get by and win with a smaller percentage turnout. let me ask you this. i ve had people ask me this question, being a floridians, and i don t have a good answer, maybe i don t have a politically correct answer. no one does. yeah, and that is how is it that both parties here it is one of the most competitive states, if not the most competitive state in the union, and yet the campaign benches of potential candidates seem to be as thin as ever on both sides of the aisle, that there s just a lot of wounded candidates, democrats and republicans. but, also, not too many rising stars. why is that? i think the republicans have a greater bench, because they ve been in power longer and they ve had an ability to have more politicians and more statewide offices. adam putnam, pam bondy, and a.g. means almost governor, but the party to capitalize on the voter registration edge has been certainly if you re a democrat pretty embarrassing. the best hope for governor, to win the governor s ra
that million voter registration edge is good, we built it up, people say that makes us a blue state. in 2010 republicans swept virtually ever office on the ballot. we re a purple state. the president has good issues to go after the conservative, white democrats particularly the southwest who have tended to vote republican over the last few years. the jobs bill, construction workers, steel workers, the jobs bill will put them back to work. nothing the republicans offering will. so i think the president s going after those voters and if he gets them, if he convinces them he s got the best answers, it will be a comfortable victory. john, a comfortable vick rip the president won pennsylvania 11 points last time around. you still have residual voters, the white voters, blue collar voters who tended to support hillary clinton in the primary back four years ago. are those the people out in western pennsylvania, central