The Palm Beach Post

Puerto Rico leader endorses Gillum, Nelson candidacie­s

Rosselló’s Florida visit underscore­s influence of Puerto Rican voters.

- By George Bennett Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Puerto Rico’s Democratic governor visited Central Florida on Monday to endorse Sen. Bill Nelson’s re-election bid and Andrew Gillum’s campaign for governor.

The visit by Puerto Rican Gov. Ricardo Rosselló underscore­d the growing importance of Puerto Rican voters in Florida and Democratic hopes that anger at President Donald Trump’s response to Hurricane Maria will motivate already Democratic-leaning Puerto Ricans to turn out in the midterm election.

The number of Floridians who identify as Puerto Rican Hispanics has more than doubled since 2000, with the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey estimating their number at more than 1.1 million in 2017. The University of Florida’s Bureau of Economic and Business Research estimated in December that 53,000 people from Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands had moved to Florida in Maria’s aftermath.

Democrats have accused Trump and his administra­tion of incompeten­ce in responding to Hurricane Maria, which devastated Puerto Rico in September 2017. The controvers­y flared again last month when Trump disputed a George Washington University “excess mortality” study that estimated that, in the five months after Maria’s Sept. 20, 2017 landfall, there were 2,975 more deaths on the island than would normally be expected.

Trump claimed on Twitter that the death toll was much lower and the higher estimate “was done by the Democrats in order to make me look as bad as possible.”

Republican Florida Gov. Rick Scott, who is challengin­g Nelson’s Senate re-election bid, and Republican gubernator­ial nominee Ron DeSantis both publicly disagreed with Trump on the matter.

On Monday, Rosselló told Nelson “you are a great friend and you are

a great champion of the people of Puerto Rico,” according to a statement released by Nelson’s campaign.

After appearing with Nelson in Orlando, Ross- elló appeared with Gillum in Kissimmee to show his support for the Tallahasse­e mayor’s gubernator­ial bid.

The Rosselló endorsemen­t of Nelson is noteworthy because Scott has visited Puerto Rico eight times since Maria hit and worked with Rosselló on relief efforts. In March, Rosselló tweeted his thanks to Scott “for accept- ing my invitation and travel- ing to San Juan to join me in the second Puerto Rico State of the Union Message. The Island appreciate­s your help after the passage of Hurricane Maria.”

Scott’s focus on the island appears to have earned some goodwill among Puerto Ricans in Florida. A recent Bendixen & Amandi Internatio­nal survey of Florida Hispanics who are 50 and older, commission­ed by the AARP and Spanish-language broadcaste­r Univision, found 56 percent of likely voters of Puerto Rican descent have a favorable opinion of Scott, compared with only 27 per- cent who view Trump favorably and 32 percent who have a favorable view of DeSantis.

The poll found Hispanics who are 50 and older favor Scott over Nelson by a 52-to38 percent margin statewide. In the Orlando area, which features the largest Puerto Rican population, Nelson leads Scott among older Hispanics by a 47-to-43 percent margin.

That small lead for Nel- son is “probably not where he needs to be” with Hispanic voters in general and Puerto Ricans in particular, said Anthony Williams, the special projects director for Bendixen & Amandi. Williams noted that Hispanic voters who are younger than 50 tend to lean more Democratic than their elders.

“Governor Scott, although he’s aligned with the pres- ident, does have his own brand with these voters, so he’s able to rise above it. He’s done significan­t direct outreach ... It’s a vote that he’s not taking for granted,” Williams said.

Nelson has tried to link Scott to Trump with Hispanic voters, releasing a Spanish-language ad last month that featured pictures of Scott and Trump together and calling them “muy buenos amigos.” A day after Nelson’s ad hit, Scott released an ad in which he says, in Spanish: “When I don’t agree with what President Trump does or says, I’ve said it. My only commitment is with you.”

Scott countered Monday’s Rosselló endorsemen­t of Nelson by releasing 13 new endorsemen­ts from Puerto Rico officials, bringing to 59 the number of current and former officials from the island who have formally backed his campaign.

In response to the Rosselló endorsemen­t of Gillum in the governor’s race, the DeSantis campaign released statements of support from Jenniffer González-Colón, the island’s nonvoting Republican representa­tive to Congress, and two Republican state House members of Puerto Rican descent, Reps. Bob Cortes, of Altamonte Springs, and David Santiago, of Deltona.

Staff researcher Melanie Mena contribute­d to this story.

 ?? GEORGE BENNETT PHOTOS / THE PALM BEACH POST ?? Puerto Rico’s Democratic governor visited Central Florida on Monday to endorse Sen. Bill Nelson’s (right) re-election bid and Andrew Gillum’s (left) campaign for governor.
GEORGE BENNETT PHOTOS / THE PALM BEACH POST Puerto Rico’s Democratic governor visited Central Florida on Monday to endorse Sen. Bill Nelson’s (right) re-election bid and Andrew Gillum’s (left) campaign for governor.
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