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Jamaicans in Florida energized by Sen. Harris on 2020 ticket

Adriana Gomez Licon/Associated Press | 10/15/2020, 6 p.m.
President Trump and Joe Biden are entering the final stretch of the campaign in a fierce battle for Latino voters ...
Sen. Harris

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - President Trump and Joe Biden are entering the final stretch of the campaign in a fierce battle for Latino voters who could sway the results in Florida and determine who wins the White House.

But in Florida, an ultimate battleground state where nearly 10 million voters participate in elections often decided by a mere percentage point, other communities could suddenly become critical.

That’s where the booming Black Caribbean community centered in Broward County comes in. Voters in this Democratic stronghold are eager to defeat President Trump, but say they are even more energized to turn out in support of U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris of California, Mr. Biden’s vice presidential running mate whose father is Jamaican.

“The fact she has a lineage means you are going to see a lot of Jamaicans voting even if they were not doing so before,” said Antoinette Henry, director of corporate relations at the Dutch Pot Jamaican Restaurant, a company with several locations in South Florida. “Part of Jamaica will be in the White House.”

Broward County, home to Fort Lauderdale, is the county with the most Jamaicans in the United States. Florida has more than 974,000 people of West Indian ancestry—a Caribbean category that excludes Hispanic nationalities such as Cuban. That total includes more than 300,000 Jamaicans and more than 530,000 Haitians, according to census figures.

A conservative estimate for the number of Jamaican voters in Florida stands at 91,000, because many may not report Jamaica as their country of origin. Haitian voters are estimated at about 115,000.

“These naturalized citizens vote. They turn out,” said Dan Smith, a University of Florida political science professor. “We also know that there is a lot of mobilization that goes on in these communities.”

Laura Uribe, who is getting her doctorate in political science at the University of California, San Diego,

has closely studied five immigrant groups in Broward County. She said 77 percent of voters of Jamaican origin are Democrats, whereas 3 percent are Republican and 20 percent have no party affiliation. In the last presidential election, 78 percent of Jamaican-American voters turned out to vote, while the total turnout was about 66 percent.

Between October 2016 and September 2018, more Jamaicans became naturalized U.S. citizens than did Venezuelans, a group pursued by the GOP, according to the most recently available data from the federal Department of Homeland Security.

“I can tell you Kamala is on the tongue of everyone. They are talking about what must be done to make sure we deliver for the team of Biden and Sen. Harris,” said Jamaican-born Hazelle Rogers, the mayor of Lauderdale Lakes who, in 1996, became Florida’s first Jamaican to be elected to office. “We are so proud, and we know that we must deliver.”

Sen. Harris, whose mother was an immigrant from India, appeared last month on a Caribbean weekly radio show that airs in South Florida. She was interviewed by a Jamaican American lawyer with political aspirations and told him that her favorite Jamaican dish was oxtail stew. When asked about songs on her playlist, she said she had “every Bob Marley song that he ever sung.”

Locals also took note that Sen. Harris chose Karine Jean-Pierre, a Black woman born in Martinique to Haitian parents, as her chief of staff and that Mr. Biden’s campaign senior adviser for Florida is Karen Andre, a first-generation Haitian American born in New York and raised in Florida.

The campaign has released a TV ad on Haitian creole stations and print ads for Caribbean publications promoting Mr. Biden’s relief efforts to aid Black-owned businesses. A new ad made for English-language Caribbean radio stations refers to Sen. Harris as “our Jamaican sister.”

During a campaign stop in Florida, Sen. Harris paid a quick visit to a Venezuelan restaurant and then headed to Florida Memorial University, a historically Black university in Miami Gardens, where she met with Black leaders, including some with Bahamian ancestry such as U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson and Gordon Eric Knowles, chief executive officer of the Miami- Dade Chamber of Commerce.

Shawn Myers, a voter in Broward County who is Jamaican American, said he would vote for Mr. Biden and Sen. Harris, just to unseat President Trump.

“We need something better,” Mr. Myers said. “With her I feel like we are getting somewhere. She is strict, so she knows what she is doing.”

Florida Rep. Anika Omphroy, born to Jamaican parents, said she and her team are encouraging people to vote by mail and early on, especially those who vote at precincts that may now be closed due to the coronavirus.

Rep. Omphroy said she identifies with Sen. Harris as a first-generation daughter of immigrants, and she also thinks the candidate is easy to like.

“She is a wife, a stepmom, an auntie, she can cook, she can dance. She has a good sense of humor and appeals to working-class people, to the middle class, as well as corporate men and women,” Rep. Omphroy said. “She is able to relate to everyone.”