The Florida GOP is gaining ground in its long-held goal to
unseat the last statewide elected Democratic official in the state.
The responses were gathered online from 507 adults from
March 3 to March 11, 2017. The margin of error for responses is plus or minus
4.5 percentage points.
A recent poll by the Saint Leo University showed that Republican
Gov. Rick Scott is within the margin of error in a potential 2018 general
election challenge against incumbent U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, a Democrat.
The poll asked respondents whom they would support if the
November 2018 election was being that day and they were presented with a choice
between Scott and Nelson for Senate. The results were close, with Nelson’s
support at 38.7 percent compared to Scott at 34.3 percent. Nearly 17 percent
could not decide, and 10.3 percent said they want someone else.
“Rick Scott starts off as the strong favorite to win the GOP
nomination,” said Frank Orlando, political scientist and director of the Saint
Leo University Polling Institute, “but it’s important to remember that Charlie
Crist was once considered a shoe-in for the Republican nod in 2010.” Crist left
a three-way primary contest that seemed unwinnable, and ran unsuccessfully as
an independent for the seat ultimately won by Marco Rubio.
The poll also found that a bit more than half of adults in
Florida have a favorable opinion of the job performance of Scott. Respondents
were asked to indicate whether they view favorably or unfavorably, and at what
level of intensity, the work of the governor, who is now in his second
four-year term. It turns out that a combined
percentage of 55.8 percent either strongly or somewhat approve of Scott. The
combined unfavorable percentage is 39.2. Just under 5 percent were unsure.
“With the Florida economy humming along, it is no surprise
that Governor Scott is enjoying solid favorability ratings,” Orlando said.
Scott, who helped now U.S. President Donald Trump win
Florida, is the early leader among potential candidates for the Republican
nomination in the 2018 U.S. Senate race.
The poll asked Republican respondents to choose from a list
of potential U.S. Senate primary candidates for that race, imagining that the
primary was being held that day. Scott was the clear leader with 44.6 percent.
The next most popular answer was “I don’t know” at 26.3 percent.