Miami Herald (Sunday)

Florida’s $150M primary race for governor nears finish line

- BY DAVID SMILEY dsmiley@miamiheral­d.com

A grinding $150-million marathon of backyard barbecues, pulpit politics, bus tours and presidenti­al tweets is entering its final weekend, as the seven major candidates competing for the Democratic and Republican nomination­s to become Florida’s next governor scramble to snare every last possible vote.

From Jacksonvil­le to Miami, five Democrats and two Republican­s are putting thousands of miles on their campaign coaches this weekend, scouring the state in search of the undecided. Per- haps more than half of the total ballots in the primary election already have been cast, but every vote matters in the scrum for political survival.

On the right, Trump-endorsed Congressma­n Ron DeSantis is expected to prevail over Agricul-

Seven candidates competing for the Democratic and Republican nomination­s to become Florida’s next governor are traveling the state from Miami to Pensacola, scrambling to snare every last vote before the primary.

ture Commission­er Adam Putnam, but a dicey week for the president could add a hint of doubt for the front-runner. On the left, a jumble remains atop the crowded field, with former Congresswo­man Gwen Graham hoping to beat out Tallahasse­e Mayor Andrew Gillum, Palm Beach billionair­e Jeff Greene, Winter Park businessma­n Chris King and former Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine.

Though election day is the climax of a campaign slog that has lasted more than a year for some of the candidates, more than 1.3 million people have voted early and by absentee mail already. This weekend, thousands more will vote, particular­ly in African American communitie­s. And this year, pastors leading the traditiona­l Sunday “Souls to the Polls” will do so with the chance to elect the first black governor in Florida in Gillum.

“It’s a chance for them to help make history,” said Geoff Burgan, a spokesman for Gillum, who plans to spend all of Sunday in South Florida, ending with a rally in Richmond

Heights in South MiamiDade, where he grew up.

So far, despite all the talk about a “blue wave” among Democratic voters, Republican­s are the ones turning out in greater numbers in the primary elections. They’ve been whipped up by President Donald Trump himself, who came to Florida last month to rally for

DeSantis.

Though he has been outspent two-to-one by Putnam, DeSantis has steadily polled ahead dating back to the first debate between the two, held on FOX News in late June. Where Putnam has spent $37 million on things like campaign barbecues and television commercial­s, the conservati­ve congressma­n has found a far cheaper way to reach voters through interviews on FOX defending Trump — and through Trump’s own comments and actions.

After tweeting to support DeSantis, Trump seemingly locked up the Republican primary when he campaigned for the congressma­n in Tampa. But Trump’s legal troubles this week — including a guilty verdict against former campaign chairman Paul Manafort and admissions by former attorney Michael Cohen that he secretly paid off two women to keep alleged infideliti­es quiet during Trump’s 2016 campaign— could give Putnam a pulse.

“I hesitate to write off Putnam completely at this point,” said Republican strategist Rick Wilson, noting Putnam’s widespread name recognitio­n and previous statewide campaigns. “But I don’t think Trump’s troubles are enough to break DeSantis’ momentum.”

Putnam planned to wrap up a nine-day bus tour Saturday with a barbecue in Hillsborou­gh County and spend election night in Lakeland. DeSantis will spend election night in Orlando, but is planning a tour Monday from Palm Harbor down to Versailles Cuban Bakery, a traditiona­l Republican campaign stop in Miami.

South Florida will also see plenty of the Democrats this weekend. Juan Peñalosa, executive director of the Florida Democratic Party, said Democrats are seeing an enthused base despite the Republican advantage in voting turnout. With numbers outpacing returns from the primary elections four years ago by about 120,000 votes, Peñalosa said this weekend should have significan­t returns for the campaigns.

“We’re approachin­g 2016 primary levels, which is kind of unheard of in midterm elections,” he said.

Though the cost of advertisin­g in the Miami media market has prohibited most campaigns from running commercial­s until about last week, Gwen Graham — whose family helped found Miami Lakes — went on air recently with a commercial touting her as “Miami’s own.” Meanwhile, Jimmy Buffett hosted a free concert in Hollywood on Thursday night for her campaign.

“We’re going to win over independen­t and Republican women in the general,” Graham, already looking past the primary, said Friday on an Emily’s List conference call with reporters. “This will give us the extra edge to finally end Republican rule in the state of Florida.”

Graham’s spending comes with an extra boost: Greene, a real estate tycoon who’s invested more than $40 million into his race, took down commercial­s this week, including several blasting Graham. His campaign — which on Friday announced a new, smallish six-figure TV buy in South Florida and a few other markets — says it decided to move away from a TVbased campaign to a fielddrive­n one.

Like Greene, Levine has been in heavy rotation on cable and network programmin­g with his commercial­s thanks to selffundin­g his campaign. But when Greene pulled his ads Thursday — including those attacking Levine — the former Miami Beach mayor announced he was rolling out his final ad in a blitz that began early in the new year.

Levine, who’ll campaign this weekend in South Florida and Kissimmee (where he’s courting Puerto Rican voters with former governor Sila María Calderón) also has one of the largest field operations in the state. Gillum, meanwhile, is also expected to field a massive team bolstered by billionair­es — Tom Steyer and George Soros — and nonprofits to help push him to victory.

All told, the seven candidates have spent about $150 million so far, according to campaign reports, with more to come by the time election night is done. Finding the money to continue on in the general election becomes a good problem to have.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Ron DeSantis
Ron DeSantis
 ??  ?? Adam Putnam
Adam Putnam

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States