Politics & Power

If Florida’s first lady decides to run, can she hold on to slim lead for governor over Trump’s pick?

47 min · 5 de ago de 2025
Portada del episodio If Florida’s first lady decides to run, can she hold on to slim lead for governor over Trump’s pick?

Descripción

How do you feel about the issues facing Florida, Florida’s legislative leaders, and the candidates shaping the field in the upcoming gubernatorial race to replace Gov. Ron DeSantis? The UNF Public Opinion Research Lab has the pulse of voters and recently released its latest public opinion poll, which specifically focused on Republican voters in Florida. Floridians go to the polls to elect a new governor on Nov. 3, 2026. Incumbent Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis is term-limited and can’t run for a third time in a row.

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episode Democrats face harsh reality as voters change party affiliation, Dems need to change their strategy artwork

Democrats face harsh reality as voters change party affiliation, Dems need to change their strategy

The two-party system still dominates at the ballot box. And, as the 2024 election bore out, voters still chose a candidate from one of the major parties. But the new reality is that voter registration rolls show that independent and third-party registration are on the rise. In the past 25 years, the number of voters not affiliated with either the Democratic or Republican party has grown nearly 9%, according to Ballotpedia. NBC News recently did an analysis of voter registration data. Its findings proved even more interesting. It found that as of this year, 32% of registered voters across dozens of states and territories chose not to affiliate with either of the major parties. That’s up 23% from 2000. National exit polls support those numbers.

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