BryanM wrote:Amendment 4 passing with over 60 percent of the vote makes it really hard to put a lot of weight on their racism. When leftist policies are put on the ballot divorced from partisan identification, they do much better than the Democrats do on average. The minimum wage practically always getting passed when on the ballot is another example.
You don't live in Florida. You know how many people I met who voted no on 4? Some quotes:
* They won't know how to behave like citizens.
* It's a ploy of the Dems to pick up black votes.
* If they acted like animals, they shouldn't have a right to vote.
* I don't want this state to go blue and be given to the freaks of the Dems.
* People who lose their vote should suffer ten times longer in order to get their voting rights back.
If you go to really rural parts of Florida, racism is more noticeable. They won't admit they are racist to you, but like a lot of things in the south, people do it indirectly. Like back to the No 4 comments above, these comments were all said by middle class white Republican folks I know who lived in a really nice part of North Florida. They don't want this state to go Blue and they want to keep it that way. Voter suppression right there folks. This passed by plenty of Independents, Democrat, and various Republican support (Religious and Pro-Business with the Koch Brothers and ACLU support, I'm serious).
Money issues always go right-wing for this state. Except for the first amendment that didn't pass (lowering property taxes), some of the others did (cap on yearly property taxes, and 60% requirement in Florida House/Senate for any tax increases).
The race was close enough that Gillum might have won. Maybe all it would have taken was not fundraise with Clinton, or running one populist ad.
No, the problem wasn't Clinton or a populist ad. The problem is DEMS DON'T SHOW UP TO VOTE AS HARD AS REPUBLICANS IN FLORIDA. There's currently 4,918,415 Registered Dems and 4,661,230 Republicans, but there's 3,521,905 indies (like me). Republicans always vote much higher numbers and actually care to vote than Dems.
I haven't met a Republican yet who didn't voted, but I met plenty of Dems who don't vote. Shit, my roomie was a Dem for ten years and this election was her first time she voted ever. She told me she forgets to vote all the time due to her life. There's plenty more Dems in South Florida that could change everything in both elections, but they didn't show up. Let me put it this way, Desantis and Gillum almost had 4 million voters split yesterday, yet there's over 13 million voters in the state. That's almost five million who didn't voted.
I also blame the FL Dem party for having poor messaging issues. They don't know where they want to take the direction of the party in this state, still go moderate or go hard left. Due to how different each part of the state is, it's a hard balancing act. [/quote]