Former U.S. Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell announced she will challenge U.S. Sen. Rick Scott for his seat in the Senate.
The Miami Democrat ended months of speculation as she launched her first statewide campaign.
"My mother brought me to this country so we could live in a nation with opportunities for all and where it doesn't matter who you are, everyone has a chance to make it," said Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, an Ecuadorian American who emigrated to the U.S. as a teenager.
The Miami Democrat unseated Republican U.S. Rep. Carlos Curbelo in 2018, a couple of years before she was before being defeated by Miami-Dade Mayor and now-U. S. Rep. Carlos Giménez, a Republican. But the fact she won her seat the same year Scott narrowly won his seat in the Senate made her a sought-after candidate.
Mucarsel-Powell touted her achievements over her House tenure and in her South Florida community before her election.
"I worked in my community for more than 20 years, expanding access to economic growth and affordable health care, and in Congress, I wrote the bill to expand Medicare Advantage coverage for our seniors," she said.
The Democrat said the stakes will be higher in many ways as she aims to unseat Scott four years after he voted against certifying President Joe Biden's 2020 victory over Republican Donald Trump.
"Now, democracy is at stake," Mucarsel-Powell said. "Rick Scott is trying to raise taxes on our families; he wrote a plan to end Social Security and Medicare coverage and is trying to strip away abortion rights. Rick Scott is a fraud, and in Florida, we know it. It will take all of us working together to defeat him, but that's when we're at our best, and everywhere I go I can feel this desire for change."
As the first South American immigrant ever elected to Congress, Democrats hope to regain some ground lost to Republicans within South Florida's Hispanic community. A news release touting her announcement notes Biden tapped Mucarsel-Powell as a special adviser for the 2022 Summit of the Americas. During her time in Congress, she consistently spoke out against the communist government in Cuba and dictatorships throughout Latin America.
A launch video stresses a compelling biography.
"I'm an immigrant, a Latina, a mother," Mucarsel-Powell says in the video. "And we made history together when I became the first South American immigrant ever elected to Congress. I've already fought guys like Rick Scott and beat them. I wrote the bill to expand Medicare, not take it away because I know my mom and so many others depend on it."
The candidate's father, Guido Mucarsel Yunes, died in Ecuador, shot outside his home. Mucarsel-Powell has been a vocal voice against gun violence, and after her time in Congress joined Giffords as a senior adviser.
"I lost my own father to gun violence. That's why l fight every day to keep our children and our communities safe," she said. "And I'm not afraid to take on Rick Scott or anyone that doesn't put Florida first."
She came out swinging against the incumbent's record, asserting the Senator will undo Medicare and Social Security (a position Scott notably denied holding). The Democrat alleges that the incumbent's positions don't align with Florida's values.
"He'd strip away women's rights with a national abortion ban. He cuts taxes for himself, but he'd raise them on you," Mucarsel-Powell says of Scott in the launch video. "He wrote the plan that could take away the Social Security and Medicare you worked and paid for. And he's gotten tens of millions of dollars richer while so-called 'serving' the people."
Mucarsel-Powell enters an existing Democratic field, where former congressional candidate Phil Ehr has already launched a campaign, and former U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson has a campaign account open. But she jumped into the race a day after state House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell announced she would sit the federal race out and seek re-election to the state Legislature.
No comments:
Post a Comment