Uncertainty on the I-4: Puerto Rican voters eye hard choice
KISSIMMEE, Fla. — Heriberto Ferrer doesn’t want to vote for Donald Trump — but he says he can’t rule it out, his open-mindedness forced by his low opinion of Hillary Clinton.
“I don’t want Trump to win. Period,” he tells a Republican volunteer standing in his doorway on a recent Saturday morning. What about Clinton? “Hillary no sirve,” he says in his native Spanish, a phrase roughly translated as “Hillary is useless.”
The 56-year-old construction worker is among many Puerto Ricans living in this working-class neighbourhood just south of Orlando along central Florida’s Interstate-4 corridor — perhaps the most valuable political real estate in the nation.
The recent explosion in Central Florida’s Puerto Rican population should have benefited Clinton, whose party has been the overwhelming preference of Hispanic Americans in Florida and across the nation in recent elections. An estimated 1,000 Puerto Rican families are moving to Florida from the U.S. territory each month. Unlike other immigrant groups, they arrive as American citizens and become eligible to vote almost immediately in the nation’s premiere battleground state.
