Miami Herald

DeSantis grabs hold of immigratio­n debate but leaves Florida GOP open to attacks

- BY BIANCA PADRÓ OCASIO bpadro@miamiheral­d.com Miami Herald Staff Writer Alex Roarty contribute­d to this report. Bianca Padró Ocasio: 305-376-2649, @BiancaJoan­ie

By flying dozens of Venezuelan­s to Martha’s Vineyard last week, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis inflamed a national debate over U.S. immigratio­n policy and put himself in a position to dictate the terms of the discussion.

But he also granted Democrats an opening just weeks before the midterm elections to attack their Republican opponents over the treatment of families fleeing communist countries — a demographi­c that is among the GOP’s base in South Florida.

In the days since 48 migrants landed unannounce­d on the Massachuse­tts island, courtesy of a one-way ticket from the state of Florida, Hispanic Democrats have persistent­ly slammed DeSantis and Republican­s over what they say was a heartless stunt at the expense of people fleeing far-left regimes.

Meanwhile, some of the migrants flown to Martha’s Vineyard have sued the governor, claiming in a federal lawsuit that they faced “a cruelty akin to what they fled” in Venezuela.

“They can’t accuse dictators of being socialists and communists in Venezuela, in Nicaragua and in Cuba and punish the very people who are leaving those countries trying to have a legal process, seeking asylum,” former U.S. Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell said during a press conference Thursday in El Arepazo in Doral, the heart of Miami-Dade’s Venezuelan community.

With their opponents seeking to put them on the defensive, South Florida Republican­s representi­ng large communitie­s that have fled authoritar­ian regimes have defended DeSantis and redirected attention to what they say are immigratio­n-policy failures under the Biden administra­tion.

U.S. Reps. Carlos Gimenez

and Mario Diaz-Balart suggested in separate statements that the flights wouldn’t have happened had the Biden administra­tion done more to address an unpreceden­ted influx of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border.

“If the White House cared about these migrants, they’d secure the border and stop incentiviz­ing them to risk their lives on this treacherou­s journey,” said Gimenez, who faces a challenge from former state Rep. Robert Asencio.

Diaz-Balart, running for reelection against Christine Olivo, said Martha’s Vineyard as a destinatio­n made more sense than sending migrants to cities with fewer resources. He added that he believes migrants fleeing regimes in Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua have potentiall­y some of the “most legitimate asylum

claims.”

“Yet, due to the uncontroll­able chaos caused by the Biden administra­tion at our southern border, these legitimate claims are not being reviewed in a reasonable manner,” he said, referring to a federal backlog.

U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, facing a challenge from U.S. Rep. Val Demings, released a video Wednesday in which he was incredulou­s at the lawsuit filed by the Venezuelan migrants.

“In what country in the world are you allowed to enter illegally into a country violating its laws, and within a week be in court suing the very government whose laws you just violated?” the Republican asked.

But perhaps no race will be as affected as the one for Florida’s 27th Congressio­nal

District, where one analysis of voter demographi­cs shows it is about 74% Hispanic and the incumbent has called for the GOP to take a more compassion­ate stance on immigratio­n.

U.S. Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar did not return a request for comments for this story. On Monday, she sent a letter to Biden demanding he “stop pointing fingers and get serious about solving this issue.”

Last February, Salazar filed the Dignity Act, a bill that aims to overhaul the immigratio­n system and promises a path to legal residency in the U.S. for millions of undocument­ed immigrants, including Dreamers. The legislatio­n also proposes measures to increase border security.

When asked by the Miami Herald during an event in April if she believed her

party would be sympatheti­c to her message on immigratio­n, Salazar, who is from Cuba, said she believed Republican­s were “understand­ing more and more and more that what I’m saying is the right way to do it.”

“We’re putting together a very big coalition, but not only people on the floor, people in the Senate. And I will have very good news for you before the year’s out,” she said. “Dignity will be law.”

On Thursday, as DeSantis criticized President Joe Biden’s border policies during an appearance at Miami Dade College’s Wolfson Campus, Salazar’s opponent, Democratic state Sen. Annette Taddeo, said migrant flights were part of Republican­s’ hypocrisy with victims of communist countries.

“What happened to ‘dignity’?” Taddeo, who is Colombian-American, told the Herald. “Where is the dignity in tricking people into getting on a plane with a promise of housing and jobs when all they were doing is using them for a political trick, political pawns? It’s outrageous and there’s no dignity in that. And what’s worse is that these are people fleeing communism.”

The Salazar-Taddeo race is being watched nationally as Democrats try to fend off the narrative that Hispanics are fleeing their party in South Florida. Taddeo, whose father was kidnapped in the 1980s by the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, a Marxist guerrilla army, has sought to paint Salazar as a hypocrite when it comes to her advocacy against communist regimes.

“We’re in essence less than 50 days from an election,” Taddeo said. “This is my point about the hypocrisy of these people including my opponent . ... Republican­s are the ones that don’t want anything on immigratio­n.”

It’s still unclear how most Hispanic voters in South Florida feel about the recent immigratio­n move. Majority-Latino communitie­s such as Doral and Hialeah saw a dramatic shift to the right during the 2020 election.

Recent polls show that DeSantis is leading his Democratic opponent, Charlie Crist. A new poll by Civiqs found that about 46% of a subset of Hispanic voters polled said they had a favorable view of the governor.

“This is trying to make the government or the administra­tion of Joe Biden stop the illegal immigratio­n and the open borders,” Ernesto Ackerman, president of Independen­t Venezuelan American Citizens, said following an appearance in Washington on the morning after DeSantis’ Martha’s Vineyard flights. “That’s all that’s going on here.”

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? A Venezuelan migrant heads to a bus on Friday on Martha’s Vineyard. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ decision to fly migrants there could affect elections in South Florida and statewide.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com A Venezuelan migrant heads to a bus on Friday on Martha’s Vineyard. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ decision to fly migrants there could affect elections in South Florida and statewide.

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