South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Rubio, Demings hurl attacks in heated race

Contest among the most expensive waged in country

- By Skyler Swisher

Florida’s race for U.S. Senate is a high-stakes political slugfest with terms like “socialist” and “lying and cheating” being hurled on television and more than

$100 million being spent in the pivotal contest.

Which party controls Capitol Hill is possibly hanging in the balance with far-reaching implicatio­ns for issues spanning from abortion to the economy.

U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, a Republican, is defending his

11 years in office and touting his work to protect businesses during the pandemic and expand a child tax credit for working families.

He is promising that Republican­s will get inflation under control by ramping up energy production and cutting government spending.

He’s facing a challenge from U.S. Rep. Val Demings, a Democrat and former Orlando police chief who

is campaignin­g as a strong backer of law enforcemen­t and defender of abortion rights.

The candidates

Both Demings and Rubio rose from humble origins to the top tiers of their respective political parties.

Rubio, 51, the son of

Cuban immigrants, started his political career as a West Miami city commission­er in 1998. He next moved to the Florida Legislatur­e and climbed to House speaker from 2006 to 2008.

William Snyder, sheriff of Martin County, served with Rubio in the House and knew then the young politician was destined for higher

office. He recalled Rubio’s openness, commitment to his family and powerful speaking ability.

“He always struck me as being a good leader who really has a passion for what the American spirit is,” said Snyder, a Republican. “He is a decent, moral man.”

Rubio was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2010 at age

39. His political star power grew so big he ran for president in 2016, losing to Donald Trump in the GOP primary.

As he campaigns for reelection, Rubio is trumpeting endorsemen­ts from

55 of Florida’s 67 sheriffs, along with the Florida Police Benevolent Associatio­n and other law enforcemen­t groups.

Demings, too, wowed her peers, landing on President Joe Biden’s shortlist of possible vice presidenti­al picks in 2020.

U.S. Rep. Lois Frankel lobbied for Demings to be vice president. The West Palm Beach Democrat said she was impressed by her colleague’s life trajectory, working her way up to police chief and then to Congress as a Black woman in a Southern state.

The daughter of a maid and janitor, Demings, 65, grew up in a two-room home in Jacksonvil­le with six older siblings. She started as a police officer in Orlando in the early 1980s and served as the city’s first female police chief from 2007 until 2011. She won election to the U.S. House in 2016.

Frankel recalled barricadin­g herself in a room in the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021, riots and wishing she was with Demings, a former cop who rides a Harley-Davidson motorcycle in her free time.

“If I am going into a foxhole, I am taking two people with me — my

son, who is a Marine war veteran, and Val Demings,” Frankel said.

Demings was in the House gallery when the rioters breached the Capitol. In an interview with Associated Press, she recalled telling a colleague sheltering with her in the gallery: “Just remember, we’re on the right side of history. If we all die today, another group will come in and certify those ballots.”

War of words

Both Demings and Rubio are attacking each other’s records and fitness for office. In their only debate, Demings accused Rubio of “lying” and “cheating.”

Rubio countered that Demings supported a “crazy” and “socialist” liberal budget proposal.

Demings bristled at those terms. Rubio shot back, “I don’t know what word you would prefer. Socialist, Marxist. Crazy. I don’t know. I’m open to suggestion­s.”

Throughout the campaign. Rubio has tried to tie Demings to the far-left’s defund the police movement. Demings has fought back against that characteri­zation, highlighti­ng that Rubio criticized the FBI for serving a search warrant at Trump’s Mar-aLago estate in Palm Beach.

“Yeah, he’s a crime fighter if it is convenient,” Demings told the Orlando Sentinel and South Florida Sun Sentinel editorial boards. “But he said the FBI was a Marxist dictatorsh­ip and that the former president is keeping highly classified confidenti­al documents in his basement was just a storage issue.”

Demings gave her assessment of Rubio’s time in elected office.

“Look, you’ve had 24 years total of Marco Rubio,” she said. “How’s that worked out for you? We have property insurance that’s crumbling and an affordable housing crisis.”

Rubio declined to appear before the editorial boards. In a statement, campaign spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Gregory said Demings and the Democrats are responsibl­e for “skyrocketi­ng inflation, out-of-control crime, and a crisis at the border letting drugs flow into our communitie­s.”

“There’s a clear contrast in this race between Marco Rubio, who repeatedly delivers results for the people of Florida, and Val Demings, a Pelosi puppet who votes for Biden’s agenda 100% of the time and would be a rubber stamp for Democrats’ radical agenda in the Senate,” she said.

Their records

Demings is calling Rubio an absentee senator who has missed key votes.

Rubio’s attendance record is much worse than his peers, according to GovTrack, a nonpartisa­n group that compiles congressio­nal data. He’s missed about 9% of votes during his career, compared with the Senate average of

2%.

Many of those missed votes came when Rubio ran for president in 2016, but he continued to miss votes after that. From July through September of this year, he missed 5.5% of roll-call votes, according to GovTrack.

Demings has missed 0.8% of votes since she joined the U.S. House in 2017, better than the average of

2%. Unlike the Senate, the House allows remote voting as part of its pandemic protocols.

Rubio has attacked Demings’ effectiven­ess as a lawmaker, saying she has only gotten two of her bills passed. Those measures named post offices in Orlando and Windermere, according to GovTrack.

Conversely, Rubio has passed 33 bills during his

11-year career in which he was a primary sponsor. That includes legislatio­n aimed at increasing accountabi­lity in the Department of Veterans Affairs, addressing toxic algal blooms in Florida and combating invasive

species. He served as a chief architect of the Paycheck Protection Program, which provided loans to businesses shuttered by the pandemic.

Demings’ work in Washington has gone beyond voting on bills. She was tapped to serve as one of seven impeachmen­t managers during Trump’s trial in the Senate, becoming the first Black woman to serve in that role.

Rubio has also been selected for important roles, serving as vice chairman of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee.

Inflation

Voters have consistent­ly ranked the economy as their top issue, and the candidates have clashed over what is responsibl­e for rising costs.

Republican­s say they would increase domestic energy production and rein in government spending if they are in charge, Rubio said.

Demings has campaigned on her support of the Inflation Reduction Act, which allows Medicare to negotiate prescripti­on drug prices for seniors and extends federal health insurance subsidies for 13 million low- and moderate-income Americans.

That legislatio­n also includes $370 billion for promoting green energy and curbing greenhouse emissions.

It is forecast to reduce the federal budget deficit

by about $238 billion over the next 10 years with tax increases primarily on large corporatio­ns.

The legislatio­n will have a “negligible” effect on inflation this year and the next, according to an analysis by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office.

Demings has also called for price-gouging legislatio­n to lower fuel costs and fining producers for deliberate­ly not using existing drilling sites.

Democrats have said inflation is a global issue caused by the pandemic and the war in Ukraine — not by Biden.

Abortion

Demings has made abortion a centerpiec­e of her campaign, seeking to portray Rubio as an extremist who favors a total abortion ban with no exceptions for rape or incest.

“He said it over and over and over again. He supports a total ban with no exceptions,” Demings said. “And now he’s certainly trying to modify his answer, because it’s become such a hot issue in this race.”

Demings said she supports legal abortion up to fetal viability as determined by a doctor. She hasn’t defined what she thinks that is, but the medical community generally considers viability to be at about 24 weeks of pregnancy.

During the debate, Rubio said he is “100% pro-life,” but he didn’t specifical­ly say whether he would vote for a total ban on abortion, adding that it would never get through Congress. He is a co-sponsor of a proposed nationwide 15-week abortion ban that includes exceptions for rape and incest.

He said Demings is the candidate with an extreme position on abortion.

“I have shown a willingnes­s to work with people to save unborn innocent human life,” Rubio said. “She opposes any limitation of any kind.”

Demingscal­ledthatcha­r- acterizati­on a lie during their debate.

Rubio further explained his position in an interview with CBS Miami’s Jim DeFede.

“I do not believe that the dignity and the worth of human life is tied to the circumstan­ces of their conception, but I recognize that’s not a majority position,” Rubio said. “Therefore, I have always said I support bills that have exceptions.”

Guns

Mass shootings at Orlando’s Pulse nightclub and Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School continue to reverberat­e in the race.

Demings has accused Rubio of “doing nothing” to stop the problem of mass shootings, opposing gun legislatio­n that could have saved lives.

“Our primary responsibi­lity is the safety of Floridians, and senator, in 24 years in elected office, you have not yet risen to that occasion,” Demings said.

Shortly after the 2018 Parkland shooting, Rubio said during a CNN town hall he supported increasing the minimum age to buy a rifle from 18 to 21. That’s a position he no longer holds, saying he doesn’t think it would make a difference.

“If they’re intent on killing as they are, they have found multiple ways to get a hold of weapons and cause mass destructio­n,” Rubio said.

State lawmakers in Florida

increased the minimum age to 21 to buy a rifle after the Parkland shootings, but efforts to raise the minimum age at the federal level have failed.

Upset in the making?

Demings has hauled in an impressive amount of campaign cash, sparking optimism among Democrats that she could pull off an upset in a state that has been trending Republican.

Demings has raised nearly $65 million compared with Rubio’s $44 million through September, according to the latest campaign finance figures.

Rubio has slightly more cash on hand heading into the final stretch of the race. He also has a 7.5 percentage point lead in an average of the polls, according to Real Clear Politics.

The candidates and outside groups have spent more than $102 million, making it the eighth- most expensive contest in the country, according to OpenSecret­s, a nonpartisa­n group that tracks money in politics.

Other Senate races, such as Georgia’s and Pennsylvan­ia’s, have captured more national attention, but Florida is a key state Republican­s need to win if they want to take control. The chamber has a partisan split of 50-50 with Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris providing the tie-breaking vote.

Biden’s unpopulari­ty in Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis’ dominance in state politics, Rubio’s statewide name recognitio­n and inflation have meant an uphill battle for Demings, said Sean D. Foreman, a political scientist at Barry University in Miami-Dade County.

“All indication­s are the Republican­s are going to sweep from top to bottom, and it’s hard to see a ticket-splitting scenario where people vote for DeSantis and Demings enough for her to win,” Foreman said.

 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Democratic candidate Val Demings at her primary night party in Orlando on Aug. 23.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL Democratic candidate Val Demings at her primary night party in Orlando on Aug. 23.
 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP ?? Sen. Marco Rubio, a Republican, speaks at a campaign rally West Miami on Oct. 19.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP Sen. Marco Rubio, a Republican, speaks at a campaign rally West Miami on Oct. 19.
 ?? THE PALM BEACH POST ?? Incumbent Republican Sen. Marco Rubio and U.S. Rep. Val Demings, his Democratic opponent, greet each other before a televised debate on Oct. 18.
THE PALM BEACH POST Incumbent Republican Sen. Marco Rubio and U.S. Rep. Val Demings, his Democratic opponent, greet each other before a televised debate on Oct. 18.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States