Miami-Dade, a historically Democratic-leaning county, has shifted rightward in the past few election cycles. That trend appears likely to continue through Election Day, according to new polling data that shows Gov. Ron DeSantis enjoying much more support there than his progressive challenger.
South Florida consulting firm Public Communications Group surveyed 6,656 registered Miami-Dade voters online in English and Spanish Oct. 12-21. The survey had a 2-percentage-point margin of error.
Its finding: DeSantis may finally break through and win as a Republican gubernatorial candidate in Miami-Dade for the first time in two decades. And even if he doesn't, Democratic candidate Charlie Crist doesn't carry the support necessary to reestablish the county as a Democratic stronghold.
"(The) data tells a clear story — with Miami-Dade trending heavily towards Ron DeSantis, the only thing that might give Charlie Crist a chance of becoming Governor would be DeSantis aggressively campaigning for him over the next two weeks. Translation: It's over. And it's going to be ugly," said Democratic consultant Evan Ross, the firm's CEO and a supporter of the gubernatorial campaign of Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, who lost to Crist in the Aug. 23 Primary Election.
The firm separated results by party affiliation. The largest group represented, Republicans, comprised 2,798 respondents. Democrats followed with 2,111 respondents, while independent, no-party respondents rounded the survey out with 1,747 people polled.
Enthusiasm for DeSantis among Republicans is far higher than among Democrats for Crist, pollsters found. The incumbent Governor holds 93% favorability among Miami-Dade voters in his party, with just 5.5% of GOP members planning to cast ballots for someone else.
Miami-Dade Republicans overwhelmingly said they would vote for their incumbent candidate for Governor. Image via Public Communications Group.
On the Democratic side, while opinions of DeSantis are very negative — more than 88% of Democrats view him unfavorably — just 57% of Democrats said they like Crist and 35% said they were neutral or had no opinion of him.
Almost 15% of Democrats in Miami-Dade said they plan to vote for someone other than Crist.
"Crist's lack of popularity among voters of his own party is devastating," Ross said.
Far fewer Democrats expressed strong support for Crist, with just 57% viewing him favorably and more than 35% who either held a neutral opinion of him or none at all. Image via Public Communications Group.
Meanwhile, enthusiasm is low for both candidates among independents. DeSantis had a net favorability rating of -9, with 39% of independent voters in the county approving of him compared to 48.5% who disapprove.
Crist's favorability among independents was worse. Just 22.5% said they like him compared to 35% who didn't — a net favorability of -12.5%.
The incumbent Governor is significantly more polarizing among potential swing voters. While a whopping 42.5% of independents hold either a neutral opinion or no opinion of Crist, just 12% could say the same of DeSantis.
Sixteen percent of independents said they wouldn't vote for either candidate.
DeSantis held a 2.6-percentage-point advantage among independent voters, just outside the poll's margin of error. Image via Public Communications Group.
Of the Republicans who responded to the poll, 47% were 55 or older, 51% were of Cuban descent and 27% identified as non-Cuban Hispanic or Latino. And of the who 75% said they were Christian, two-thirds were Catholic. Other than 3.5% of Republican respondents who said they were Jewish, no other religious group had 1% or greater representation in the poll.
Democrats were similarly represented age-wise, with 46% of respondents being 55 or older. Twenty-eight percent said they were non-Cuban Hispanic or Latino compared to 21% of Cuban descent, 25% non-Hispanic White and 20% Black or African American.
While a majority of Democratic respondents cited Christianity as their faith — including 30% who said they are Catholic and 24.5% who said they belonged to another form of Christian faith — 33% of Democrats polled said they were irreligious. Roughly 5.6% said they were Jewish, while 6.6% said they adhered to another faith.
Independent voters skewed younger, with just 42.5% aged 55 or older. Thirty-six percent were non-Cuban Hispanic or Latino, 27% were of Cuban descent, 21.6% were non-Hispanic White, 7.5% were Black or African American and 1.2% were Asian.
In terms of religion, 35% were Catholic, while 22% said they believed in another form of Christianity. Thirty-one percent were irreligious, while 3.5% were Jewish and nearly 9% held other religious beliefs.
Early voting in Miami-Dade is now underway. Election Day is Nov. 8.
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