If you were in charge of Florida Democrats, what would your goals be?
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  If you were in charge of Florida Democrats, what would your goals be?
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Tekken_Guy
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« on: March 22, 2024, 10:08:56 PM »

If your were in charge of Florida Democrats, what would your goals be?
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Junior Chimp
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« Reply #1 on: March 23, 2024, 09:17:54 PM »

Take back control of key party functions like voter registration, partisan organization, data-driven persuasion, etc. from outside groups. FL Dems did make substantial gains in these areas during the mid-to-late 2000s before they outsourced these functions to outside groups, so returning to that era's playbook is the key first step.
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Progressive Pessimist
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« Reply #2 on: March 24, 2024, 02:47:03 AM »

Pay Bugs Bunny to saw off the state.

No, in all seriousness, use whatever money they have to pay for as many loyal Democrats in the state to move to one of the real battleground states instead.
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Mr. Smith
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« Reply #3 on: April 15, 2024, 07:12:20 PM »

Make more serious efforts with all the non-Cuban Hispanic groups, take no prisoners in Jacksonville, get Broward ballots under control.
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Landslide Lyndon
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« Reply #4 on: April 17, 2024, 07:28:23 AM »

Try and convince as many Democrats as I can to move to Georgia.
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Amenhotep Bakari-Sellers
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« Reply #5 on: April 18, 2024, 12:12:54 PM »

It's turning like the R version of IL
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Fuzzy Bear
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« Reply #6 on: April 20, 2024, 05:16:00 PM »

Convincing moderate Republicans to become Democrats.  Recruiting party switchers and supporting their candidacies.

The first thing I would do is address the bleeding in Miami-Dade County.  Miami-Dade County went for Trump in 2020, which was a foreteller of the DeSantis victory there in 2022.  This would require making direct appeals to Cuban voters in Miami whom the Democrats HAD been making progress with
until 2020.  The Gillum campaign was the beginning of the damage; Gillum came off as a Bernie-Bro, and however moderate Miami Cuban Republicans may seem to be, issue-wise, they are NOT moderates on socialism.  Palm Beach County needs to be shored up as well, but I believe that the DeSantis victory there was an abberation.

There are counties in FL that, through 2020, were trending Democratic.  Duval and Seminole Counties are toss-up counties, and Seminole, definitely, is trending Democratic.  There are Republicans upset with the trends; these could be Democratic candidates of 2024.  Pinellas County is a third county in this category.  St. Lucie is a fourth county; these counties  MUST go Democratic for the Democrats to win. 

There are other counties that are trending Democratic, but won't carry for the party anytime soon.  Lee County (Ft. Myers) is a good example; it's moving toward the Democrats, but Democrats can't win county-wide.  What Democrats COULD be doing is electing Democrats in non-partisan races (e. g. Ft. Myers and Cape Coral city commissions).  Establish beachheads.  Florida has lots of municipalities with non-partisan elections; attempting a stealth effort to get Democrats elected to those positions would be a worthy project.  (And I don't mean efforts like the ham-handed attempts to take over school board seats; that didn't go particularly well.) 
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Mr. Smith
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« Reply #7 on: April 27, 2024, 12:42:22 PM »

Convincing moderate Republicans to become Democrats.  Recruiting party switchers and supporting their candidacies.

The first thing I would do is address the bleeding in Miami-Dade County.  Miami-Dade County went for Trump in 2020, which was a foreteller of the DeSantis victory there in 2022.  This would require making direct appeals to Cuban voters in Miami whom the Democrats HAD been making progress with
until 2020.  The Gillum campaign was the beginning of the damage; Gillum came off as a Bernie-Bro, and however moderate Miami Cuban Republicans may seem to be, issue-wise, they are NOT moderates on socialism.  Palm Beach County needs to be shored up as well, but I believe that the DeSantis victory there was an abberation.

There are counties in FL that, through 2020, were trending Democratic.  Duval and Seminole Counties are toss-up counties, and Seminole, definitely, is trending Democratic.  There are Republicans upset with the trends; these could be Democratic candidates of 2024.  Pinellas County is a third county in this category.  St. Lucie is a fourth county; these counties  MUST go Democratic for the Democrats to win. 

There are other counties that are trending Democratic, but won't carry for the party anytime soon.  Lee County (Ft. Myers) is a good example; it's moving toward the Democrats, but Democrats can't win county-wide.  What Democrats COULD be doing is electing Democrats in non-partisan races (e. g. Ft. Myers and Cape Coral city commissions).  Establish beachheads.  Florida has lots of municipalities with non-partisan elections; attempting a stealth effort to get Democrats elected to those positions would be a worthy project.  (And I don't mean efforts like the ham-handed attempts to take over school board seats; that didn't go particularly well.) 

Biden still won Miami-Dade, it was just a single digit win instead of a blowout like Hillary.
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Fuzzy Bear
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« Reply #8 on: April 27, 2024, 01:00:40 PM »

Convincing moderate Republicans to become Democrats.  Recruiting party switchers and supporting their candidacies.

The first thing I would do is address the bleeding in Miami-Dade County.  Miami-Dade County went for Trump in 2020, which was a foreteller of the DeSantis victory there in 2022.  This would require making direct appeals to Cuban voters in Miami whom the Democrats HAD been making progress with
until 2020.  The Gillum campaign was the beginning of the damage; Gillum came off as a Bernie-Bro, and however moderate Miami Cuban Republicans may seem to be, issue-wise, they are NOT moderates on socialism.  Palm Beach County needs to be shored up as well, but I believe that the DeSantis victory there was an abberation.

There are counties in FL that, through 2020, were trending Democratic.  Duval and Seminole Counties are toss-up counties, and Seminole, definitely, is trending Democratic.  There are Republicans upset with the trends; these could be Democratic candidates of 2024.  Pinellas County is a third county in this category.  St. Lucie is a fourth county; these counties  MUST go Democratic for the Democrats to win. 

There are other counties that are trending Democratic, but won't carry for the party anytime soon.  Lee County (Ft. Myers) is a good example; it's moving toward the Democrats, but Democrats can't win county-wide.  What Democrats COULD be doing is electing Democrats in non-partisan races (e. g. Ft. Myers and Cape Coral city commissions).  Establish beachheads.  Florida has lots of municipalities with non-partisan elections; attempting a stealth effort to get Democrats elected to those positions would be a worthy project.  (And I don't mean efforts like the ham-handed attempts to take over school board seats; that didn't go particularly well.) 

Biden still won Miami-Dade, it was just a single digit win instead of a blowout like Hillary.

It was 7 points, 53-46, but if you link that to DeSantis's solid victory in Miami-Dade in 2022, it's a frightening trend.

The counties in Florida in the Central Time Zone long ago went Repubican, Presidentially, and were solidly Republican in 2000.  Duval, Seminole, Pinellas, Orange, Osceola, and (to a lesser degree) Manatee, Sarasota, and Polk Counties have moved, Presidentially, toward the Democrats by varying degrees.  Seminole County went for Biden in 2020; that was a county that was rock-ribbed Republican that is now flipping.  But these trends are offset by the smaller rural counties in North Florida, east of Tallahassee, going as Republican as the Western Panhandle; these counties are MORE Republican, Presidentially, than they have ever been. 

The growth areas for Florida's Democrats are no mystery; they are the areas of folks who were traditionally Republican, but have shield away from the conservatism of the GOP and are not growing due to an influx of Republican retirees.  Places like Pasco County, Sarasota County, and Manatee County ought to be areas of growth; the Republicanism there is not the Southern Republicanism of the Panhandle.  These are areas that were once the hotspot for retirees, but the retirees have found other areas; this is especially true of Pasco County, which is becoming a suburb of Tampa and has more people living there that work in Tampa than ever.  These are the harder nuts to crack, but if the Florida Democratic Party stayed focused, this could happen.
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