Florida
Related: About this forumCould anti-immigration law backfire on DeSantis and turn Florida blue again? - Opinion
https://news.yahoo.com/could-anti-immigration-law-backfire-132341659.htmlThirty years ago, California was a reliably red state governed by Pete Wilson, one of the countrys most prominent conservatives of the time. Many saw Wilson as a future president, and as Wilson looked to burnish his conservative credentials for a national run, he threw his weight behind the now-infamous Proposition 187, one of the most egregiously anti-Latino and anti-immigration laws in U.S. history.
The policy aim of Proposition 187 barred undocumented immigrants from receiving government services, but its practical impact was that Latino Americans all across California became profiled, harassed and abused. Latinos felt less safe in their own communities and deeply disrespected by the Republican Party.
So they voted. The mobilization of Latino voters to the polls in the aftermath of Proposition 187 was largely responsible for turning California the nations biggest electoral prize from red to reliably blue.
With that history in mind, Gov. Ron DeSantis highly calculated decision to champion and sign the similarly anti-immigrant SB 1718 into law may be seen years from now as one of the great political blunders of our time.
Similar to Proposition 187, SB 1718 requires hospitals to collect data on citizenship, which could discourage immigrants from accessing vital community resources like hospital emergency rooms. It gives law enforcement (and, lets face it, racist vigilantes) permission to harass anyone they deem to be an immigrant.
Deep State Witch
(11,248 posts)Because the Cuban vote is crucial in Miami and other places.
carpetbagger
(4,774 posts)And that community is not very supportive of newer Cuban immigrants coming. I remember seeing a recent poll where support for traditional (i.e. loose) Cuban immigration policies was supported by less than a 10 percent majority.
barbaraann
(9,287 posts)It seems to me that there will be a similar blue shift in Florida once the effects of the anti-immigration laws become clear, but I have never lived in Florida.
carpetbagger
(4,774 posts)The Latino demographics are dissimilar, with Mexican-Floridians being only 1/7 of Latinos in Florida.
As to the blue shift in California, that was fueled by its own power, probably helped by 187 backlash but going on independently. There was nothing in the 1990s or since that was working in favor of the forces of guns, race, and religion that led to the current GOP coalition.
Florida is a much more Southern state, so the race/gun/religion thing has tilted it towards its neighboring states, with the nails in the coffin being provided by retiring white northerners (who are as anti-immigrant as anyone in this country) replacing the last of the WWII generation that elected progressive Floridians from the 70s to the 90s.
barbaraann
(9,287 posts)I lived in California during the waning GOP years but have only visited Florida, so I'm not too informed about that state.