And they’re pissed,
spelling trouble for Republicans in Florida and elsewhere.
Maybe they ran out of paper towels. |
Hurricanes Irma and Harvey devastated Florida and Texas,
respectively, but the government’s response was largely praised.
Supplies and personnel
were slow to reach the island. Volunteers who did arrive found no organized relief effort on the ground
in motion and stood around for days with nothing to do.
Today, nearly two months since Maria made landfall, most of the
island remains without power, and authorities continue to struggle to bring clean water
and other basic services back online.
Despite the President’s
insistence everything had gone smoothly – even famously giving himself a “10 out of 10” – it was
clear to anyone willing to look that the government treated Puerto Ricans
suffering from the devastation of Hurricane Maria with much less urgency,
energy and care than Floridians and Texans following Irma and Harvey.
Trump’s blame-gaming, intransigence, and refusal to admit any
shortcomings in the face of overwhelming evidence only exacerbated the
situation.
Both Texas and Florida are critical to any Republican candidates
chances in a presidential election.
Together, they accounted for 67 of Trump’s 306 electoral votes
in 2016.
Florida on its own is an
important swing state coveted by both parties. It’s 29 electoral votes
often prove decisive in close elections, as they did in the controversial 2000 presidential election that
saw George Bush declared the winner weeks later after numerous recounts and
lawsuits.
Puerto Rico, meanwhile,
has zero electoral votes.
The island is a territory, not a state, and therefore has no
electoral votes in a general election.
It’s inhabitants are American citizens, however, and do
possess the right to vote in national elections – if they set up residence in
other states.
Trump, therefore, could afford to drop the ball in Puerto Rico
in a way he never could in Florida or Texas because the political consequences
were minimal. Or he thought.
According to a shocking report by the Miami Herald, because of
the failure of Trump’s relief and recovery effort in Puerto Rico, at least
156,000 of the island’s residents have relocated to Florida so far.
With many arriving carrying grudges, the exodus has the
potential to cause a tectonic shift underneath the national electoral map.
“Politically, this is more
than a big deal — it’s transformational,” Fernand Amandi of the Bendixen &
Amandi polling agency told the Herald.
Trump only won Florida by 112,000 votes. If even just 2/3
of these Puerto Rican transplants fleeing the devastation caused by Hurricane
Maria vote for the Democratic candidate in the 2020 election, Trump’s presidency
will be over.
It would be the sweetest
of all political ironies if our forgotten brothers and sisters in Puerto Rico
cast the decisive votes.