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babylonsister

(171,065 posts)
Tue Jul 10, 2018, 04:53 PM Jul 2018

Florida and the Puerto Rican Vote

http://www.boomantribune.com/story/2018/7/10/131644/484

Florida and the Puerto Rican Vote
by BooMan
Tue Jul 10th, 2018 at 01:16:44 PM EST


Florida Gov. Rick Scott is smart to make “Puerto Rico the centerpiece of his campaign” for U.S. Senate. The Sunshine State is known for its photo-finish political campaigns, and it presents a real problem for the governor that approximately 40,000 Puerto Ricans resettled there in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria. More than that, there are now more Puerto Ricans living in Florida (1.3 million) than there are Cuban-Americans, and they’re mostly Democratic-leaning voters who are extremely pissed off about how the Trump administration has handled the natural catastrophe on their home island. If Scott doesn’t show he’s different from the president, he could doom his prospects for victory.

He could be screwed anyway. Puerto Ricans are full American citizens who can immediately register to vote once they establish residency in any of the fifty states. Al Gore, who “lost” the state and the presidency by 537 votes could have benefitted from 40,000 angry and displaced voters bent on punishing his opponent’s political party. Gov. Scott knows he cannot afford to let those votes go unchallenged.

When [Scott] announced his bid in April, he spoke alongside top Puerto Rican official Luis Rivera Marín and touted efforts to help the island after the hurricane. The governor has visited the island six times since September and announced he backs the island’s bid for statehood.

“This state showed up and we helped Puerto Ricans that came here because the problems that happened after Maria and we showed up in Puerto Rico,” Scott said in April. “We’re going to continue to be the best friend in the world for Puerto Ricans in Puerto Rico and in the United States.”

Shortly after his announcement, Scott went up with a $1 million Spanish-language TV spot. His efforts appear to have helped his standing with Puerto Ricans who moved to Florida before and after Maria, according to a recent Florida International University (FIU) poll.


Incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson cannot take these votes for granted. He very well may need to run up his margins with this voting group in order to prevail.

Unfortunately, there’s another thing Senator Nelson cannot ignore. As I wrote about recently, there is new research from Harvard political scientist Ryan Enos, whose recent book “The Space Between Us” looks at how white communities react to an influx of non-white immigrants. His work shows that white liberal tolerance for racial integration diminishes very quickly when faced with actual integration. Tolerance is highest where integration is already high or where it hardly exists at all.

The relationship between the proportion of an out-group in an area and group-based bias is curvilinear: it becomes greater as the out-group proportion increases until reaching a tipping point and then starting to decrease. This means that when a group makes up a large portion of a place — for concreteness, say 40 percent — each additional person above 40 percent actually decreases group-based bias.


That gobbledegook means that if there are suddenly a lot of Puerto Ricans living in areas that were previously all-white, even the liberals will get disconcerted for a time. This is the precise kind of phenomenon that Trump is willing and able to expertly exploit. It’s unlikely that Rick Scott won’t try to exploit it for his own benefit, although he’ll have to do a careful dance to make sure it all doesn’t cancel out or actually work to his disadvantage.

If Scott panders to nativists, then Nelson has to make sure that the Puerto Rican community is aware of it. Aside from that, he needs to tie Scott to Trump and point out that if he is elected he will go to Washington DC and vote with the president ninety percent or more of the time. He may even prevent the Democrats from winning a majority and forcing Trump to address the needs of Puerto Rico.

I suspect this election will be one of the tightest in the country and there’s a good chance it will determine control of the Senate. For these reasons, I think people really ought to give it more prominence.
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Florida and the Puerto Rican Vote (Original Post) babylonsister Jul 2018 OP
One bit of encouragement zipplewrath Jul 2018 #1
Thanks for the post.....k and r...nt Stuart G Jul 2018 #2
I've been cheering on Puerto Ricans. The GOP left them to Hortensis Jul 2018 #3
Puerto Ricans voting (R) is like chickens voting for Col Sanders. lpbk2713 Jul 2018 #4
I sincerely doubt any Puerto Ricans will vote (R); babylonsister Jul 2018 #5

zipplewrath

(16,646 posts)
1. One bit of encouragement
Tue Jul 10, 2018, 05:08 PM
Jul 2018

There was already a sizable PR presence in central Florida. A very large number of the refugees moved in with/near relatives and friends. So the non-PR communities saw very little direct impact. Probably the largest was in the schools where they showed up in droves. But in many cases, the schools were already configured to deal with the PR population. The local school districts also set up kiosks in the airports to process refugees and look for teachers among them to help with the influx of students.

It could really be a "good news" story for the democrats, if they only can leverage it. Nelson hasn't been the strongest here in any way really. To a great degree he's been getting by because there is a D after his name. But if enough of the refugees look to our party because of Trump, it could make a significant difference.

Hortensis

(58,785 posts)
3. I've been cheering on Puerto Ricans. The GOP left them to
Tue Jul 10, 2018, 05:53 PM
Jul 2018

literally die, or live as they managed. And that was directly related to PR's overwhelming Democratic vote in 2016, small future political Republican potential, and of course the very large investment recovery requires, and not least the reality that they just don't care.

Our Danish DIL lived there for years and would love to return someday. I know why. Btw, the storm named Beryl has left many areas, and homes, sodden and flooded today.

I hope all PRans are mad as hell and direct it like Hurricane Maria against the Republicans on November 6.

lpbk2713

(42,757 posts)
4. Puerto Ricans voting (R) is like chickens voting for Col Sanders.
Tue Jul 10, 2018, 06:09 PM
Jul 2018


We have to put the word out. Nothing will ever change for the better unless they are stopped.

babylonsister

(171,065 posts)
5. I sincerely doubt any Puerto Ricans will vote (R);
Tue Jul 10, 2018, 06:22 PM
Jul 2018

there's got to be some organization in FL to get them all registered if they're not already.

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