Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Scott has slight edge over Nelson for U.S. Senate

- By Jim Saunders News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — Emerging from his final legislativ­e session, Republican Gov. Rick Scott holds a small lead over incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson in a potential U.S. Senate race that could help determine control of the Senate, a poll released Monday shows.

The poll of likely voters, conducted this month by the Tallahasse­e-based firm Clearview Research, shows Scott receiving 43.3 percent of the support, while Nelson gets 41.3 percent.

The difference is within the poll’s margin of error of 3.6 percentage points.

Scott has not announced that he is running for the Senate but is widely expected to do so, and no other prominent Republican­s are running against Nelson. After the annual legislativ­e session ended Sunday afternoon, Scott indicated a decision on entering the

high-profile race could be weeks away.

“I’m focused on this [governor’s] job. I’m glad we had a very successful session,” Scott said. “I’ll think about my future in the next few weeks.”

Steve Vancore, president of Clearview Research, said Scott leads Nelson by a margin of 37 percent to 34 among voters without a party affiliatio­n. Another key factor in the poll results is that Vancore’s firm estimates Republican­s will have a narrow turnout edge in the mid-term election.

“While it is still very early to make any prediction­s, it is clear that this off-year election could come down to two simple factors: turnout and gaining margins among NPA [no party affiliatio­n] voters,” Vancore said in an analysis of the results.

“Both candidates are extremely well known and have the strong support of their parties, so turnout will be vital and in the event turnout is even, it will come down to NPA or ‘independen­t’ voters who, right now, slightly favor the governor.”

Vancore said Nelson does best among young voters, AfricanAme­ricans and non-Cuban Hispanics. Scott does well among voters over age 35, white voters and Cuban Hispanics.

Retaining Nelson’s seat could be pivotal to Democratic hopes of taking control of the U.S. Senate, where Republican­s now hold 51 seats. Democrats hold 47 seats and are typically joined by two independen­ts.

A Quinnipiac University poll released Feb. 27 showed Nelson with a four-point lead in the potential matchup. But the methodolog­y of that poll differed from the Clearview poll Monday.

As an example, Clearview used a turnout model based on 41 percent of voters being Republican­s, 39 percent Democrats and 20 percent with no party affiliatio­n or being registered with other parties.

Vancore said the model would have ordinarily used a 4 percentage-point turnout advantage for Republican­s, but Clearview scaled it back to 2 points because of recent election results, higher enthusiasm among Democrats and the “natural tendency” for mid-term elections to favor the party out of the White House.

The poll of 750 likely voters was conducted from March 1 through Wednesday. The results said the compositio­n of the poll respondent­s “took into account current registrati­on and previous voter turnout in an attempt to make the final sample ‘look like’ the state’s likely 2018 general election voting population.”

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/TNS ?? Florida Gov. Rick Scott
OLIVIER DOULIERY/TNS Florida Gov. Rick Scott
 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla.

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