Good morning and happy Friday. Throughout the weekend, the national political world will be watching Monday’s Iowa caucuses. But there’s a special election coming in Central Florida on Tuesday that the state's Democrats and Republicans are laser-focused on. The contest is for state House District 35, which is in both Orange and Osceola Counties. The seat is open because Gov. Ron DeSantis tapped the former lawmaker, GOP Rep. Fred Hawkins, to be president of South Florida State College. Democrats see flipping this seat as a first step in their goal to undo the Republican supermajority in the lower chamber, per a memo from the Florida House Democratic Campaign Committee viewed by Playbook. President Joe Biden won the district in 2020. Their candidate is veteran Tom Keen, a manager at Collins Aerospace. Democrats’ polling shows the most “potent” messages heading into the election are abortion rights and Florida’s property insurance crisis — and the political committee said in its memo that it was “prepared to spend upwards of seven figures” in the race. Republicans nominated Erika Booth, a conservative member of the Osceola County School Board. She raised $305,000 for the race, thanks in large part to contributions GOP organizations and lawmakers, per Silas Morgan of Fresh Take Florida. The total far exceeds Keen’s $115,386 raised. Erin Huntley, Orange County GOP chair, told Playbook that during door knocking leading up to the race, voters told her their top concerns were inflation, border security and parental involvement in schools. When it comes to abortion, she said, it’s not as top of mind for Republican voters but more for Independents. “They are definitely working really hard,” she said of Democrats. “They are definitely fighting for it.” By Thursday afternoon, early voting results showed Democrats cast 43 percent of ballots compared to 40 percent from registered Republicans, per Fresh Take Florida. Samuel Vilchez Santiago, chair for Orange County Democrats, said voters have also been asking grassroots supporters about the governor’s fight with Walt Disney World and how the company pulled out of a $1 billion office space that was slated to add 2,000 jobs in Florida. “Some residents are concerned about the precedent it sets for governmental intervention in private businesses,” Keen said. “Many folks have told me they are tired of the culture wars that waste taxpayer money.” But Booth said voters never mention the Disney fight to her. Property insurance problems have resonated, however. Booth told Playbook she was “campaigning on a platform of holding big insurance companies accountable until they lower premiums and stop denying rightful claims.” Whoever wins on Tuesday victor will still have to compete again in November 2024 — when it looks like Donald Trump and Biden will lead the top of the ticket and probably shake up the race. In 2022, a DeSantis blowout helped carry Hawkins to a 10-point victory. — WHERE'S RON? Gov. DeSantis has events in Iowa today but there’s a strong chance the blizzard will get in the way. Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for Playbook? Get in touch at: kleonard@politico.com Programming Note: We’ll be off this Monday for Martin Luther King Jr. Day but will be back in your inboxes on Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024. |