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Jacksonville area may prove key to Florida victory

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The Democratic campaign was more competitive in 2008 in part because it built excitement in Duval County's large black community with voter registration drives and get-out-the-vote efforts to support the nation's first black presidential candidate on a major party ticket.

Duval County has more than 516,000 registered voters out of a total population of about 871,000. The percentage of black residents, 29.8, is nearly double the statewide figure. The campaign will have to keep the same enthusiasm among black voters to keep Duval competitive.

Just as Democrats are spending money on advertising, voter turnout and events – Obama spoke at a Jacksonville rally in July and Michelle Obama has visited the area twice – Republicans are trying to put more resources toward restoring the overwhelming turnout they've enjoyed for almost a generation.

"We have to drive up the score here so that we can make sure that we make up ground in other areas," Republican National Chairman Reince Priebus said in Jacksonville in August. "We're going to have a plan in this county to not just win, but to try to win as big as possible. Winning here isn't enough. You have to do great in places you're strong."

The Romney campaign didn't wait for the former Massachusetts governor to secure the nomination to set up a presence in the city. Unlike McCain, who was far outspent, they're matching the huge resources Obama is pumping into the area, said Brett Doster, a Florida-based political consultant who is advising the campaign and ran George W. Bush's 2004 Florida campaign.

Along with a stronger ground game – Doster says it's bigger and better organized than when Bush carried Duval County by 61,000 votes – the Romney campaign believes it will be able to win back Republicans who supported Obama.

"We were at a unique time in history. People were frustrated," Doster said. "I do not think they're going to put their faith back in him again."

That's the case with Lynn Fernandez, a shoe repair shop owner and a Republican who voted for Obama four years ago. Now she's voting for Romney. While she blamed Congress for lack of progress in Washington, she's taking it out on the president and hoping, not so optimistically, that a change can break Washington gridlock.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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