Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)
Flamboyance for Floridians: Both campaigns go full-bore
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Battleground Florida was again a central focus of the presidential campaign Saturday as President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and former President Barack Obama all had high-profile events in the state.
Trump kicked things off in the morning by voting early at a library in West Palm Beach, saying as he left the building that he had voted for “a guy named Trump.” Trump spent the night at his nearby Mar-a-Lago club and then headed out to several events in other states.
“It’s an honor to be voting. It’s an honor to be in this great area that I know so well,” Trump told reporters in West Palm Beach. “There’s tremendous spirit. I hear we are doing very well in Florida, and we’re doing very well, I hear, everyplace else.”
Obama, meanwhile, did a drive-in rally in North Miami at the Florida International University campus there. Obama urged people to vote for former Vice President Joe Biden, contending again that Trump has bungled the coronavirus pandemic and made a number of other missteps in office.
“Miami, I’m asking you to remember what this country is about. You can’t just talk. You’ve got to go out there and fight for it,” Obama said. “Are you fired up? Let’s make this happen.”
The competing rallies and events come as public opinion polls show Biden with perhaps a slight lead over Trump. But longtime political observers and the state’s political history indicate that it will be an extremely close race once again in Florida, which could be key to the presidency.
Pence, meanwhile, was set to hold events in Lakeland and Tallahassee in support of Trump’s re-election bid. Around the state, officials including GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis were taking part in early voting events aimed at rallying around the president.
Before his event, Obama stopped by a Democratic volunteer location in Miami Springs, which is next to Miami International Airport.
“If you bring Florida home, this thing’s over,” he said.