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Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis believes Democrats don't stand a chance in the Sunshine State going forward. This comes as reports indicate registered GOP voters now outpace Democrats by nearly 900,000.

"You're talking about a million-plus voter registration shift," DeSantis told Fox News' Maria Bartiromo, saying that older numbers indicated Republicans were behind their Democrat adversaries by nearly 300,000 registered voters in 2018.

"Part of that, I think, is a response locally where people are more likely to switch from Democrat to Republican in Florida, nonparty to Republican, than vice versa. That's been an important component of it, but I do think that migration has skewed amongst people who come to Florida, not because they want to change the policies to reflect in Illinois or California or New York, but because they appreciate how Florida has done it differently from where they're coming from."

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Welcome to Florida sign

Reports indicate that registered GOP voters in Florida outpace Democrats by nearly 900,000. (Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images/File)

Local reports have affirmed DeSantis' claims, including one report from USA Today that alluded to the state's former identity as the nation's most significant swing state, perhaps most notably for its role in the 2000 presidential matchup between George W. Bush and then-Vice President Al Gore.

"Republicans now hold the biggest advantage in voter registration either major party has held in almost four decades," the report reads, noting that the GOP reached an 851,417-voter lead as of last month – the most significant lead by either of the two major parties since Democrats' dominance in the late 1980s.

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Ron DeSantis

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (Sergio Flores/AFP via Getty Images/File)

The state's panhandle – a vibrantly red area – is suspected to further propel Republicans to victory this November, perhaps making Florida an "afterthought," as the report speculates. 

DeSantis, in an X post last Thursday, cited local outlet Florida's Voice, which compiled data indicating that Republican support has climbed even further to 889,569 as of April 4.

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Donald Trump, Joe Biden

Former President Trump and President Biden are to face off for the second time this November, but many speculate Florida will be solidly red. (Getty Images/File)

In that same amount of time, Democrats reportedly lost 1,000 voters.

"Florida is off the board. It is a Republican state," DeSantis said.

"We used to be a one-point state every election hung on: ‘How would Florida go?’ That is not true anymore, and I think that's a good thing for the party."

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