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GOP Hopes to Hold on to Florida's Cubans
Florida is getting more of a mix in the Latino vote. Cubans in Florida still hold most of the political power but Mexicans and South Americans are growing in numbers.
MIAMI (AP) -- For nearly a decade, Republican presidential candidates have counted on Florida's Cuban-American community to win the state and, with it, the presidency.This year's hopefuls are again making the rounds in Little Havana and on Miami's Spanish-language radio, mixing criticism of Fidel Castro's Cuban regime with scathing comments about Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
But this once fail-safe plan has become more risky as Florida's increasingly diverse Hispanic community no longer guarantees a monolithic vote. Of the state's estimated 3 million Hispanics, Cubans represent a third. Puerto Ricans and Mexicans, more traditionally Democratic voters, make up another third, and Central and South Americans round out the group.
Meanwhile, Democrats, who after former President Clinton all but ceded the Cuban-American vote, are courting the community with renewed vigor while also using Florida as a platform to reach out to Hispanics nationwide.
The eight Democratic candidates will participate in a live forum Sunday at the University of Miami sponsored by the Spanish-language Univision Network. The televised forum, with the candidates' answers translated simultaneously from English to Spanish, is aimed at the nation's more than 34 million Hispanics, underscoring the candidates' recognition of this demographic shift.
On the Republican side, only John McCain agreed to attend Univision's now-canceled GOP forum. His rivals cited scheduling conflicts, though Univision executives say they are in talks with the candidates to reschedule the event.
The Univision forum is the third nationally televised Hispanic event in Florida in the last six months that the top Democratic candidates have attended, and the third that major Republican candidates have skipped.
Instead, Republicans are focused on their core Florida constituencies - religious conservatives, retired and active military members and Miami Cubans. They haven't focused as much on Orlando's Puerto Ricans, the state's Mexican-Americans or other Hispanics.




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 09:00 on September 7th, 2007
gmony714, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 19:34 on September 7th, 2007
gmony714, I like this story. It's good stuff. Them there Latinos are just confusing everybody, nothing is a sure thing.