The Guardian (USA)

The Democratic war council working to turn Florida blue in 2020

- Richard Luscombe in Miami

When Donald Trump beat Hillary Clinton by fewer than 113,000 of the 9.4m votes cast in Florida’s 2016 presidenti­al election, it came as little surprise in a state accustomed to razor-thin margins. Memories of the 2000 cliffhange­r and Bush’s 537-vote victory over Al Gore were still fresh, after all.

But when lightning struck again in the 2018 midterms and the Democratic candidates for state governor and the US Senate were edged out after close recounts, it was time for some profound introspect­ion.

Weary of being perpetual runnersup in state and national races (Barack Obama’s two Florida victories aside), the state’s Democratic leaders convened a top-level war council to plot strategy for the 2020 presidenti­al elec

tion, now just 12 months away.

From aiming to register hundreds of thousands of new voters to earlier and better on-the-ground canvassing, and from investing millions of dollars in recruiting local organizers to more finely focused outreach efforts on a sizable Hispanic and African American communitie­s, Democrats are going all out to reverse the notion that Florida is unassailab­le Trump country.

“In a lot of ways, 2016 was kind of self-inflicted,” said Gary Farmer, a state senator and leader-designate of the Democratic caucus in Tallahasse­e who has the reins of the Florida party’s campaign fundraisin­g committee.

“There was a great sense of dissatisfa­ction amongst a lot of Democratic voters after the primary. A lot of them stayed home, a lot of them voted for Trump as a protest, so you look at the turnout and adjust it for population growth, it’s one of the lowest turnouts we’ve ever had.

“We can’t make that mistake again. Vote for who you want in the primary, but come together afterwards.”

His message of unity resonated at the party’s state convention in October, when about 1,500 Florida Democrats, from elected politician­s to grassroots voters, descended on Disney World in Orlando to talk tactics.

“Whoever the Democrats put up, whether it’s Biden or Mickey Mouse, we have to vote Democrat,” one attendee noted, with a nod to his surroundin­gs.

Ultimately, however, party leaders agree it will take more than just the unquestion­ed loyalty of existing supporters to turn Florida blue. New voters are needed, lots of them, and in May the party announced a “monumental” $2m investment to register 200,000 statewide before the 2020 election.

“It’s about making the electorate we need versus the electorate the polling says we have,” said Terrie Rizzo, chair of the Florida Democratic party.

“It’s about building our base again, if you will. But to get 200,000 new Democrats takes a lot of effort, and we’re investing in a number of programmes.”

How this looks on the ground is a sea of new faces – young and enthusiast­ic activists and volunteers, from diverse background­s and often with deep knowledge of their own neighborho­ods and issues. Many are students, active in Florida’s numerous university campuses.

They work under a network of field organizers, a newly expanded team of dozens of paid recruits responsibl­e for community engagement and voter registrati­on and education on a region-by-region basis. Florida is one of the seven key battlegrou­nd states targeted by Democrats nationally as part of their Organizing Corps 2020 campaign launched earlier this year.

“It’s programmin­g so people hear our message in all 67 of Florida’s counties, and in all our communitie­s,” Rizzo said. “LBGTQ voters, people living with disabiliti­es, Hispanic and Latino voters, African Americans understand­ing what the Democratic party stands for and why our ideas our better, how we bring stability to the country and especially in Florida.”

“In Palm Beach county we have passed 400,000 Democrats for the first time ever. We are out-registerin­g the Republican­s and pulling away. And that’s a blue county. The Republican­s are making an effort there – that’s the home of Mar-a-Lago.”

Prominent Democratic figures are also in the thick of the fight, including Andrew Gillum, the former Tallahasse­e mayor who lost the 2018 election for state governor to Republican Ron DeSantis.

Gillum, seen as a rising star of the Democratic party, leads Forward Florida Action, a progressiv­e voter registrati­on organizati­on that has an even more ambitious target - registerin­g and re-engaging one million Florida voters before November 2020.

“Neighbors talking to neighbors, that’s how we’re going to empower everyday Floridians to flip Florida blue,” said Rosy Gonzalez Speers, the group’s executive director.

For those already knocking on Floridians’ doors, the key issues are clear.

“The first thing is healthcare, then affordable housing and jobs and the economy,” said Melanie McRae, a Miami-based electoral field organizer for New Florida Majority, an independen­t political action and advocacy group that works mostly with “marginaliz­ed and excluded” communitie­s.

“Unemployme­nt is higher amongst people of color, so even when you have the lowest jobless rate that we’ve seen historical­ly, you still have a higher number of people of color who can’t find work, or can’t find consistent fulltime living wages.

“So of course it’s jobs, getting a living wage, being able to take the relatively low wages that unskilled or minimally skilled labor will be able to get, and translatin­g that into quality, affordable, safe housing. That’s very difficult in Miami.”

Besides New York, there is no other US city more familiar with the challenges of income inequality. A study published in April by the Miami Urban Future Initiative, a collaborat­ion between Florida Internatio­nal University and urban researcher­s at the Creative Class Group, found that there were stark racial dimensions to the city’s high rate of poverty.

Specifical­ly, it found that 14.3% of Miami residents lived in poverty, affecting African Americans at two and a half times the rate of white Americans and Hispanics at twice the rate of whites. Many in Miami and other tourist-rich areas of Florida, such as Orlando and Tampa, work in lower-paid, serviceind­ustry jobs including hotel, retail and food service.

In Orlando, the median servicecla­ss wage is $24,057, the lowest in the country, according to the 2017 US census community survey, and in Miami it was little higher at $26,532.

“It’s hard sometimes just to make the rent,” said Maria Medina, a second-generation Cuban American and mother of two elementary schoolaged children, from Little Havana. She works two part-time jobs: a morning waitress at a pancake house and afternoons and some evenings as a seamstress for a family-run tailor’s shop on Calle Ocho.

Medina, 34, said many of her neighbors and friends were not interested in politics but that she would vote for the Democratic nominee next year, whoever it was.

“Donald Trump has been very bad for the country in many ways,” she said. “He has been horrible for immigratio­n. We need to make sure he is voted out.”

McRae, who organizes small teams of canvassers knocking on up to 100 doors a day in Miami’s ethnically diverse neighborho­ods, stresses that her organizati­on is non-partisan. “We are not the Democratic party, we are not politician­s, so we don’t come to ask for your vote. We’re here year-round motivating, educating and advocating for a better Florida,” she said.

But she acknowledg­es that many of New Florida Majority’s ideals – including racial and social equality, criminal justice reform, care of the environmen­t and tackling the climate crisis – are shared by most Democrats and will be huge motivating factors for voters in next year’s election.

“What I’m getting from voters is anger, disgust, a little bit of hopelessne­ss, which we’re trying to use as fuel to get them out,” she said. “We’re not preparing for 2020. 2020 is already here.”

Rizzo, the state party’s chair, accepts that Republican­s will point to Florida’s booming economy and unemployme­nt rate of 3.2% as a reason for sticking with Trump for four more years, but she counters that low wages are crippling families.

“Many people are working two or three jobs just to have a decent living,” she said.

“Educating voters so they know the issues is going to be critical. Healthcare is number one for Floridians and Republican­s are attempting to wipe out the Affordable Care Act. The environmen­t is another huge issue where Democrats are full of positive change, while the Trump administra­tion wants to have offshore drilling off Florida.

“Once people figure out who’s doing what, that can be very motivating.”

Ultimately, as in so many recent elections, the result in Florida is going to be a simple numbers game. The party that engages and recruits more supporters will carry off the state’s 29 electoral college votes, and with them probably the White House.

“It’s why we’re working harder, and earlier, than ever before,” Rizzo said. “They used to call us the one per cent state. Now we’re the half per cent state.”

Neighbors talking to neighbors, that’s how we’re going to empower everyday Floridians to flip Florida blue

 ?? Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images ?? The Democratic presidenti­al candidates Julián Castro, Cory Booker and Elizabeth Warren in Florida during a debate in June.
Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images The Democratic presidenti­al candidates Julián Castro, Cory Booker and Elizabeth Warren in Florida during a debate in June.
 ?? Photograph: Phelan M Ebenhack/AP ?? The then Florida governor-elect, Ron DeSantis, right, answers questions from reporters, with his wife Casey, after being declared the winner of the Florida gubernator­ial race in November 2018.
Photograph: Phelan M Ebenhack/AP The then Florida governor-elect, Ron DeSantis, right, answers questions from reporters, with his wife Casey, after being declared the winner of the Florida gubernator­ial race in November 2018.

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