DeSantis responds to predictions Miami-Dade could turn red for first gov since Jeb Bush

Miami-Dade County may be ripe for Republicans as Gov. Ron DeSantis' popularity in the Democratic-majority county is rising ahead of a key gubernatorial election.

In 2002, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush became the last to-date Republican gubernatorial candidate to win the heavily-populated and diverse Miami-Dade County in South Florida, which current Gov. Ron DeSantis could be in position to do for the first time since.

DeSantis told Fox News that Miamians understand he was the governor "saving their jobs, their businesses and keeping their kids in school during COVID" and that opponent Charlie Crist's Democratic Party opposed him on each front.

"They wanted basically indefinite lockdowns and school closures. And that is not good for blue-collar people."

The county, which extends south and west of the city into Homestead and parts of the Everglades, has an approximate population of 2.6 million, while the city of Miami proper has about 440,000 people as of 2021.

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Crist, running as a Republican for governor in 2006, won the race overall but lost Miami-Dade to Democrat Jim Davis III.

The county has a Democratic executive, while Miami Mayor Francis X. Suarez is one of few big-city leaders aligned with the GOP.

The city has a high Latino and Hispanic population, particularly Cuban-Americans. In 2020, Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar, R-Fla., upset incumbent and former Bill Clinton cabinetmember Donna Shalala in the district covering that part of the city and beyond.

DeSantis said the GOP establishment view that "you need open borders and amnesty to appeal to Hispanic voters" is "dead wrong."

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"My first year, we banned sanctuary cities and newsmedia thought that would be not approved down [in Miami] – And yet Hispanic voters in Florida had the highest approval rating for our policy to ban sanctuary cities," DeSantis added.

Invoking his recent transport of migrants to Martha's Vineyard that had been decried as racist and untoward by pundits including Florida's own former Republican Congressman Joe Scarborough, DeSantis said the perception was the operation would not go over well, but Hispanic voters in the state supported him on it.

"They understand the border is out of control," he said.

DeSantis said another issue relevant to South Floridians is crime, adding that he called out the Florida National Guard during the George Floyd riots.


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"I also think we reflect their values as parents raising kids. We fought Disney to make sure that the kids wouldn't be sexualized in elementary school by keeping things like gender ideology out of the classroom. But yet it's the left that wants to put all that in there," he said.

"So I think you just see Latinos down here, but really blue-collar people generally saying we're representing them, we are standing up for them, their jobs, their education, their safety and their families."

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The number of registered Republicans voting in Miami-Dade County also notably surpassed Democrats last week, just after President Biden visited for a campaign stump. The county is 72% Hispanic according to the AP.

The adjacent mainland counties of Broward and Palm Beach are still reliably blue, while to the south, Monroe County – comprising mostly of the Keys – has seen its congressional seat flip to and fro in recent elections.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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