Miami Herald (Sunday)

Trump casts his ballot in person in Palm Beach

- BY BIANCA PADRÓ OCASIO, DAVID SMILEY AND JOEY FLECHAS bpadro@miamiheral­d.com

President Donald Trump has voted twice by mail since becoming a Palm Beach County resident one year ago. But on Saturday, like so many other Florida Republican­s, Donald Trump voted for Donald Trump in person.

Trump cast his ballot at the Palm Beach County main library in West Palm Beach at around 10 a.m.. Trump voted alone in a private room at the library, according to White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany. Outside, Trump supporters waved flags and chanted, hoping to catch

The appearance by the United States’ 44th president came on the first weekend of early voting in Florida, where about 5.5 million voters had already cast ballots by the time Obama finished his 45minute speech. That pace puts Floridians on track to easily surpass the 6.5 million ballots cast early and by mail in the entirety of the 2016 election.

But in an election held during a pandemic, neither side intends to ease up before Election Day. Democrats have built a massive lead over Republican­s through vote-by-mail, although Florida Republican­s set a party record Saturday for number of mail ballots cast in an election at more than 1.1 million, topping their 2016 numbers with 10 days still to go before Election Day.

Hoping to preserve as much of Democrats’ mail ballot lead, Biden, who was in Pennsylvan­ia on Saturday, sent Obama to

North Miami, where the former president slammed nearly every facet of the incumbent’s record during a rally held in the student parking lot of FIU’s Biscayne Bay campus.

Making his first speech in Miami-Dade County in two years, Obama made specific appeals to Florida’s diverse electorate by mentioning issues like socialism, Obamacare and the federal government’s Hurricane Maria response. But the biggest chunk of his 45-minute speech was devoted to President Donald Trump’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We literally left this White House a pandemic playbook to show them how to respond before a virus reached our shores,” Obama said, drawing honks from the crowd. “It must be lost along with the Republican healthcare plan.”

Instead of applause, Obama was greeted with horn-honking from the 228 cars allowed on an open field in the middle of campus. Instead of a backdrop full of politician­s and community leaders, Obama gave his remarks from an empty stage.

“We just saw the highest number of cases spike up yesterday,” Obama said, of COVID-19 infections nationally. “You think [Trump] would be ready for a response? He doesn’t have a plan. He doesn’t even acknowledg­e the reality.”

More than 16,000 Florida residents have died of COVID-19, according to the Florida Department of Health. The outbreak in Florida isn’t as severe now as it was in late July, but the number of positive cases has been rising somewhat in recent days, with 4,433 cases reported Saturday.

Obama, before arriving at FIU, stopped at a BidenHarri­s field office in Miami Springs and spoke to a small crowd of Democratic organizers over a megaphone, saying “If you bring Florida home, this thing’s over.” His stop in the small, majority Latino city was meant to motivate local campaign workers for Biden in communitie­s where Trump’s campaign thinks they can find enough votes to win Florida on Election Day.

Obama also mentioned Florida’s policy of counting mail-in votes as they are received, meaning that the state could offer some clarity on Election Day once polls are closed.

“I won’t have to wait for the results,” Obama said. “I want to go to sleep knowing we’re going to have a president fighting on our behalf.”

At least some of the scattered crowd at FIU on Saturday had already voted. Bernice Fidelia-Morris, a Miami Shores Democrat who came to the U.S. from Haiti about 40 years ago, said she’s anxious to vote Trump out of office. She said she plans to vote Sunday at the Lemon City Branch Library.

“This particular president doesn’t care about people, doesn’t care about nothing but himself. It’s what’s in it for him,” said Fidelia-Morris, who worries about the future of her Obamacare insurance and Trump’s efforts to deport Haitians.

It also wasn’t a coincidenc­e that the Democratic Party brought their biggest draw to majority Black North Miami. Black voter turnout in the state dropped from 74% in 2008 during Obama’s first run for president to 69% in 2016, when Hillary Clinton lost Florida to Trump by 112,000 votes.

Obama used one of his many Trump-related zingers to respond to a boast from the president, which he repeated at Thursday’s final presidenti­al debate, that “not since Abraham Lincoln has anybody done what I’ve done for the Black community.”

“He loves talking about Black unemployme­nt, says he’s the best president for Black Americans since Abe Lincoln,” Obama said, with a smile and a shake of his head. “What?”

Biden is banking on Democrats to show up in high numbers to vote in person this weekend and next to counteract a wave of Republican­s expected to crest on Election Day.

Obama criticized Trump for trying to overturn Obamacare through the courts without offering a replacemen­t, reminding MiamiDade County voters that the area is particular­ly reliant on the 10-year-old law.

“Miami-Dade has the highest enrollment of any county in Florida,” Obama said. “Florida has the highest enrollment of any state in America. Just this week Trump flat out said he hopes the Supreme Court will take Obamacare away.”

And he also responded to ongoing Republican attacks that Biden is a tool of the socialist left, aimed at Cuban-American voters and other Latinos in Miami-Dade. Polling suggests that Trump is in a position to do better with South Florida Latinos than he did in 2016.

“Don’t fall for that garbage. Joe Biden is not a socialist,” Obama said.

“He was a senator from Delaware. He was my vice president, I think folks would know if he was a secret socialist by now.”

The overarchin­g message of Obama’s speech — that four more years of Trump would lead to worse healthcare outcomes in the midst of a pandemic — was reinforced by the 17-yearold who introduced him, Miami Northweste­rn senior George Pickens. Pickens, who is Black, lost his mother nine months ago to cancer, and Obama mentioned him frequently.

Obama closed with an appeal for Floridians to vote early for Democrats, making a COVID-themed riff from his famous “Fired Up! Ready to go!” chant during his own campaign days.

“Honk if you’re fired up. Honk if you’re ready to go,” Obama said.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI AP ?? President Donald Trump votes Saturday in West Palm Beach.
EVAN VUCCI AP President Donald Trump votes Saturday in West Palm Beach.
 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? Cars wait in line at the testing center for COVID-19 at Hard Rock Stadium on Oct. 15.
DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com Cars wait in line at the testing center for COVID-19 at Hard Rock Stadium on Oct. 15.

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