Charlie Crist: Florida Democrats pick challenger to Ron DeSantis
Crist #Crist
By Jude SheerinBBC, Washington
Image caption,
Charlie Crist is a former Republican before he switched parties in 2012
Democratic voters have picked congressman Charlie Crist to take on Florida’s Republican Governor Ron DeSantis in the midterm elections.
Mr Crist routed the state’s agriculture commissioner, Nikki Fried, in the race to be the party’s standard-bearer in November’s vote.
Democrats are eager to eclipse rising star Mr DeSantis amid expectations he will run for the White House in 2024.
Voters in New York and Oklahoma also picked candidates on Tuesday.
It was the last big election day before the autumn midterms, which will determine control of Congress for the final two years of Democratic President Joe Biden’s term.
In New York, Democrats chose nominees who will also help determine the direction of their party in November, including in a cut-throat fight between two of the party’s most powerful congressional committee chiefs.
Mr Crist is currently trailing Mr DeSantis in Florida, a crucial swing state in presidential elections that has grown steadily more Republican ruby red during the governor’s tenure.
Mr DeSantis leads Mr Crist by several percentage points, according to opinion polls, in a race that the Republican incumbent is hotly tipped to use as a launchpad for a White House campaign.
Mr Crist was formerly a Republican who served a single term as the state’s governor before switching parties in 2012.
Image source, Getty Images Image caption,
Ron DeSantis has been hailed as a conservative rockstar
“Tonight, the people of Florida clearly sent a message: they want a governor who cares about them and solves real problems, preserves our freedom, not a bully who divides us and takes our freedom away,” Mr Crist declared in reference to Mr DeSantis.
At his victory party in a Miami-area ballroom, Mr DeSantis hit back: “We will never ever surrender to the woke agenda. Florida is a state where woke goes to die.”
The Republican won his first election in 2018 by less than half a percentage point, and has since become one of the most admired governors in the country among the party faithful.
With his fierce opposition to mask and vaccine mandates during the coronavirus pandemic and his refusal to back down on culture war flashpoints from abortion to education, the conservative rockstar is widely seen by Republicans as a natural successor to former President Donald Trump.
The party is kicking off at Ron DeSantis’ headquarters in Hialeah, Florida.
That it would be a victory party was preordained – the incumbent governor was running unopposed for the Republican nomination in November. Instead, the event is giving his fellow politicians a chance to make their pitch to conservative donors and supporters.
“The battle starts tonight,” said congressman Mario Diaz-Balart, pledging that Republicans would send Democrats in the House and Senate “packing” in the midterms.
While the demographics of the Republican coalition in recent elections have been overwhelmingly white, the crowd of supporters at an art centre here in Hialeah – a predominantly Cuban community near Miami – is diverse. Many fled from communist dictatorships, and have taken their distrust of “socialism” and the political left with them to their new home.
Brian Tam and Liem Bui immigrated from Vietnam and eventually settled in Florida. They say they’re dedicated DeSantis supporters who would love to see him run for president one day, although Mr Tam adds that he’d prefer Mr Trump run again – with Mr DeSantis as his vice-president.
Mr DeSantis and Mr Trump have been circling each other warily ahead of the looming battle to see who will be crowned as the Republican nominee for the White House race of 2024.
On Tuesday, Florida Democratic voters also chose Val Demings, a congresswoman and former Orlando police chief, to take on Republican Senator Marco Rubio, a former presidential hopeful, in November.
Most opinion polls show Mr Rubio with a firm lead so far. Like Mr DeSantis, he ran unopposed in his primary.
Florida Republican congressman and Trump loyalist Matt Gaetz also cruised to victory on Tuesday, despite facing a federal sex-trafficking investigation.
Democrats have been on the defensive up until now in this election season, with their party’s prospects complicated by President Biden’s low approval ratings, inflation and historical political gravity.
Republicans still sound optimistic that they can wrest control of the US House of Representatives this autumn.
But their hopes of winning the Senate have been tempered as Trump-endorsed candidates fight to gain traction in Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona and Ohio.
Liberal anger over the Supreme Court’s decision in June to roll back abortion rights may also prove a potent weapon for Democrats to deflect Republican attacks on the economy.
New York saw several marquee primary contests on Tuesday.
Jerry Nadler beat fellow Democratic party heavyweight Carolyn Maloney in a titanic duel for a newly merged district in Manhattan.
Incumbent congressman Sean Patrick Maloney comfortably fended off left-wing challenger Alessandra Biaggi in suburban New York.
And partial results showed Democrat Pat Ryan ahead of Republican Marc Molinaro in a special election for an open US House seat that could prove a bellwether for the midterms.
In Oklahoma, meanwhile, Trump-endorsed congressman Markwayne Mullin defeated the former speaker of the state legislature in a Republican primary to fill the seat of the state’s retiring US senator.