Los Angeles Times

Democrats turn left in Florida

Long out of power, party hopes a young, black liberal can capture governorsh­ip.

- By Jenny Jarvie jenny.jarvie@latimes.com

The party, which has not won the governorsh­ip in two decades, looks to Andrew Gillum, a young, liberal African American mayor.

ATLANTA — When Andrew Gillum stepped up to accept the Democratic nomination for Florida governor, he went back to the beginning — back to his working-class roots, back to the lesson he learned at an early age from his grandmothe­r.

“She would say, ‘Bring it home,’” he said. “‘Baby, it ain’t just about you.’ ... There was a belief that if I went far in life, we would all go far in life, that if I did good, we would all do good. Well, Florida, y’all know what? We’ve got to bring that sense of community, collection and collectivi­sm back to the state of Florida.”

Gillum’s upset victory in Tuesday’s primary made the 39-year-old Tallahasse­e mayor the first African American to win a major party nomination for Florida governor.

The win immediatel­y set up Gillum as a national champion of the Democratic left and will almost surely turn the contest for governor in the nation’s largest swing state into one of the most intensely watched elections of the year — a test for the party’s progressiv­e wing and for racial politics in the Trump era.

Gillum, a liberal candidate who comes endorsed by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), now confronts Rep. Ron DeSantis, a staunchly conservati­ve Iraq war veteran and Fox News commentato­r who wooed the Republican base — and the president — by presenting himself as a Trump loyalist.

Looming over the contest is the question of whether a black, left-ofcenter Democrat can win Florida. Within hours of the last primary votes being counted, the fraught issue of race had already taken center stage.

During the campaign, Gillum stood on a platform of Medicare for all, a $15-anhour minimum wage, abolishing the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency, standing up against the National Rifle Assn., and repealing Florida’s so-called stand-yourground law — which justifies a person’s use of lethal force in certain cases.

DeSantis quickly went on the offensive, presenting his rival as a far-left socialist who would cripple the economy and usher in an apocalypti­c era of high crime.

“I’m trying to make Florida even better; he wants to make Florida Venezuela,” DeSantis said in a postelecti­on interview with Laura Ingraham on Fox News. “This guy can’t even run the city of Tallahasse­e. There’s no way Florida voters can entrust him with our entire state.”

But it was another remark Wednesday morning on Fox that generated the most attention: DeSantis warned Floridians not to “monkey this up” by choosing Gillum, drawing protests from Democrats who accused him of using a racially charged phrase.

“It’s disgusting that Ron DeSantis is launching his general election campaign with racist dog whistles,” Florida Democratic Party Chairwoman Terrie Rizzo said in a statement.

A spokesman for DeSantis said it was “absurd” to say the candidate’s comment was racial in nature. He was “obviously talking about Florida not making the wrong decision to embrace the socialist policies that Andrew Gillum espouses,” said the spokesman, Stephen Lawson.

Democrats, however, were not about to let the issue drop. Gillum, also doing an interview on Fox, said DeSantis was mimicking Trump.

“In the handbook of Donald Trump they no longer do whistle calls — they’re now using full bullhorns,” he said, adding that voters are “sick of it.”

Gillum has played down the significan­ce of his skin color, emphasizin­g that his campaign was geared toward all voters.

Asked in a postelecti­on interview by CNN’s Don Lemon about vying to be the state’s first black governor, Gillum responded: “I’m vying to be the next governor of the state of Florida. I just so happen to be black.”

Born in Richmond Heights, a blue-collar community about 15 miles southwest of downtown Miami, Gillum has made much of his origins, branding himself during the primary as “the only nonmillion­aire in the race.”

His mother, Frances, was a bus driver who pressed clothes in a dry cleaning shop in the summer. His father, Charles, was a constructi­on worker who took on side jobs selling fruit and vegetables on a street corner.

Gillum was the first of seven siblings to graduate from high school and college; at 23, he became the youngest city commission­er in the history of Tallahasse­e. At 35, he was elected mayor.

Throughout the primary, the convention­al wisdom was that Gillum was a longshot. Critics noted that Tallahasse­e has the highest crime rate in the state. Its city government is the subject of an FBI investigat­ion into corruption. Gillum counters that he is not the target of the inquiry and has emphasized Tallahasse­e’s progress in having the fastest-growing economy in the state per capita and its tripling of solar energy production.

Although vastly outspent by his rivals, Gillum was boosted in late June when Tom Steyer, the billionair­e Democratic donor from Silicon Valley, announced that his NextGen America organizati­on would commit $1 million to Gillum’s campaign. In the final week of the race, Steyer, fellow billionair­e George Soros and anonymous donors offered a boost of $650,000.

Even as Gillum gained in late polls, his rivals largely attacked one another, giving him a clear path in a multi-candidate field.

“Gillum was flying a campaign under the radar,” said Michael McDonald, associate professor of political science at the University of Florida.

Gillum ended surging ahead of four wealthy challenger­s, beating the more moderate establishm­ent favorite, Gwen Graham, a former member of Congress and daughter of a former Florida governor and U.S. senator, 34% to 31%.

Although Florida has famously been one of the country’s most evenly divided states in presidenti­al elections, a Democrat has not won its governorsh­ip in more than 20 years. Some party strategist­s — and many Republican­s — believe Gillum is too far to the left to break that streak.

Others, however, note that the strategy of nominating a moderate, white politician has failed repeatedly for Democrats in the state. Gillum’s victory in the primary showed he has an ability to inspire young and minority voters to the polls.

“What you saw in Gillum’s win is the changing of the guard generation­ally in Florida, a pattern you’re seeing across the country,” said Susan MacManus, a political analyst and professor emeritus of political science at the University of South Florida.

While Florida is often seen as a state of aging retirees, MacManus noted that about half of its current registered voters are in the three youngest generation­s. Among Florida Democrats, the majority of registered voters are nonwhite.

Gillum’s victory echoes what happened next door in Georgia in May, when Stacey Abrams became the first black female candidate to win the Democratic nomination for governor. Yet, unlike Georgia, which is a predominan­tly blackwhite state, Florida’s minority compositio­n is far more diverse, with greater numbers of Latino, Asian and Caribbean blacks, as well as African American voters.

“He kind of fits an Obama mold,” McDonald said of Gillum. “Obama hit the stage as a relatively unknown candidate, but was able to excite the progressiv­e side of the Democratic Party. That’s what the mold is for him.”

While much has been made of his endorsemen­t from Sanders, Gillum has pitched himself as someone who can unite all wings of the Democratic Party. He is quick to note he was a committed supporter of Hillary Clinton in 2016.

“Our candidacy has the ability to bring together the Hillary wing, the Barack Obama wing, the Bernie Sanders wing,” he told Lemon on CNN.

“Honestly, if we’re going to win in November, we have to have a candidate that can bring those folks together and [bring] some disaffecte­d Republican­s right along with us. But the way we’re going to do it is not by capitulati­ng and shrinking from what we believe, but by giving our voters a reason to go out and vote for something.”

 ?? Steve Cannon Associated Press ?? ANDREW GILLUM, with son Jackson, was the surprise winner of Florida’s Democratic primary for governor. While emphasizin­g his working-class roots, the Tallahasse­e mayor defeated four wealthy opponents.
Steve Cannon Associated Press ANDREW GILLUM, with son Jackson, was the surprise winner of Florida’s Democratic primary for governor. While emphasizin­g his working-class roots, the Tallahasse­e mayor defeated four wealthy opponents.
 ?? Chris O’Meara Associated Press ?? ENDORSED by Sen. Bernie Sanders, left, Gillum now becomes a national leader of the Democratic left, but he says he’s confident he can unite all party factions.
Chris O’Meara Associated Press ENDORSED by Sen. Bernie Sanders, left, Gillum now becomes a national leader of the Democratic left, but he says he’s confident he can unite all party factions.

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