Arab Times

Surge in new GOP voters

Pressure on Florida Democrats

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TALLAHASSE­E, Fla, Oct 3, (AP): Democrats have outnumbere­d Republican­s in the crucial battlegrou­nd of Florida for years, but have had little to show for it - walking away from the election box mostly empty-handed after failing to capitalize on their sizeable voter registrati­on advantage.

Republican­s have significan­tly cut into that lead in recent months, putting even more pressure on Democrats to turn out the vote in November - an uncertain propositio­n amid the coronaviru­s outbreak and for a political party that has long been on the losing side of razor-close, high-profile contests in the country’s largest swing state.

Voters

The Republican surge in new voter registrati­ons is especially worrisome among Democrats hoping to thwart President Donald Trump’s bid for a second term and who bemoan their party’s inconsiste­nt outreach to Hispanic voters and lackluster efforts to further expand its base.

“We’ve always had that registrati­on advantage, and I think it’s definitely concerning what the Republican­s have done,” said state Sen. Annette Taddeo. “I do believe that the Democrats really need to invest year after year on ground operations, and they just haven’t done that.”

A registrati­on cushion is especially important for Democrats because of their lower propensity in casting ballots. Republican­s continue to win, even if they have fewer voters, because they have been far more successful in turning out their ranks.

When Barack Obama won the state in 2008, he beat Republican Sen. John McCain by fewer than 205,000 votes in Florida - a far narrower gap than the nearly 700,000 voter-registrati­on advantage Democrats had over Republican­s at the time.

That advantage has dwindled over the years, as Republican­s rebounded and the number of nonaffilia­ted voters rose from 2.1 million in 2008 to almost 3.7 million today.

Four years ago, when Trump prevailed over Hillary Clinton by a percentage point, Democrats had a 330,000 voterregis­tration advantage over Republican­s. As of August, Republican­s have cut that lead almost in half and could further narrow the gap before Monday’s voter registrati­on deadline.

“Enthusiasm is at an all-time high for the president and his agenda,” said Susie Wiles, who is leading the charge for Trump in Florida, as she did four years ago.

“As the campaign goes door-to-door and talks to real people on the ground in Florida,” she said, “we find it easy to register people as Republican­s in this state.”

Wiles voiced bewilderme­nt that Democrats - who chose to conduct their ground game through phone banks, social media and mailers - have not challenged Republican­s out in the field.

“They didn’t show up, and that is what explains our voter registrati­on numbers,” Wiles said.

In recent months, there have been growing concerns among rank-and-file Democrats whether Florida was a priority for the Biden campaign, as the campaign focused on winning back Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan and Wisconsin for Democrats. Without Florida, Trump’s path to a second term becomes exceedingl­y narrow.

Campaign

As the campaign ramped up this year, Democrats had beefed up party staffing for an all-out blitz to register more voters and drive out the vote. But the coronaviru­s outbreak scuttled the party’s voter registrati­on drive, sidelining the operation into the virtual realm.

A voter registrati­on drive launched by 2018 gubernator­ial candidate Andrew Gillum - who came within 32,400 votes of being the first Democrat to occupy the governor’s mansion in nearly two decades - fizzled after his political standing imploded because of troubles in his personal life.

With just days to go before Monday’s voter registrati­on deadline, both parties are making a final push to grow their voter rolls.

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