Why Democrats Are Suddenly Excited About Florida – TIME
This article is part of The D.C. Brief, TIMEs politics newsletter. Sign up here to get stories like this sent to your inbox.
The signage surrounding Vice President Kamala Harris in Jacksonville, Fla. last week was not exactly subtle: Reproductive Freedom and Trust Women framed the lone woman ever to be within a heartbeat of the presidency, as she laid the blame for Floridas ban on abortion after six weeks at the foot of former President Donald Trump on the very day it took effect. As a matter of political stagecraft, it was about as perfect as one could have scripted.
Donald Trump is the architect, Harris said on May 1, decrying the 4 million women who woke up that morning with fewer reproductive rights. He brags about it.
As a political matter, Harris is not wrong. Trump nominated three of the U.S. Supreme Court justices who made the end of Roe v. Wade possible, which in turn allowed Florida lawmakers to outlaw abortions in the state after six weeks. And five of the seven justices on the Florida court that allowed the new law to go into effect were named by Governor Ron DeSantis, who rose to power with Trumps blessing.
To Bidens campaign, the list of battleground states is longer than the measly seven that have thus far drawn the most attention. Steamy Florida, where Republicans hold every statewide office, has the potential to be a sexy eighth option. Hence: Harris visit last week, Bidens a week before, and a handful of new campaign hires to mind the state day to day.
Floridas overreach on reproductive rights may indeed put it in play this cycle, but the Sunshine State remains Trumps to lose. Much more likely is that we may now have an unexpectedly competitive race between GOP Sen. Rick Scott and his Democratic challenger, former Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell.
Its a race that most strategists had relegated to the second tier until very recently. Along with the motivating power of Floridas six-week ban and a November ballot measure that will give voters the chance to undo it, Democratic Senator Joe Manchins decision to forgo a re-election bid in West Virginia has freed up valuable resourcesnot just from the Democratic Partys official Senate campaign arm but also the abortion rights groups who, to this point, have been undefeated when the question of access is put directly to voters.
While the White House race dominates in Florida in terms of sizzle, the Senate race may have greater consequences for the next few years. Biden might not need Florida if he can hold steady or even make his push into North Carolina. Even so, Democrats need to pick up at least one Republican-held seat if they have any chance of maintaining control of the Senate. Frankly, West Virginia is gone for a generation given Manchins retirement. That leaves the party with only two pick-up optionsFlorida and Texas, and the latter is at the moment only marginally less of a pipe dream. And that all assumes that Democrats can even hold their seats in places like Montana, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.
In other words, Democrats need every break they can get, which is why Mucarsel-Powell is the quiet rockstar that the party is trying to promote without flagging her as a target for the right.
What I think is happening is they are realizing the shift on the ground and the shift in Florida, Mucarsel-Powell tells TIME during a visit to our Washington Bureau.
To be clear, Scott remains the frontrunner. The few non-partisan polls in the state show him with a double-digit advantage. And while not exactly adored by his constituents, he has managed to eke out win after win over more than a decade. Hes never won any of his general-election races by more than two percentage points. (Usually less, and once via recount.) This is the first time he will be on the ballot when hes not the top of the ticket; that crown this year belongs to Trump, and theres no telling how the ex-President will dictate or derail news coverage over the next six months.
And Scotts time in Washington has been anything but smooth. In early 2022, he released a campaign strategy memo that drew the open scorn of some members and the ire of Senate Leadership, specifically its call to sunset popular social programs like Social Security and Medicare. (He has since retreated.) He tried and failed to unseat Senate Leader Mitch McConnell after the 2022 elections that he quarterbacked as head of the GOP Senates campaign arm.
Read more: The Least Popular Man in Washington
In a warning shot against Mucarsel-Powell, Scott has been spending about $700,000 a week on ads to promote his re-election, including one emphasizing his opposition to socialismtypically a winning message in immigrant-heavy Florida but one that even some Republicans worry may have lost clout when run against Mucarsel-Powell, whose family fled socialist Ecuador when she was a child. Mucarsel-Powell returned the salvo with a Spanish-language ad that says its freedom that Rick Scott wants to take away.
Scott may be the wet blanket of a candidate that his critics cast him as, but he knows the terrain and is a disciplined technocrat who will out-hustle his rivals. When I went to Florida in 2018 expecting to write him off, I couldnt help but to admire his workmanship as I watched him grind it out in boring roundtables and steamy town halls at shift changes. Looking to learn Spanish, he hired native-speaking personal aides to practice with him between eventsa pander at first glance but it gave him sufficient proficiency to show he was trying to understand his constituents.
Of course, his vast personal wealth provides him a huge leg up over his rivals. In his first campaign for governor, he spent $70 million of his own money to get to Tallahassee. His second campaign cost him almost $13 million. And his Senate race six years ago cost him more than $50 million.
Mucarsel-Powell has technically outraised Scott, drawing more than $7 million so far. While Scott has reported $7.7 million on his campaign filings, about $7 million is a loan from his checking account, and he has a personal fortune estimated at a quarter-billion dollars waiting at the ready.
Yet Mucarsel-Powell is poised to see a significant boost, now that courts have cleared the way for Floridians to be asked to preserve abortion rights this fall. Outside groups are readying a ton of cash to get the ballot measure to victory. Polling shows Florida in the same headspace of supporting abortion rights as Ohio and Kansas, both red states that surprised pundits when they backed abortion rights ballot issues.
But heres the hiccup: Democrats and allies will need 60% of voters to pass the ballot measure, a bar advocates cleared in California and Vermont but one that would have been fatal in Ohio, where voters backed a constitutional right to abortion with 57% support. And the wording on Floridas ballot measure is tricky and may be harder for voters to parse.
But Mucarsel-Powell only needs 50% plus one vote to win the seat, a target the ballot measure may help her reach, even if it falls short of its higher threshold.
Scotts team has been across the spectrum when it comes to abortion access in Florida. While he has said he would have preferred a 15-week ban, he nonetheless has backed the six-week one, and said he would have signed it if he had still been governor. (Florida Republicans are quick to note that, unlike total bans in other Southern states, Florida does allow abortions after six weeks for cases involving rape, incest, fetal abnormalities, or when the life of a pregnant person is at risk.)
Everyone knows that Senator Rick Scott supports the right to life. Congresswoman Debbie Mucarsel-Powell does not, says Chris Hartline, a senior adviser to the Scott campaign. Floridians agree that there should be some reasonable limits placed on abortion. Senator Scott has been very clear where he stands: No national bans, with the consensus at 15 weeks with limitations for rape, incest, and life of the mother. Congresswoman Debbie Mucarsel-Powell takes an extreme view opposing any common-sense limits on abortion."
Despite the murmurs of optimism on the Democratic side, Scott backers argue Democrats are overplaying their hand. Their strongest evidence: Floridas voter rolls no longer reflect a swing state, with registered Republicans sporting a 900,000-vote advantage, compared to a 100,000-vote deficit four years ago.
What Florida Democrats call newfound confidence, anyone with a brain calls delusion," Hartline tells TIME. "Republicans will win up and down the ballot in Florida because weve put the time and effort into registering voters and focusing on the issues that matter most to Florida families.
As recent elections have shown in spades, support for abortion rights is bipartisan. Of the roughly 1.3 million signatures submitted in the first round of filings for the ballot measure, roughly 150,000 of those Hancocks were registered Republicans.
I've been saying this for a long time because I've lived in Florida for so long: Florida is a very independent state. It's a purple state. It's a third, a third, a third, Mucarsel-Powell tells TIME.
Which is why Democrats are quietly cheering Murcasel-Powell on without too many heralds. Florida is enormously expensive, and the climb is very, very steepno matter what the polling says about 62% support for abortion in some or all cases.
Still, the fact that Florida is even in the conversation as an up-for-grabs state in 2024 is stunning. Its a sign of how much Republican overreach on abortion rights has made the landscape so much more fraught for their candidates. Democrats might have a fighting chance in Florida, even with a one-term former House member. Theyre just engaging relatively late, and with a decided cash disadvantage, given that the Republican incumbent is the richest man in the Senate.
Make sense of what matters in Washington. Sign up for the D.C. Brief newsletter.
Continued here:
Why Democrats Are Suddenly Excited About Florida - TIME
- Democrats left their base, Tommy Tuberville says - Fox News - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Jesse Watters: The Democrats should aspire to be like the Knicks - Fox News - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Bondi shifts responsibility for Epstein files release to Todd Blanche, making him Democrats next target - Politico - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Congressional Democrats argue in filing that White House ballroom construction shouldn't proceed without Congress' consent - CBS News - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- South Carolina Democrats expected to celebrate after failure of Trump-backed redistricting push - PBS - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Purplish: The Democrats and Republicans who want to be Colorados next governor - KUNC - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- New California Governor Poll Shows a Slim but Growing Chance of 2 Democrats Advancing - KQED - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Democrats running for governor say what theyll do to help struggling renters - Maine Morning Star - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Democrats feud over stock trading amid anti-corruption messaging against Trump - PBS - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Democrats flipped control of the Onondaga County Legislature in 2025. Will they keep it? - Central Current - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- While Other Democrats Battled Trump, Gretchen Whitmer Worked With Him - The New York Times - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Why are we talking about this?: Democrats are furious that the Bidens wont go away - Politico - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- A Democrats Dodge on AIPAC Points to the Partys Tensions Over Israel - The New York Times - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- A Skeptics Guide to Whether Texas Democrats Can Actually Win This Year - Texas Monthly - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- House Democrats to Introduce Bill to Block Trumps Triumphal Arch Amid Backlash Over Vanity' Projects - Time Magazine - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Opinion | Hes Entitled and Nepotistic. This Is Not What Democrats Need. - The New York Times - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- No, Democrats have not gerrymandered New England | Steve Collins - The Portland Press Herald - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Opinion | How Democrats Can Avoid the Mistakes of 2024 - The New York Times - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Did Trump just hand Texas to Democrats with his Senate pick? - The Seattle Times - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Republicans are poised to finish this years redistricting war 10 seats ahead of Democrats - CNN - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Mary Ellen Klas: Democrats are putting their faith in military veterans - TribLIVE.com - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Democrats 'selling their soul' to embrace Platner are in for rude awakening with Maine voters: GOP lawmaker - Fox News - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- California Democrats, Anxious About Wasted Votes, Are Clinging to Their Ballots - KQED - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Two Democrats Are Fighting for the Chance to Flip Californias Only Toss-Up House Race - KQED - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- This Gerrymandered California District Could Decide Control of the House. Will Democrats Blow It? - News of the United States - NOTUS - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Democrats blast Pam Bondi over Justice Department testimony - USA Today - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Meet the 8 Democrats running in Nevada's 2nd Congressional District - The Nevada Independent - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- 'You didn't try to get my vote': How Democrats lost Dearborn, and what it would take to win it back - Planet Detroit - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- For Years, Democrats Refused to Primary Him. This Year Is Different. - The New York Times - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Iowa Democrats make renewed pitch to restore first-in-the-nation caucus status - KCCI - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Trump and Democrats Get Paxton in Texas, the Senate Nominee They All Wanted - WSJ - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Mark Poloncarz hits the road to support local Democrats - - The Capitol Pressroom - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Democrats in 12th District House race sound off on the Iran war - New Jersey Monitor - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- What the Texas primary reveals about Trump, Maga and the Democrats - The Times - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Iowa Democrats advocate for first-in-the-nation caucus status in Washington - KCCI - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Michigans Gretchen Whitmer will address Kentucky Democrats at annual dinner in August - Kentucky Lantern - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Can Democrats Seize the Anti-Interventionist Vote? - New York Magazine - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- New Hampshire Democrats prepare to make case for first-in-nation primary to DNC - WMUR - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Republicans are fighting a battle for their souls Democrats already lost - JNS.org - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Opinion | How Democrats Can Win, According to This Nobel Economist - The New York Times - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Iowa Democrats traveling to D.C. to make case for restoring first-in-the-nation caucus - weareiowa.com - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Meet the Democrats vying to represent Iowas 4th Congressional District - weareiowa.com - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Iowa Democrats Threaten to Go Rogue in 2028 - News of the United States - NOTUS - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Canadians are folding on Vegas. Democrats see a royal flush. - Politico - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Democrats are already preparing Trump investigations if they retake the House - MS NOW - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Tom Kean Jr.s absence from Congress makes Democrats bullish they can flip his seat - Politico - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats dont need an autopsy to know what they did wrong - vox.com - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Partisan Mud Fight, or Focus on the Midterms? Redistricting Divides Democrats. - The New York Times - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats renew effort to prevent US military action against Cuba - Roll Call - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- More Republicans voted early in May runoff than Democrats - Spectrum News - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- The best thing Democrats can do for the climate: Stop talking about it - vox.com - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- 5 Takeaways From the Democrats Autopsy of Kamala Harriss 2024 Loss - The New York Times - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats Lead the Generic Ballot by 8 Points as Midterms Approach - Data For Progress - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats wanted answers for what went wrong in 2024. Now, there are more questions - NPR - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats clearly learned nothing from their 2024 defeat | Opinion - USA Today - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats admit why Trump beat Kamala Harris - The Times - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats outdraw GOP in Georgia primary as turnout flips from 2022 | - Capitol Beat - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- First Thing: Progressive Democrats criticize 2024 election autopsy for silence on Gaza - The Guardian - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats are racing to one region ahead of the 2028 presidential primaries - NBC News - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- A Republican Bloodbath in the Texas Senate Primary Is Giving Democrats Hope - The New Yorker - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Whats in the Democrats 2024 election autopsy report, and whats left out? - The Guardian - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Scalise: Democrats' Politics of Hatred and Division Need to Stop - Congressman Steve Scalise (.gov) - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Gaza Wasnt the Biggest Omission in the Democrats 2024 Autopsy - The New Republic - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats Move to Force Republicans on the Record on Trump Slush Fund - Congressman John Larson (.gov) - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats demand answers from Treasury secretary on Trump's IRS settlement - ABC13 Houston - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Democrats to choose Congressional nominee from field of three - Decorah Leader - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- House Democrats are scrambling to contain their Maureen Galindo problem - Axios - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- CNN's Manu Raju pushes Jeffries on realities of Democrats' loss in Virginia - CNN - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Democrats turn to state legislative races to catch up in the redistricting battle - NBC News - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- In Ambitious Session, Democrats Focused on Affordability and Addressed Must-Fix Issues Amidst Federal Attacks and a Billion Dollar Deficit - Colorado... - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Meet the Kentucky Democrats who think they can flip McConnells Senate seat - Louisville Public Media - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- California Democrats think voting late will stop a GOP sweep. They might slow down the results - CalMatters - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Wisconsin Democrats split with Gov. Tony Evers over school funding deal - WPR - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Democrats warn a third of the Congressional Black Caucus could be wiped out by redistricting wars - NBC News - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Select Committee Democrats Outline Priorities Ahead of TrumpXi Meeting in Beijing - Select Committee on the CCP - Democrats | (.gov) - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Kentucky Democrats are underdogs in the U.S. Senate race but several candidates argue they can win - Kentucky Lantern - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Key House Republican faces calls from Democrats to resign over radio interview - Axios - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Democrats abandon rollback of business tax breaks to fund family tax credit after Colorado governors veto threat - The Colorado Sun - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Live Nation: Democrats Plan Hearing on Controversial DOJ Settlement, Which Could Preview Oversight Theyll Conduct If Mid-Terms Return Them to Power -... - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Tennessee Democrats removed from House committees after redistricting protests - WBIR - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]