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There Was A “Red Wave” In One State

Francesco Abbruzzino, The Uncensored Report, LLC

 

There was most definitely a “red wave” on Tuesday.  But it was not the sort of “red wave” that most Republicans were expecting.  Instead of a national “bloodbath”, the Republican Party greatly exceeded expectations in just one state.  Florida Governor Ron DeSantis beat Charlie Crist by a whopping 19 points, and several other Republican candidates won by double digit margins as well.  Florida is now being called a “red state”, but just four years ago it was considered to be a purple state.  In fact, in 2018 DeSantis defeated Andrew Gillum by just 0.4 percentage points.  So what has changed?  And why was there a “red wave” in Florida but not in other states?

I’ll definitely answer those questions.

 

But first, let’s take a moment to appreciate the magnitude of the victory that we just witnessed in Florida.  One Florida news source actually used the term “red tsunami” to describe what just happened…

 

Landslide. Red tsunami. Bloodbath.

Call it what you will, Republicans overwhelmed Democrats in Tuesday’s elections in Florida.

 

It wasn’t just DeSantis that absolutely pulverized his opponent.  In race after race, we witnessed blowouts on a scale that we usually never see in Florida

 

On Tuesday evening, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis handily beat former Governor Charlie Crist, Attorney General incumbent Ashley Moody beat former State Attorney Aramis, Florida’s CFO winner was incumbent Jimmy Patronis, and the state’s new Agriculture Commissioner will be Wilton Simpson.

On the national front, Sen. Marco Rubio beat hometown favorite Rep. Val Demings.

All of these winners are Republicans, and all won by about a 17-20% margin.

As a result of this election, Democrats will not have a single statewide officeholder for the very first time in modern history.

 

In addition, Republicans were able to pick up three seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.

 

And voters also gave Republicans a supermajority in the Florida House of Representatives and a supermajority in the Florida Senate.

 

Now that is what I call a “red wave”.

 

But it is so important to remember that it wasn’t always this way in Florida.

In fact, Democrats came agonizingly close to winning the race for governor each of the last three times

 

Democrats had come close in 2010, 2014 and 2018, losing by narrower margins each time. DeSantis defeated Democrat Andrew Gillum by just 0.4 points after having trailed in most polls.

Obviously, something changed dramatically between 2018 and 2022 in Florida.

If there had been a national “red wave”, it would have been really easy to dismiss what just took place in Florida because similar election results would have been coming in from all over the country.

 

Needless to say, that isn’t what happened, and the media really took note of the fact that we were “only seeing this red wave in Florida”

 

“This time, the pollsters underestimated,” News 6 Political Analyst Dr. Jim Clark said. “What’s striking to me is that it looks like we’re only seeing this red wave in Florida. It doesn’t seem to be as big a sweep across the country.”

 

So what made Florida so different from other key battlegrounds?

 

It is actually very simple.

 

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