Biden is a corporate democrat who wants entirely private health insurance.
I think you might be having a Biden moment, Obama was also Goldman sacs puppet.
Florida has also unpredictable inverse effects of the incumbent and I think Floridians spite vote more then support vote.
Just because you have some pasty faced faggot that shares the same surname as your hero, doesn't mean Cubans vote that way. It's funny how you leftist immediately lump people into one mode of thinking/behavior due to some political/racial identity.
Perhaps you should consult something more factual. Here directly from the right-wing Nazi news source NPR.
The Latino vote is often talked about as if it's one thing, but most elections show us it's anything but. In Florida, the results aren't final, but we do know something about how Cubans voted there.
www.npr.org
FERNAND AMANDI: What we've seen over the years is an evolution. What used to be a monolithically, almost singlehanded base vote for the Republican Party has opened up in recent years where you see
more and more Cuban Americans and second-generation and third-generation U.S.-born Cuban-Americans pulling the lever for Democrats.
(proof that leftist Public school indoctrination is working)
GARCIA-NAVARRO: And that had given Democrats some hope in recent elections. But what we saw this election is, in
Miami-Dade's most Cuban precincts, Ron DeSantis won twice as many votes as the Democratic candidate Andrew Gillum - 66 percent to 33 percent. And that's leading some to say that the Cuban vote came out strongly on the right this time.
AMANDI: It sure did. And we also saw that phenomenon in pre-election polling. And you find that Puerto Ricans and non-Cuban Hispanics overwhelmingly supported the Democratic candidates in this election. It's the Cuban community that, this time around, went in stronger numbers for both the DeSantis and Rick Scott. And interestingly enough, they are the only Hispanic electorate in all of the United States that gives high marks to President Donald Trump, at least in Florida. And I think you can make a very strong case that, this time around, it could very well be in an election that's going to be probably decided by less than 60,000 votes in either case for governor and senator that the Cuban-American vote made the difference.