Posted on 06/20/2011 6:24:12 AM PDT by randita
Obama, Republicans prepare for another showdown in Florida
By Niall Stanage - 06/20/11 05:15 AM ET
In the 17 months between now and Election Day 2012, innumerable theories, some esoteric, will be advanced about how President Obama can get reelected. Math provides a starker answer: Win Florida.
Obama in 2008 carried nine states that former President George W. Bush won four years previously. If Obama loses eight of those battlegrounds and holds Florida and the other states remain unchanged he will secure another four years in the Oval Office.
To say the presidential campaign is already underway in Florida might be an exaggeration but not by much. Last week, Obama paid his third visit of the year to the Sunshine State. And no sooner had he left than putative Republican frontrunner Mitt Romney arrived.
Floridas unemployment rate is 10.6 percent. This figure, significantly above the national average, forms the keystone of the GOPs argument to eject Obama.
President Obama has had over two years [in office] and the economy is continuing to shrink, said Trey Stapleton, the Florida Republican Partys communications director. Weve just had a lot of rhetoric on this issue.
Stapletons Democratic counterpart, Eric Jotkoff, makes the case for the defense: I think Floridians recognize that President Obama has done everything in his power to jump-start the economy, he said. His policies have stabilized our economy and jobs are being created.
It seems premature to pen Obamas political obituary in Florida based on job numbers alone. A Quinnipiac University poll last month indicated that 51 percent of Floridians approved of Obamas job performance, while 43 percent disapproved.
But that finding likely reflected the Osama bin Laden bounce that benefited Obama in the wake of the killing of the al Qaeda leader. The same organization the month before had recorded an almost mirror-image result: 44 percent approval and 52 percent disapproval.
Obama could, receive aid from an unexpected quarter. The victory of Republican Rick Scott in last years gubernatorial election in Florida was seen at the time as a Tea Party triumph. Today, with an approval rating measured by one recent poll at 29 percent, Scott could well be the most unpopular governor in the nation.
Scotts popularity is in the doldrums for several reasons, including his ardor for budget cuts, a decision to decline more than $2 billion in federal funding for a high-speed rail link and a personality seen by critics as gratuitously aggressive.
Democrats say Scotts policies have given Floridians a taste of a Republican governing agenda, sharpening the idea that the 2012 election will not be simply a referendum on Obama.
[Scotts] record and his governing style underline that this election will not be about how much you like Barack Obama, Democratic strategist David Beattie asserted. It will be about competing visions of government.
Floridas population has a higher proportion of those over the age of 65 than any other state, so the debate over Medicare will be intense.
Concern that Obamas healthcare reform law would negatively affect Medicare is widely believed to have fueled Republican gains in the midterm elections. But now Democrats argue with undisguised glee that Rep. Paul Ryans (R-Wis.) plan to replace the current system with what has been called a voucher program might be a boon to the presidents chances even though only people under the age of 55 would be affected.
By ending Medicare as we know it, Republicans are trying to impose their extreme agenda, said Jotkoff. Floridians are literally up in arms over the Ryan plan. They flatly reject it.
Not so fast, counters Florida Republican strategist Brett Doster, who served at the top levels of the 2000 and 2004 Bush-Cheney campaigns in the state: I think it is far too simplistic to suggest that seniors will vote for President Obama because they are nervous about Medicare being cut. Seniors are also very fiscally conservative. They have the feeling that government spending is out of control.
Seniors collectively form one of the tiles in Floridas demographic mosaic. Hispanics account for 22.5 percent of the states population, according to the 2010 Census, but their voting behavior is far from uniform.
Aside from the traditionally Republican-leaning Cuban-American population, there is also a large and growing Puerto Rican community, which is especially concentrated along the politically vital I-4 corridor that stretches across the states midsection.
Obamas visit to Puerto Rico last week was a clear play for that vote. His speech in the capital, San Juan, was the first such presidential address there since John F. Kennedy visited in 1961.
Puerto Ricans are swing voters, said Steve Schale, a Florida Democratic strategist who served as the Obama campaigns state director in 2008. They are not as Democratic as Mexican voters in Arizona, for example. But they tend to skew our way. And, from what Im hearing, people are pretty pleased about the trip.
The Jewish vote is also being scrutinized for signs of change. There has been speculation that Jewish voters could turn away from Obama because of his policies on the Middle East, and Israel in particular.
The recent appointment of Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz as Democratic National Committee chairwoman, however, could be seen as an attempt to shore up the Jewish vote against any slippage. Wasserman Schultz is herself Jewish, and a stalwart supporter of both Israel and Obama.
Jewish Floridians would not necessarily have to vote for the Republican presidential nominee in overwhelming numbers to affect the elections outcome, however they merely would have to stay home. The same is true for many groups younger voters, African- Americans and Hispanics who propelled Obama to his 2008 Sunshine State victory.
Enthusiasm for the president or the intensity of other voters hopes to replace him will undoubtedly be crucial. Doster believes it could be determinative: It is pretty clear to me that Obama has lost his [2008] coalition, he asserted.
His best chance of winning Florida is igniting a supernatural turnout of his base, and hoping that will make up for his loss of support among independent voters. But I think that [kind of turnout] is unlikely.
The Obama camp, naturally, disagrees. And, in any case, every prediction about Florida is liable to be undermined by the peculiar volatility of the current political moment.
Susan MacManus, a political science professor at the University of South Florida, argued that the nebulous voter discontent seen across the nation is especially pronounced there. It is being buttressed by several different factors, she said, from the shock engendered by Floridas economic malaise to Rick Scotts performance to a distrust of government generally.
How this sense of ennui shakes out, she predicted, will be central to the 2012 result. Some groups could go to the polls in greater numbers than usual. Others may collectively shrug their shoulders and stay home.
The crucial thing is going to be figuring out which group is in which category, MacManus said
Source: http://thehill.com/homenews/news/167239-a-storm-brews-in-florida-ahead-of-2012-election
Anyone in Florida still employed? I guess the five or six who still have a job will be voting for the Socialist Hussein.
Unlike the country as a whole Florida’s unemployment is actually decreasing and Gov Scott has enticed businesses to move to the state. When 2012 comes around FL will be no further in reach of Obama than it was in 2010. The state has shifted substantially and may not even be a swingstate. WI is another state under going a similiar shift though it has been much longer coming.
The Republicans in Florida would be wise to expose Hussein’s obvious anti-Semitic treatment of Israel and his, obvious, disdain for Jews. It would also be wise to expose the Kapos who surround Hussein and the anti-Semitic attitude of his Czars.
Obama’s popularity with the retiree bloc in Florida went way down when democrats alienated them with their cuts to medicare used to “finance Obama-Kare”, not to mention Obama’s inflationary policies that hurt everyone, particularly those on fixed income.
But congressman Ryan has given Obama new life with his budget proposal that calls for major medicare changes.
(I’m not saying it’s bad - just that it opens the door for democrat spin and scare)
Even though Ryan does not propose changes for those already on Medicare, it gives democrats an opening to renew their “Mediscare” tactics by giving them something new to spin and lie about.
That puts Florida more in play.
Obama is slipping quickly and no amount of media bull shiite will help him.
The trend foe O is down across the board.... Rubio and J Bush need to secure the state for the GOP..... they can do that whomever we nominate....
better yet Rubio VP = slam dunk!
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