With October voter registration data posted Friday on the Florida Division of Elections website, unofficial announcements made three weeks ago at last were confirmed by public, official counts: There now are more registered Republicans than registered Democrats in Florida, for the first time ever.

But the voter registration numbers posted through October don't show any big voter registration push by the Republican Party of Florida.

Instead, they show the RPOF was not hit as hard by voter losses as the Florida Democratic Party.

That is, Republicans won the latest count by having their registered voters rolls shrink less since last year.

According to the latest counts issued Friday by the Secretary of State's Division of Elections, on Oct. 31 there were 5,118,357 registered Republicans and 5,114,039 registered Democrats. That gives the RPOF 4,318 more voters than the FDP.

Never before have Republicans outnumbered Democrats in Florida.

Just last year, in the 2020 General Election, Democrats held a 134,242 voter advantage. A few years ago, Democrats' advantage was more than a half million.

Voter registration rolls tend to stay flat or decline a bit in the year following a presidential election. In the past year, however, Florida's electorate rolls declined a lot.

Florida Democrats cried foul three weeks ago, saying the Republican-controlled Secretary of State's Office was purging inactive voters from the rolls in unfair ways that trimmed more Democrats than Republicans. Democrats maintain they still have an edge of 79,000 of eligible voters through the end of October, including those who were recently purged as "inactive."

Democrats provided analysis of deactivated voters that showed considerably more Democrats than Republicans removed.

"What we're showing in our analysis is that Republicans are playing accounting shell games with the voting numbers. They're moving a disproportionate amount of Democrats to inactive, compared to Republicans," said FDP spokesman Jose Parra. "And this is them moving to generate a press release to make them look good. But this is not in any way, shape or form them having a massive voter registration effort."

In the past year, neither major party ought to boast about voter registration efforts. They both lost voters, according to the latest data.

Since the 2020 General Election, Florida has lost a net of 142,414 voters. That was how much the state's total voter registration decreased from the 14,441,869 voters who were eligible to vote in 2020, according to Division of Elections data.

The past year has shown some gains of independent voters and among some minor parties. Meanwhile, both major parties lost voters over the past year. Democrats lost far more, according to the division's reports.

Democrats lost 189,215 registered voters in Florida since the 2020 General Election, when there had been 5,303,254 registered Democrats. Republicans' voter registration rolls dropped by 50,655, from the 5,169,012 Republicans who'd been registered to vote in the 2020 General Election.

Republicans made their greatest gains — or, more accurately, Democrats suffered their worst losses — in South Florida. Democrats lost 37,723 voters in Miami-Dade County in a year. Republicans only lost 3,592 there. Consequently Republicans improved their standing versus their rivals by 34,131 voters.

Similarly, Democrats lost 26,265 votes in a year in Palm Beach County, while Republicans lost 12,291 there. So Republicans netted a 13,974 voters compared to Democrats as a result.

Republicans also improved their standing by thousands over Democrats by losing fewer voters in Hillsborough, Leon, Pinellas, Polk, Brevard, Broward, and Pasco counties.

Republicans had actual voter registration gains in Lee, Sarasota, Collier, Volusia, Manatee, Marion, Charlotte, Sumter, Hernando, St. Johns, Citrus, St. Lucie, and Lake counties among others. In each of those, Republicans pulled away from Democrats by at least 2,000 net voters.

The only places that Democrats outdid Republicans — or more accurately Republicans lost more voters than Democrats — were in Alachua, Escambia, Seminole, Clay, Santa Rosa, and Okaloosa counties.

Since the 2020 General Election, Democrats actually increased their voter registration totals in only three of Florida's 67 counties: Sarasota, Volusia, and Sumter. But Republicans added thousands more voters than Democrats did in each of those counties.

Republicans increased their voter registration totals in 36 counties since the 2020 General Election.