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Governor Scott Trying To Win Over Hispanic Voters

TALLAHASSEE (CBSMiami/AP) — Florida Governor Rick Scott is now making a concentrated push to improve his reputation with Hispanic voters.

Scott's latest bid to redo his image came Monday when Florida joined more than three dozen other states in the nation that offer in-state tuition rates to high school students living in the country illegally.

He has framed his support as an effort to keep the cost of college affordable for aspiring students. The tuition rate paid by those in the country illegally is about four times higher than it is for other residents. The bill also restricts the ability of most state universities to charge tuition higher than the rate set by the state Legislature.

"Signing this historic legislation today will keep tuition low, and allow all students who grew up in Florida to have the same access to affordable higher education," Scott said in a statement.

But the new law also gives Scott a way to try to win over Hispanic voters.

Democrats, who have backed the push for in-state tuition for several years only to watch it die under previous Republican administrations, have sharply criticized Scott's about face as a "deathbed conversion." Sen. Chris Smith, D-Fort Lauderdale, called Scott's decision to back the bill a "remarkable turn-around."

Florida's Hispanic community varies widely by region and political affiliation. While Cuban-Americans reside in Miami-Dade and lean Republican, many Puerto Ricans who back Democratic candidates reside in Central Florida.

When he campaigned four years ago, Scott had strong backing from tea party conservatives. He called for an Arizona-styled enforcement law and a need to "secure the borders." Just last year he vetoed a bill that would have offered temporary driver's license to some young immigrants.

But freed from the likelihood of a contested GOP primary, Scott is softening the stances he took during his first campaign.

The incumbent governor signed the college measure into law even though he had opposed the idea back in 2011. He pushed for the legislation even after many of his fellow Republicans came out firmly against it and even called it "pandering" during a divisive debate in the state Capitol this spring.

An April poll taken by a statewide business group found that 75 percent of likely Hispanic voters backed the idea. The poll of 500 voters, which had a margin of error of 4.38 percent, found strong support among both Cuban-Americans and Puerto Ricans for offering in-state tuition rates to high school graduates even if they were living in the country illegally.

House Speaker Will Weatherford, who championed the legislation even before Scott did, contended the push in the Legislature was not about a political goal of helping the governor and Republicans but about policy.

"We were righting a wrong," said Weatherford, a Wesley Chapel Republican. "I think it's a reflection of the leaders in Tallahassee who recognize there was an injustice taking place in society."

Still Scott's decision to embrace the in-state tuition law comes at the same time his re-election campaign is actively targeting Hispanic voters. The campaign launched a Spanish radio ad this week. That follows a Spanish-language ad that was aired on television in late April. Jaime Florez, the Hispanic communications director for Scott, vowed the initial buy was "only the first of many to come." Scott has a Spanish website and a Spanish communications shop.

Scott has also criticized top Democratic rival and former Gov. Charlie Crist for advocating that the United States should scrap the 52-year-old embargo with Cuba.

Annette Taddeo-Goldstein, chairwoman of the Miami-Dade Democratic Party, maintained that Hispanics won't be swayed by an "election year ploy."

"At the end of the day I don't think it's going to work because as Hispanics we remember," said Taddeo-Goldstein.

One problem for Democrats, however, is that Crist was opposed to in-state tuition for students living here illegally when he was running as a Republican. Crist now says he supports the change.

(TM and © Copyright 2014 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2014 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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