Biden visits Florida to shore up support among critical Hispanic voters
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[September 15, 2020]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and John Whitesides
(Reuters) - Democrat Joe Biden on Tuesday
will make his first campaign visit of the year to Florida, where opinion
polls show a tight race against President Donald Trump amid signs of
lagging support for Biden among the battleground state's crucial
Hispanic voters.
With less than 50 days until the Nov. 3 election, the Biden campaign is
trying to overcome concerns about enthusiasm among Florida Latinos, as
well as a disinformation campaign that has tried to paint the moderate
Democratic nominee as a socialist.
A recent NBC News/Marist poll showed the two White House contenders in a
dead heat in Florida and Trump with a 4-point edge over Biden among the
state's Latinos - a group Democrat Hillary Clinton won by 27 percentage
points in 2016, according to exit polls. Other polls have shown Biden
leading among state Hispanics but still trailing Clinton's support.
Trump won Florida over Clinton by just 1.2 percentage points, which
helped propel him to the White House. His inroads with Florida Hispanics
have been fueled by his strength with conservative Cuban Americans, a
Republican-leaning bloc he has courted throughout his presidency.
"Clearly, there has been some hemorrhaging of Hispanic support going on,
mainly Cuban Americans," said Democratic state Senator Annette Taddeo, a
Colombian American. "The Republicans have worked really, really hard,
and they have been constantly present."
The steady drumbeat of Republican attacks on Biden, the vice president
under Barack Obama, as a socialist has also taken a toll, Florida
Democrats said. The Republican convention last month featured a
Cuban-born Florida businessman, Maximo Alvarez, who compared Biden's
agenda to the promises of Fidel Castro's Communist rule.
Some Florida Democrats said they had noticed a sharp rise in videos and
commentary in social media feeds and texts warning, falsely, that Biden
is a socialist and pushing other conspiracy theories about Democrats.
"We are seeing a massive disinformation campaign in Spanish aimed at our
community calling Biden and Democrats socialists, and it is having an
effect," said Evelyn Perez-Verdia, a Colombian-American Democratic
strategist in south Florida.
'SOCIALISM OF THE LEFT'
Ana Hernandez, 63, a transportation auditor from Miami and a Cuban
American whose family immigrated to the United States in 1964 to escape
communism, said she could not support Democrats because they were too
far left.
"I would rather stay with what we have than go communist," she said,
adding the "socialism of the left" was her top concern.
Florida, where Hispanics make up about 20% of the state electorate, is a
linchpin in Trump's re-election strategy. A Biden win of Florida's 29
electoral votes would sharply reduce Trump's chances of another term -
no Republican has won the presidency without Florida since Calvin
Coolidge in 1924.
Trump, a former New York businessman, changed his permanent residence to
Florida last year.
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Democratic U.S. presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe
Biden speaks about climate change during a campaign event held at
the Delaware Museum of Natural History in Wilmington, Delaware,
U.S., September 14, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis
Nationally, Hispanics make up the largest minority voting group at
more than 13% of eligible voters. Biden's support with Latino voters
across the country has dropped, with the group favoring him over
Trump by 9 points in August, down from 30 points in July, according
to Reuters/Ipsos data.
The Biden campaign, urged by Taddeo and other Democrats to do more
to court Latinos, has stepped up Spanish-language and bilingual
advertising and hired more staff in battleground states including
Florida to reach the vital voting bloc.
Ahead of events on Tuesday in Tampa and Kissimmee, two Florida
cities with heavy Puerto Rican populations, Biden said: "I am going
to work like the devil to make sure I turn every Latino and Hispanic
vote."
He will get some help from former Democratic primary rival Michael
Bloomberg, who will spend $100 million on Biden's behalf in Florida
with a particular focus on Latino voters.
Polls show Biden running ahead of Clinton's level of 2016 support
among seniors in Florida, another crucial voting bloc, and among
white voters, giving him plenty of pathways to reach a majority,
Democrats said.
They said there was plenty of opportunity for Biden to make up
ground with Florida Hispanics, particularly among the state's
non-Cuban Latinos who include a fast-growing Puerto Rican population
and Mexicans, Colombians and Venezuelans.
Biden has vowed to rescind many of the hardline immigration policies
put in place by Trump's administration, and has emphasized the need
for broad health and economic strategies to recover from the
coronavirus pandemic that has hit Latino communities particularly
hard.
Unite the Country, a Democratic group that supports Biden, is
spending $1.4 million on digital advertising aimed at Latinos in
south Florida. Steve Schale, the group’s chief executive, said the
group could be most effective by driving up the support of non-Cuban
Hispanic voters who are not attached to a party and are typically
more persuadable.
Felice Gorordo, a Cuban-American Biden ally and finance committee
member, said the campaign should focus on younger Cuban voters, who
do not see foreign policy as the No. 1 issue, making them more open
to the campaign’s central message on recovery from the COVID-19
crisis.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and John Whitesides; Additional
reporting by Michael Martina and Chris Kahn; Editing by Colleen
Jenkins and Peter Cooney)
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