by Laurel Duggan
Florida Democrats still have no clear leader or plan for the future two months after Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis swept the state in the November midterm elections, numerous lawmakers and leaders told The Washington Post.
DeSantisĀ wonĀ his reelection by 19 points afterĀ winningĀ his initial election by only 0.4 points in the former battleground state. There is no clear frontrunner to replace Manny Diaz, former Florida Democratic Party chair, following his recent resignation, and Democrats both within and outside Florida appear to be giving up on the third most populous state,Ā accordingĀ to the Post.
āThe thing about Florida Democrats is we keep learning with every passing year that just when you thought you had hit bottom, you discover that there are new abysses to fall deeper and deeper into,ā Fernand Amandi, a Florida Democratic operative, told the Post. āThere is no plan. Thereās nothing. Itās just a state of suspended animation and chaos ā and, more than anything, itās the mournful regret and acceptance that Florida has been cast aside for the long, foreseeable future.ā
Democratic donors at the national level largelyĀ pulled backĀ from the state in 2022 amid predictions of a Republican blowout, and will likely do the same in 2024 if DeSantis runs for president, according to the Post. The state currently has zero statewide elected Democrats, and Florida Democrats now doubt whether they could run a successful Senate race in 2024, according to the Post.
āFlorida reminds me of the Monty Python āDead, Not Deadā skit. Yes, the state is expensive and complicated to campaign in, but with 30 electoral votes and a population that lines up well with the makeup of the Democratic coalition, Democrats canāt afford to bury it,ā Juan PeƱalosa, former executive director of the Florida Democratic Party, said in a statement.
Florida swung for former President Barack Obama twice, but voting trendsĀ shiftedĀ during DeSantisā first term, with registered Republican votersĀ outnumberingĀ Democrats for the first time in 2022. DeSantis hasĀ attributedĀ this largely to the stateās rejection of COVID-19 policies such as vaccine passports and business and school closures.
āThere are really no Democrats in Florida who have money or are motivated,ā John Morgan, a major Democratic donor, told the Post.
The Florida Democratic Party did not respond to the Daily Caller News Foundationās request for comment.
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Laurel Duggan is a reporter at Daily Caller News Foundation.
Photo “Ron DeSantis” by Federal Government of the United States of America. Background Photo “Florida State Capitol” by DXR. CC BY-SA 4.0.