Miami Herald

Florida Democrats put up billboards to find candidates for November

- BY STEVEN LEMONGELLO Orlando Sentinel

ORLANDO

Florida Democrats are putting up billboards in four counties to recruit candidates for dozens of legislativ­e and congressio­nal races in which the party has yet to find someone to run in November.

“You’re already a leader. Run for office,” state the billboards, which are appearing in Miami-Dade, Seminole, Polk and Madison counties.

The appeal comes less than two months before the June 14 deadline to file for state House and Senate races. The federal deadline to file for Congress is Friday The cost of the campaign was not revealed.

“We all know someone who should run for office, and if there has ever been a time to step up and lead, it’s now,” campaign director Danielle Hawk said Wednesday.

“We hope this campaign is the sign that leaders in our communitie­s need to see to make the decision to run, and the Florida Democratic Party is here to help.”

Florida Republican

Chair Evan Power was dismissive of the effort.

“Floridians are so turned off by the Democrats’ radical agenda that the Florida Democratic Party have had to spend tens of thousands on billboards just to attempt to find candidates,” Power said via text.

“While Nikki Fried is lighting her limited campaign cash on fire, Republican­s are growing our registrati­on lead, flipping local elections, and delivering for Florida’s citizens,” Power added in mentioning the state Democratic Party chair.

According to the Florida Division of Elections, last week there were 37 state House seats with no Democratic candidate filed to run, compared to 20 with no Republican candidate.

While many districts without Democrats are in heavily Republican areas, others that lean Democratic on paper also have no party member currently in the running.

The party’s statement about the billboard campaign specifical­ly listed only 27 unconteste­d state House seats, omitting 10 others. Democratic spokeswoma­n Eden Giagnorio said it did so because candidates were planning to file for those 10 seats.

In the state Senate, there are four races in the Panhandle and South Florida without Democratic candidates.

“We are already competing in more races compared to 2022, but it is our goal to field candidates in every seat across the state and give Republican­s a run for their money,” Fried said in a statement.

On the congressio­nal side, the party listed three races with no Democratic candidate, in seats held by Republican U.S. Reps. Neal Dunn, John Rutherford and Gus Bilirakis.

The districts are a hard sell for Democrats, with all of them listed by the nonpartisa­n Cook Political Report as Republican stronghold­s for 2024.

Still, Aubrey Jewett, a professor of political science at the University of Central Florida, said having a candidate was vitally important.

“Not only might it increase the turnout of your own party, but it also ties down the other party and makes them have to worry about that seat, even if only a little bit,” Jewett said. “It means they have to run a campaign, it means they have to raise money, it means they have to buy ads. And it means that they can’t just spend all their time and money and resources on a few seats.”

Underdog candidates have also pulled off occasional upsets, he said, such as Democratic recruit Stephanie Murphy defeating 12-term Republican U.S. Rep. John Mica in 2016.

Florida Democrats are coming off one of their party’s worst performanc­es in 2022. Their candidate, Charlie Crist, lost the governor’s race by 19 points. The Democrats also have a growing registrati­on disadvanta­ge, with Republican­s having nearly 900,000 more registered voters as of March 31.

But the party has done well in elections since then, including winning the Jacksonvil­le mayor’s race and a special election for a state House seat in Central Florida.

“Some of the seats are legitimate­ly competitiv­e,” Jewett said. “And Democrats actually have a chance to win, and probably should have won two years ago if they hadn’t had such a dramatic drop in turnout.”

Democratic analyst Matt Isbell said by placing billboards in heavy traffic areas such as Central Florida, the I-4 corridor and Miami, “part of it is just advertisin­g for the party. … It’s essentiall­y instilling confidence.”

 ?? STEPHEN M. DOWELL Orlando Sentinel/TNS ?? The Florida Democratic Party makes its pitch on a billboard in Longwood on April 17.
STEPHEN M. DOWELL Orlando Sentinel/TNS The Florida Democratic Party makes its pitch on a billboard in Longwood on April 17.

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