Home
2012
Election Results
Election Info
Weblog
Wiki
Search
Email
Site Info
Store
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Did you miss your
activation email?
May 19, 2013, 08:59:49 pm
News:
Please delete your old personal messages.
Atlas Forum
Presidential Elections - Analysis and Discussion
U.S. Presidential Election Results
(Moderator:
True Federalist
)
Why is florida more R at the state level
« previous
next »
Pages:
[
1
]
Author
Topic: Why is florida more R at the state level (Read 1477 times)
cope1989
YaBB God
Posts: 1318
Why is florida more R at the state level
«
on:
June 22, 2012, 08:25:45 pm »
Florida is a perennial swing state, but that appears to only be at the national level.
Despite the fact that the state is almost always a battleground in presidential elections, Republicans seem to have a distinct advantage at the state level.
Florida has had a Republican governor since 1998, it's house delegation is majority Republican, and the GOP controls both houses of the legislature by a wide margin. It looks like Bill Nelson is the only statewide, high profile Democrat, and he looks vulnerable.
So why is this? I can understand gerrymandering as part of the reason. But it doesn't make sense to me that a 50/50 state at the Presidential level is so dominated by Republicans at every other level. It is vote splitting or is the Florida GOP much more organized? Or is it something else?
Logged
Can't we all just get along?
freepcrusher
YaBB God
Posts: 2055
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #1 on:
June 23, 2012, 11:42:48 am »
Quote from: cope1989 on June 22, 2012, 08:25:45 pm
Florida is a perennial swing state, but that appears to only be at the national level.
Despite the fact that the state is almost always a battleground in presidential elections, Republicans seem to have a distinct advantage at the state level.
Florida has had a Republican governor since 1998, it's house delegation is majority Republican, and the GOP controls both houses of the legislature by a wide margin. It looks like Bill Nelson is the only statewide, high profile Democrat, and he looks vulnerable.
So why is this? I can understand gerrymandering as part of the reason. But it doesn't make sense to me that a 50/50 state at the Presidential level is so dominated by Republicans at every other level. It is vote splitting or is the Florida GOP much more organized? Or is it something else?
what's even more interesting is that Florida is a southern state where democrats usually run ahead of the national party.
Logged
crypto-fascist superhero
wormyguy
YaBB God
Posts: 7815
Political Matrix
E: 7.61, S: -7.65
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #2 on:
June 23, 2012, 03:44:51 pm »
Quote from: freepcrusher on June 23, 2012, 11:42:48 am
what's even more interesting is that Florida is a southern state where democrats usually run ahead of the national party.
The last time when a Democratic POTUS candidate did better in Florida than nationally was 1976, and before that 1956...
Logged
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WV6Bq8xeQrU
Senator Napoleon
Napoleon
YaBB God
Posts: 11590
Political Matrix
E: -3.35, S: -8.17
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #3 on:
June 23, 2012, 03:47:56 pm »
Quote from: crypto-fascist superhero on June 23, 2012, 03:44:51 pm
Quote from: freepcrusher on June 23, 2012, 11:42:48 am
what's even more interesting is that Florida is a southern state where democrats usually run ahead of the national party.
The last time when a Democratic POTUS candidate did better in Florida than nationally was 1976, and before that 1956...
He means that in Southern states, Democrats typically do better at the state level than at the federal level and Florida bucks that trend. Now, one explanation could be minority turnout, in non-presidential years, but I think that ignores Republicans strength in the state legislature during presidential years.
Logged
Quote from: bgwah on April 20, 2013, 12:46:53 am
The only thing that is certain is that he's a douche! What he will infract is uncetain.
ajc0918
YaBB God
Posts: 1321
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #4 on:
June 23, 2012, 05:54:53 pm »
Both the Florida Senate and the Florida House have drawn terrible republican gerrymanders. Most of the democrats represent heavy minority districts and even the new maps under the new laws are still republican maps.
Also because of this gerrymander the Republican Party of Florida raises millions more from special interests than thr Democrats who virtually have little influence in state legislation. This allows the RPOF to outspend the Florida Dems and manage a better GOTV campaign.
Democrats need a leader who can appeal to all fractions of the party. They need a better grassroots campaign and better voter turnout. Remember, Dems have about a 400k+ registration advantage yet republicans have super majorities in both chambers.
Logged
hopper
YaBB God
Posts: 555
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #5 on:
June 24, 2012, 10:09:07 pm »
I don't know maybe more younger people in Florida come out to vote for the presidential elections alot more than they do for state level and mid-term congressional races. Plus Florida as everybody knows is a bastion for senior citizens or older people once they retire. The older electorate doesn't vote Dem like young people and minorities do.
Logged
Emperor SJoyce
sjoycefla
YaBB God
Posts: 6509
Political Matrix
E: -1.35, S: -10.00
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #6 on:
June 27, 2012, 11:04:19 am »
The reason is primarily history, particularly the days of the Solid South. Back in the days when the Republicans taking over Florida was unimaginable, unthinkable, party leaders focused more on internal divisions and power squabbles while the Republicans stayed organized. The Rs eventually managed to get a breakthrough and have gerrymandered themselves into power ever since.
Logged
Vote SJoyce for Emperor. It's Finger Lickin' Good.
Quote from: windjammer on April 17, 2013, 05:38:19 pm
And for Sjoyce, sorry but your -10 on social issues, it scares me!
Speaker Dereich
Dereich
YaBB God
Posts: 1066
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #7 on:
June 27, 2012, 01:29:26 pm »
Well, in addition to minority turnout, one reason is that Democrats in the state are pretty much shut out of everything non-minority north of Orlando or Tampa. Not that the state party does anything to change that; the state Democratic party is more set up to fight national elections then local ones. What I mean is that they do much more preaching to the choir (cities dwellers, college students, the general left) then they do the still moderately southern swing voters. The kind of Democrat who can win at a state level here is someone like Bill Nelson; strong on military issues, less liberal and a bit of a southern twang NOT someone like DWS or Alan Grayson. I guess what I'm trying to say is that the state Democrats do an awful job of appealing outside their base, and would need to move to the right to win locally.
Oh, and as for gerrymandering; Florida is a pretty well naturally gerrymandered for the Republicans, even a fair map would give a Republican advantage; and as I mentioned above the Democrats in the state are so dedicated to acting like a permanant minority party they probably will be.
Logged
Federalist legislator for the IDS. I'm always available if you have concerns or suggestions!
OC
olawakandi
YaBB God
Posts: 8398
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #8 on:
June 28, 2012, 10:50:30 am »
There hasn't been a good enough candidate that appeals to the Cuban and southern white community like Lawton Chiles or Bob Graham could. The Democratic party in a lot of ways have nominated people like Sink who appeals to Southern Florida only.
«
Last Edit: June 28, 2012, 10:53:26 am by OC
»
Logged
cope1989
YaBB God
Posts: 1318
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #9 on:
June 28, 2012, 01:36:16 pm »
Quote from: Dereich on June 27, 2012, 01:29:26 pm
Well, in addition to minority turnout, one reason is that Democrats in the state are pretty much shut out of everything non-minority north of Orlando or Tampa. Not that the state party does anything to change that; the state Democratic party is more set up to fight national elections then local ones. What I mean is that they do much more preaching to the choir (cities dwellers, college students, the general left) then they do the still moderately southern swing voters. The kind of Democrat who can win at a state level here is someone like Bill Nelson; strong on military issues, less liberal and a bit of a southern twang NOT someone like DWS or Alan Grayson. I guess what I'm trying to say is that the state Democrats do an awful job of appealing outside their base, and would need to move to the right to win locally.
Oh, and as for gerrymandering; Florida is a pretty well naturally gerrymandered for the Republicans, even a fair map would give a Republican advantage; and as I mentioned above the Democrats in the state are so dedicated to acting like a permanant minority party they probably will be.
If there's enough of a Democratic base to win national elections, why can't they be mobilized to win statewide ones?
Logged
Can't we all just get along?
Emperor SJoyce
sjoycefla
YaBB God
Posts: 6509
Political Matrix
E: -1.35, S: -10.00
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #10 on:
June 28, 2012, 02:08:57 pm »
Quote from: OC on June 28, 2012, 10:50:30 am
There hasn't been a good enough candidate that appeals to the Cuban and southern white community like Lawton Chiles or Bob Graham could. The Democratic party in a lot of ways have nominated people like Sink who appeals to Southern Florida only.
Appealing to Southern Florida is another problem. The Dems are stuck in the notion that they have to nominate moderate-conservatives to win statewide, so they spend money contesting all sorts of counties in the Panhandle and North Florida that they'll never win, counties McCain won by 15-20 points, where a 20-point swing in all of em would be equal to a 2-point swing in Miami-Dade alone, instead of focusing on GOTV in South Florida, Tampa Bay, and Orlando-Daytona.
This
is the best analysis I've seen so far.
Logged
Vote SJoyce for Emperor. It's Finger Lickin' Good.
Quote from: windjammer on April 17, 2013, 05:38:19 pm
And for Sjoyce, sorry but your -10 on social issues, it scares me!
Speaker Dereich
Dereich
YaBB God
Posts: 1066
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #11 on:
June 28, 2012, 03:05:14 pm »
Quote from: cope1989 on June 28, 2012, 01:36:16 pm
Quote from: Dereich on June 27, 2012, 01:29:26 pm
Well, in addition to minority turnout, one reason is that Democrats in the state are pretty much shut out of everything non-minority north of Orlando or Tampa. Not that the state party does anything to change that; the state Democratic party is more set up to fight national elections then local ones. What I mean is that they do much more preaching to the choir (cities dwellers, college students, the general left) then they do the still moderately southern swing voters. The kind of Democrat who can win at a state level here is someone like Bill Nelson; strong on military issues, less liberal and a bit of a southern twang NOT someone like DWS or Alan Grayson. I guess what I'm trying to say is that the state Democrats do an awful job of appealing outside their base, and would need to move to the right to win locally.
Oh, and as for gerrymandering; Florida is a pretty well naturally gerrymandered for the Republicans, even a fair map would give a Republican advantage; and as I mentioned above the Democrats in the state are so dedicated to acting like a permanant minority party they probably will be.
If there's enough of a Democratic base to win national elections, why can't they be mobilized to win statewide ones?
Because a national base and a state base are two different things. Its a bit like West Virginia in reverse.
Quote from: SoEA SJoyceFla on June 28, 2012, 02:08:57 pm
Quote from: OC on June 28, 2012, 10:50:30 am
There hasn't been a good enough candidate that appeals to the Cuban and southern white community like Lawton Chiles or Bob Graham could. The Democratic party in a lot of ways have nominated people like Sink who appeals to Southern Florida only.
Appealing to Southern Florida is another problem. The Dems are stuck in the notion that they have to nominate moderate-conservatives to win statewide, so they spend money contesting all sorts of counties in the Panhandle and North Florida that they'll never win, counties McCain won by 15-20 points, where a 20-point swing in all of em would be equal to a 2-point swing in Miami-Dade alone, instead of focusing on GOTV in South Florida, Tampa Bay, and Orlando-Daytona.
This
is the best analysis I've seen so far.
Well, they do. Your article was right about the quality of the Democratic bench, but the fact remains that the parts of the electorate who would vote for all and any Democrat don't vote as much in the midterm elections that really matter for state politics. I'd say the Dems don't really have much ability to grow in Miami-Dade, I mean they pretty much depend on it as a crutch already. The Tampa to Orlando area is of course key, but everyone has always known that. And the panhandle will definately still support a blue dog, Alan Boyd was still winning with big margins until the wave. Thinking about it a bit more, one of the big troubles for the state party is that their constituancies are even more divided then normal. Its hard to craft a solitary message to appeal to blacks, Cubans, other hispanics, blue dog supporters, and cosmopolitan liberals. The party spends so much of its time trying to hold itself together and form a united front with hardly any widely appealing candidates, its not surprising that they can't get off the ground.
Also, I personally am a pretty big fan of Sink; I think she's the only Democratic candidate for Goveror I'd vote for over Scott.
Logged
Federalist legislator for the IDS. I'm always available if you have concerns or suggestions!
Emperor SJoyce
sjoycefla
YaBB God
Posts: 6509
Political Matrix
E: -1.35, S: -10.00
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #12 on:
June 28, 2012, 03:18:45 pm »
Quote from: Dereich on June 28, 2012, 03:05:14 pm
Quote from: SoEA SJoyceFla on June 28, 2012, 02:08:57 pm
Quote from: OC on June 28, 2012, 10:50:30 am
There hasn't been a good enough candidate that appeals to the Cuban and southern white community like Lawton Chiles or Bob Graham could. The Democratic party in a lot of ways have nominated people like Sink who appeals to Southern Florida only.
Appealing to Southern Florida is another problem. The Dems are stuck in the notion that they have to nominate moderate-conservatives to win statewide, so they spend money contesting all sorts of counties in the Panhandle and North Florida that they'll never win, counties McCain won by 15-20 points, where a 20-point swing in all of em would be equal to a 2-point swing in Miami-Dade alone, instead of focusing on GOTV in South Florida, Tampa Bay, and Orlando-Daytona.
This
is the best analysis I've seen so far.
Well, they do. Your article was right about the quality of the Democratic bench, but the fact remains that the parts of the electorate who would vote for all and any Democrat don't vote as much in the midterm elections that really matter for state politics. I'd say the Dems don't really have much ability to grow in Miami-Dade, I mean they pretty much depend on it as a crutch already. The Tampa to Orlando area is of course key, but everyone has always known that. And the panhandle will definately still support a blue dog, Alan Boyd was still winning with big margins until the wave. Thinking about it a bit more, one of the big troubles for the state party is that their constituancies are even more divided then normal. Its hard to craft a solitary message to appeal to blacks, Cubans, other hispanics, blue dog supporters, and cosmopolitan liberals. The party spends so much of its time trying to hold itself together and form a united front with hardly any widely appealing candidates, its not surprising that they can't get off the ground.
Also, I personally am a pretty big fan of Sink; I think she's the only Democratic candidate for Goveror I'd vote for over Scott.
Dems don't need to
grow
in Miami-Dade/Broward/Palm Beach, they just need to actually spend money there and do GOTV to up the atrocious voter turnout for Dems in those areas. The Panhandle may be willing to go for a Blue Dog, but South Florida won't turn out for a Blue Dog like they will for a Grayson or Wasserman-Schultz, and South Florida turnout>Panhandle voters. The issue is really they're trying too hard to appeal to those different groups that you get bland centrists like Sink instead of somebody who actually stands for something, and voters pick the guys who stand for something even if it's absolutely nutty over the moderate hero who doesn't stand for anything at all (2010 governor's race, for example).
I personally think Sink is a rather inept campaigner and that the Dems need Graham or Nelson (or Charlie) to take back the Governor's office, but I'd vote for Sink (or Nan Rich or Rod Smith or whoever) over
.
Logged
Vote SJoyce for Emperor. It's Finger Lickin' Good.
Quote from: windjammer on April 17, 2013, 05:38:19 pm
And for Sjoyce, sorry but your -10 on social issues, it scares me!
Speaker Dereich
Dereich
YaBB God
Posts: 1066
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #13 on:
June 28, 2012, 03:44:53 pm »
Quote from: SoEA SJoyceFla on June 28, 2012, 03:18:45 pm
Quote from: Dereich on June 28, 2012, 03:05:14 pm
Quote from: SoEA SJoyceFla on June 28, 2012, 02:08:57 pm
Quote from: OC on June 28, 2012, 10:50:30 am
There hasn't been a good enough candidate that appeals to the Cuban and southern white community like Lawton Chiles or Bob Graham could. The Democratic party in a lot of ways have nominated people like Sink who appeals to Southern Florida only.
Appealing to Southern Florida is another problem. The Dems are stuck in the notion that they have to nominate moderate-conservatives to win statewide, so they spend money contesting all sorts of counties in the Panhandle and North Florida that they'll never win, counties McCain won by 15-20 points, where a 20-point swing in all of em would be equal to a 2-point swing in Miami-Dade alone, instead of focusing on GOTV in South Florida, Tampa Bay, and Orlando-Daytona.
This
is the best analysis I've seen so far.
Well, they do. Your article was right about the quality of the Democratic bench, but the fact remains that the parts of the electorate who would vote for all and any Democrat don't vote as much in the midterm elections that really matter for state politics. I'd say the Dems don't really have much ability to grow in Miami-Dade, I mean they pretty much depend on it as a crutch already. The Tampa to Orlando area is of course key, but everyone has always known that. And the panhandle will definately still support a blue dog, Alan Boyd was still winning with big margins until the wave. Thinking about it a bit more, one of the big troubles for the state party is that their constituancies are even more divided then normal. Its hard to craft a solitary message to appeal to blacks, Cubans, other hispanics, blue dog supporters, and cosmopolitan liberals. The party spends so much of its time trying to hold itself together and form a united front with hardly any widely appealing candidates, its not surprising that they can't get off the ground.
Also, I personally am a pretty big fan of Sink; I think she's the only Democratic candidate for Goveror I'd vote for over Scott.
Dems don't need to
grow
in Miami-Dade/Broward/Palm Beach, they just need to actually spend money there and do GOTV to up the atrocious voter turnout for Dems in those areas. The Panhandle may be willing to go for a Blue Dog, but South Florida won't turn out for a Blue Dog like they will for a Grayson or Wasserman-Schultz, and South Florida turnout>Panhandle voters. The issue is really they're trying too hard to appeal to those different groups that you get bland centrists like Sink instead of somebody who actually stands for something, and voters pick the guys who stand for something even if it's absolutely nutty over the moderate hero who doesn't stand for anything at all (2010 governor's race, for example).
I personally think Sink is a rather inept campaigner and that the Dems need Graham or Nelson (or Charlie) to take back the Governor's office, but I'd vote for Sink (or Nan Rich or Rod Smith or whoever) over
.
Crist is really the epitome of the candidate you most seem to dislike. And Scott's convictions aren't what saved him, but his money and the year he was running in were. If McCollum had won the primary the election would have been over, but Scott almost handed a mostly safe seat to the Democrats. Just look at the Miami-Dade results, every Republican going for a state office ran ahead of Scott. And what I'm saying more or less is that you
can't
get get many of those south Floridians out to vote for any office less than President, except in a blue moon; and 45% of those that do vote do so for the Republicans. And the fact that the Democratic Hispanic caucus is laughably pathetic just adds to their turnout problem. If the Democrats assembled a decent hispanic bench and managed to pry away some of the significant populations of Republican hispanics I'd really start to worry, but they're still too focused on black, jewish and elderly turnout for that to be a worry.
«
Last Edit: June 28, 2012, 03:46:36 pm by Dereich
»
Logged
Federalist legislator for the IDS. I'm always available if you have concerns or suggestions!
Emperor SJoyce
sjoycefla
YaBB God
Posts: 6509
Political Matrix
E: -1.35, S: -10.00
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #14 on:
June 28, 2012, 04:09:06 pm »
Quote from: Dereich on June 28, 2012, 03:44:53 pm
Quote from: SoEA SJoyceFla on June 28, 2012, 03:18:45 pm
Quote from: Dereich on June 28, 2012, 03:05:14 pm
Quote from: SoEA SJoyceFla on June 28, 2012, 02:08:57 pm
Quote from: OC on June 28, 2012, 10:50:30 am
There hasn't been a good enough candidate that appeals to the Cuban and southern white community like Lawton Chiles or Bob Graham could. The Democratic party in a lot of ways have nominated people like Sink who appeals to Southern Florida only.
Appealing to Southern Florida is another problem. The Dems are stuck in the notion that they have to nominate moderate-conservatives to win statewide, so they spend money contesting all sorts of counties in the Panhandle and North Florida that they'll never win, counties McCain won by 15-20 points, where a 20-point swing in all of em would be equal to a 2-point swing in Miami-Dade alone, instead of focusing on GOTV in South Florida, Tampa Bay, and Orlando-Daytona.
This
is the best analysis I've seen so far.
Well, they do. Your article was right about the quality of the Democratic bench, but the fact remains that the parts of the electorate who would vote for all and any Democrat don't vote as much in the midterm elections that really matter for state politics. I'd say the Dems don't really have much ability to grow in Miami-Dade, I mean they pretty much depend on it as a crutch already. The Tampa to Orlando area is of course key, but everyone has always known that. And the panhandle will definately still support a blue dog, Alan Boyd was still winning with big margins until the wave. Thinking about it a bit more, one of the big troubles for the state party is that their constituancies are even more divided then normal. Its hard to craft a solitary message to appeal to blacks, Cubans, other hispanics, blue dog supporters, and cosmopolitan liberals. The party spends so much of its time trying to hold itself together and form a united front with hardly any widely appealing candidates, its not surprising that they can't get off the ground.
Also, I personally am a pretty big fan of Sink; I think she's the only Democratic candidate for Goveror I'd vote for over Scott.
Dems don't need to
grow
in Miami-Dade/Broward/Palm Beach, they just need to actually spend money there and do GOTV to up the atrocious voter turnout for Dems in those areas. The Panhandle may be willing to go for a Blue Dog, but South Florida won't turn out for a Blue Dog like they will for a Grayson or Wasserman-Schultz, and South Florida turnout>Panhandle voters. The issue is really they're trying too hard to appeal to those different groups that you get bland centrists like Sink instead of somebody who actually stands for something, and voters pick the guys who stand for something even if it's absolutely nutty over the moderate hero who doesn't stand for anything at all (2010 governor's race, for example).
I personally think Sink is a rather inept campaigner and that the Dems need Graham or Nelson (or Charlie) to take back the Governor's office, but I'd vote for Sink (or Nan Rich or Rod Smith or whoever) over
.
Crist is really the epitome of the candidate you most seem to dislike. And Scott's convictions aren't what saved him, but his money and the year he was running in were. If McCollum had won the primary the election would have been over, but Scott almost handed a mostly safe seat to the Democrats. Just look at the Miami-Dade results, every Republican going for a state office ran ahead of Scott. And what I'm saying more or less is that you
can't
get get many of those south Floridians out to vote for any office less than President, except in a blue moon; and 45% of those that do vote do so for the Republicans. And the fact that the Democratic Hispanic caucus is laughably pathetic just adds to their turnout problem. If the Democrats assembled a decent hispanic bench and managed to pry away some of the significant populations of Republican hispanics I'd really start to worry, but they're still too focused on black, jewish and elderly turnout for that to be a worry.
Candidate I most seem to dislike? I'm from St. Petersburg, and I'm most interested in seeing Scott lose, and if there's one candidate who'll return to Tallahassee like MacArthur to the Philippines while completely dismantling Scott, it's Crist.
Logged
Vote SJoyce for Emperor. It's Finger Lickin' Good.
Quote from: windjammer on April 17, 2013, 05:38:19 pm
And for Sjoyce, sorry but your -10 on social issues, it scares me!
Speaker Dereich
Dereich
YaBB God
Posts: 1066
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #15 on:
June 28, 2012, 04:17:11 pm »
When I said you wouldn't like Crist I was refering to
Quote
The issue is really they're trying too hard to appeal to those different groups that you get bland centrists like Sink instead of somebody who actually stands for something
And we all know that the only thing Charlie Crist stands for is Charlie Crist. But you're right about him being able to destroy Scott.
Logged
Federalist legislator for the IDS. I'm always available if you have concerns or suggestions!
Senator Kalwejt
Kalwejt
YaBB God
Posts: 35730
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #16 on:
July 01, 2012, 01:22:38 pm »
Quote from: OC on June 28, 2012, 10:50:30 am
There hasn't been a good enough candidate that appeals to the Cuban and southern white community like Lawton Chiles or Bob Graham could.
Don't forget Claude Pepper.
Logged
Senator Clarence
clarence
YaBB God
Posts: 4360
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #17 on:
July 01, 2012, 02:53:38 pm »
Quote from: Vice President-elect Kalwejt on July 01, 2012, 01:22:38 pm
Quote from: OC on June 28, 2012, 10:50:30 am
There hasn't been a good enough candidate that appeals to the Cuban and southern white community like Lawton Chiles or Bob Graham could.
Don't forget Claude Pepper.
Or Jeb
Logged
"I have not yet begun to fight"
Emperor SJoyce
sjoycefla
YaBB God
Posts: 6509
Political Matrix
E: -1.35, S: -10.00
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #18 on:
July 01, 2012, 04:18:51 pm »
Quote from: clarence on July 01, 2012, 02:53:38 pm
Quote from: Vice President-elect Kalwejt on July 01, 2012, 01:22:38 pm
Quote from: OC on June 28, 2012, 10:50:30 am
There hasn't been a good enough candidate that appeals to the Cuban and southern white community like Lawton Chiles or Bob Graham could.
Don't forget Claude Pepper.
Or Jeb
Jeb isn't a Democrat
Logged
Vote SJoyce for Emperor. It's Finger Lickin' Good.
Quote from: windjammer on April 17, 2013, 05:38:19 pm
And for Sjoyce, sorry but your -10 on social issues, it scares me!
Dumbo
Jr. Member
Posts: 73
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #19 on:
July 13, 2012, 03:19:48 pm »
At the local level it looks good for Democrats. Florida
has 18 cities with a population of 100.000 or more
and in 13 of these 18 cities the mayor is a member of
the Democratic party.
Logged
Beet
Moderators
YaBB God
Posts: 14771
Political Matrix
E: -2.52, S: -4.43
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #20 on:
July 13, 2012, 03:24:22 pm »
1) gerrymandering
2) they were very, very, very smart with who they decided to nominate and when
In 2006 when voters were ready to elect a Dem governor, the GOP nominated an uber-moderate. In 2010, when voters were angry at Obama, the GOP nominated a conservative. They nominated Hispanics at critical moments (2004, 2010) that denied Democrats' attempts to win Senate seats.
Logged
Quote from: krazen1211 on January 17, 2013, 06:26:56 pm
15 rounds for the elites but 7 for the people. Interesting.
Markit Credit Data
cope1989
YaBB God
Posts: 1318
Re: Why is florida more R at the state level
«
Reply #21 on:
July 13, 2012, 09:14:57 pm »
Quote from: Beet on July 13, 2012, 03:24:22 pm
1) gerrymandering
2) they were very, very, very smart with who they decided to nominate and when
In 2006 when voters were ready to elect a Dem governor, the GOP nominated an uber-moderate. In 2010, when voters were angry at Obama, the GOP nominated a conservative. They nominated Hispanics at critical moments (2004, 2010) that denied Democrats' attempts to win Senate seats.
Pretty good explanation. Although I think Rick Scott would have been soundly defeated in any year but 2010. I see him having a very very tough fight in 2014.
The GOP will dominate the Florida legislature for the foreseeable future, but the state is due for a correction at the Gubernatorial level. What makes florida a swing state in a Presidential election will make it competitive for Governors races as well. I guess we'll just have to see what happens in 2 years.
Logged
Can't we all just get along?
Pages:
[
1
]
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Presidential Elections - Analysis and Discussion
-----------------------------
=> 2016 U.S. Presidential Election
===> 2016 U.S. Presidential General Election Polls
===> 2016 U.S. Presidential Primary Election Polls
=> U.S. Presidential Election Results
===> 2012 U.S. Presidential Election Results
===> 2008 U.S. Presidential Election Results
===> 2004 U.S. Presidential Election Results
===> 2000 U.S. Presidential Election Results
=> Presidential Election Trends
=> Election What-ifs?
===> Past Election What-ifs (US)
===> Alternative Elections
===> International What-ifs
-----------------------------
Other Elections - Analysis and Discussion
-----------------------------
=> Gubernatorial/Statewide Elections
===> 2013 & Odd Year Gubernatorial Election Polls
===> 2014 Gubernatorial Election Polls
=> Congressional Elections
===> 2014 Senatorial Election Polls
=> International Elections
=> Election Predictions
-----------------------------
Questions and Answers
-----------------------------
=> Presidential Election Process
===> Electoral Reform
===> Polling
=> The Atlas
===> How To
-----------------------------
General Discussion
-----------------------------
=> Constitution and Law
=> Religion & Philosophy
=> History
===> Alternative History
-----------------------------
General Politics
-----------------------------
=> U.S. General Discussion
=> Political Geography & Demographics
=> International General Discussion
=> Economics
=> Individual Politics
=> Political Debate
===> Political Essays & Deliberation
===> Book Reviews and Discussion
-----------------------------
Election Archive
-----------------------------
=> 2012 Elections
===> 2012 Senatorial Election Polls
===> 2012 House Election Polls
===> 2012 U.S. Presidential Primary Election Polls
===> 2012 U.S. Presidential General Election Polls
===> 2012 Gubernatorial Election Polls
=> 2010 Elections
===> 2010 House Election Polls
===> 2010 Senatorial Election Polls
===> 2010 Gubernatorial Election Polls
=> 2008 Elections
===> 2008 Senatorial Election Polls
===> 2008 Gubernatorial Election Polls
===> 2008 U.S. Presidential Election Campaign
===> 2008 U.S. Presidential General Election Polls
===> 2008 U.S. Presidential Primary Election Polls
=> 2004 U.S. Presidential Election
===> 2004 U.S. Presidential Election Campaign
===> 2004 U.S. Presidential Election Polls
=> 2006 Elections
===> 2006 Senatorial Election Polls
===> 2006 Gubernatorial Election Polls
-----------------------------
Forum Community
-----------------------------
=> Forum Community
===> Forum Community Election Match-ups
=> Election and History Games
===> Mock Parliment
===> Town Hall
===> Survivor
===> Interactive Timelines
=> Off-topic Board
-----------------------------
Atlas Fantasy Elections
-----------------------------
=> Atlas Fantasy Elections
===> Voting Booth
=> Atlas Fantasy Government
===> Constitutional Convention
===> Regional Governments
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
Powered by SMF 1.1.18
|
SMF © 2013, Simple Machines
Loading...