions for those concerns are the conservati­ve solutions. In addition to education, this means addressing issues such as housing, urban violence and prison reform. The governor’s race in Florida gives us good reason to believe that a more aggressive, targeted effort by Republican­s in reaching out to minority communitie­s could make all the difference in the presidenti­al election in 2020.

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