Miami Herald (Sunday)

• Souls to the Polls aims to ramp A up Black turnout,

- BY ALEX HARRIS, ROB WILE, KARINA ELWOOD AND BEN CONARCK aharris@miamiheral­d.com

Music blared and the scent of food wafted under overcast skies in Miami Gardens as the final hours of Saturday’s early voting push ticked down, part of the “Souls to the Polls” effort to increase turnout in the state’s largest majority-Black city and across South Florida.

There was plenty of urgency and excitement at the North Dade Regional Library polling place at around 5 p.m., but there were no long lines of people waiting to get to a voting booth. About an hour later, heavy rains swept through the area, and many of the volunteers had begun to pack up to leave.

Unlike previous elections, this “Souls to the Polls” weekend comes on the heels of a week of record-setting early voting turnout and during an unpreceden­ted pandemic election that has changed voters’ behaviors. Democrats will make their biggest early vote push on Sunday, the final day of early voting before Election Day.

Elysia Richardson, 45, a Miami Gardens resident and content editor, arrived late at the North Dade Regional Library on Saturday — about 6:30 p.m.

She came to cast her ballot for Joe Biden out of a sense of civic duty, she said, having drawn inspiratio­n in recent days from documentar­ies on Black American history

“I owe it to my ancestors and I owe it to myself,” Richardson said.

Richardson said she dropped off her mail-in ballot to make sure it counted. She said she disagreed with the direction the country was heading under Trump and didn’t want another four years of a Trump presidency. She’s ready to see what Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden will bring to the table.

South Florida’s last Saturday of early voting, crucial for Democrats, features Souls to the Polls events in an effort to boost voter turnout among Blacks.

Democrats are relying on more voters like Richardson to push up their numbers in the final days of early voting and shore up their now-slipping lead in voter turnout against Republican­s. Any hope Democrats have for a “landslide” victory requires a surge of voters, especially Black and Hispanic voters, which Democrats hope multiple Souls to the Polls events over the weekend will help fuel.

Earlier in the day at the Miami Gardens library, Darius Bowleg, a young volunteer for the BidenHarri­s campaign, said the voting site had been bustling over the past week, and that turnout had been strong and steady.

But from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., the in-person line for voting inside the library never grew longer than a handful of people.

State Sen. Oscar Braynon, a Black Miami Democrat, was among those greeting voters Saturday. He noted that there appeared to be more activists than people casting ballots.

“I’m never over-confident” in the run-up to an election, he said, adding that he was especially concerned about bad weather stunting turnout.

‘LESS HESITANT’

“Tuesday, I’ll be less hesitant,” he added.

Souls to the Polls events across South Florida included musical performanc­es, appearance­s by comedians and giveaways in an attempt to energize voters to cast their ballots after church services but before Election Day on Tuesday.

Chef José Andrés joined singer Pharrell Williams at the early-voting site at the Coral Gables library’s early-voting site. They talked to reporters by the food stand set up by Andrés’ World Central Kitchen, where bagged Cuban sandwiches and guava pastelitos were available for anyone who wanted them.

“We need to show up and vote,” Andrés said, who spoke earlier in the day at a rally with Democratic vice-presidenti­al nominee Kamala Harris at Florida Internatio­nal University.

“We’ve got to show up in numbers,” added Williams, a Trump critic who demanded the campaign stop using his “Happy” song at rallies.

Florida, a must-win state for the president, has been been the focus of intense campaignin­g as Election Day nears and polls show a tight race for the state’s 29 Electoral College votes. On

Saturday, Democratic vice presidenti­al candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., campaigned in MiamiDade, Broward and Palm Beach counties. On Sunday, President Donald Trump will host a late night campaign rally at the Miami-Opa locka airport. Then on Monday, MiamiDade will get another visit from former President Barack Obama.

7 A.M. START

Polls opened at 7 a.m. Saturday, and there was already a large turnout of political supporters and voters decked out in foul weather gear at the DavieCoope­r City library at 7:30 a.m. as a line of showers moved through and tested their resolve.

Cooper City Mayor Greg Ross, who is running for re-election, was there with his sign and coffee, greeting arrivals and thanking them for voting.

“The turnout has been very encouragin­g,” he said.

The line snaked around the building with voters socially distanced under umbrellas and jackets and wearing masks.

Almost all the campaign supporters were complying, too, except for one man circulatin­g through the parking lot. He wore a MAGA hat and was handing out leaflets but not wearing a mask.

When someone said he should have a mask on, he responded with a loud, “So?”

Florida Democrats also held a virtual get-out-thevote forum for the faith community Saturday. Bishop Adam Jefferson Richardson Jr., senior bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, told viewers that when he submitted his vote earlier this week, he felt he had “done something holy.”

“I believe that the same voice that says ‘let my people go’ says ‘let my people vote’,” he said.

South Carolina Congressma­n Jim Clyburn, the Democratic House Majority Whip, talked about how a Trump win could cast a shadow over the struggle for racial justice in the Black community. He said he believes the 2020 election is as consequent­ial as the 1860 election of Abraham Lincoln, which kicked off a period of Reconstruc­tion.

“On Tuesday, on the ballot is in fact this country’s foundation. A foundation upon which we have been building in pursuit of a more perfect union. Will we continue that pursuit or step back and relieve much of our history that we thought we would never see again?” he asked.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Canvassers organized by Unite Here make their way toward their cars to fan out across South Florida to knock on ‘ doors during their Take Back 2020 event.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Canvassers organized by Unite Here make their way toward their cars to fan out across South Florida to knock on ‘ doors during their Take Back 2020 event.

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