Since everyone likes to slam Florida I think we should look at blue states that did worse than Florida on a per capital rate.
Arizona
New Jersey
Michigan
Georgia
New Mexico
New York
Pennsylvania
Nevada
First, using the method I'm talking about here (excess deaths, rather than just counting how many people the state feels like designating as having died of COVID), the only blue states that did worse than FL are NM, NV, CA, CO, and MI.
Second, Florida, Hawaii, Nevada, and maybe a few others are potentially misleading cases, because of the extreme role of tourism in those states. Consider:
https://www.clickorlando.com/news/florida/2021/02/16/florida-tourism-numbers-lowest-since-2010/
So, Florida had 86.714 million visitors to the state in 2020, versus 131.420 in 2019. Pre-pandemic, the average stay was about 5.0 days per visitor (weighted average for international plus domestic visitors).
https://s3.amazonaws.com/media.clov...lorida_Visitor_Study_-_Digital_Version_1_.pdf
So, in 2019, that would have been about about 657.1 million person-days of visits, versus 433.57 million in 2019. So, that's a difference of 223.53 million person-days, between the two years. Divide by 365, and you realize that's equivalent to the average population of the state at any given moment being 612,000 lower in 2020 than 2019, just from the hit tourism took. For a state with a population of 21.5 million at the time, that means the population shrunk by roughly 3% that year (not in terms of official residents, but in terms of actual average number of people in the state at any moment, which would be the relevant factor for mortality).
So, for example, if a state would ordinarily have had a population of 1 million, with 10,000 of them dying in a year, and instead 11,800 of them died, we'd at first see that as 18% excess mortality (up from 1% mortality to 1.18%). But what if the population also went down by 3%? Then it's like having almost 22% excess mortality. That is, previously mortality was 1% (10k/1M) and now it's about 1.216% (11,800/970k).
So, the huge dip in tourism, in 2020, would be expected, other things being equal, to result in Florida having significantly fewer deaths (e.g., fewer tourists dropping dead of heart attacks at the buffet, drowning at the pool, getting crushed in car accidents, and so on).
Hawaii and Nevada would have experienced the same thing, in terms of losing a lot more incoming people than outgoing people, when tourism was hit. A few others may also make the list, but most other states would go the other way since they ordinarily have more of their residents leave for tourism than they have outsiders arrive. All told, my "back of the napkin math," accounting both for 2020, with low tourism, and 2021, with thing returning to normal, tells me Florida's excess death rate accounting for tourism, as actually about two points higher than the graph suggests. Hawaii's is about four-points higher, since it's even more tourism-dependent. So, on my graph, if we did adjusted numbers, Hawaii would be at 7 (making it second best, rather than best), and Florida would be around 20.... still doing better than NM, and NV, among blue states, but maybe no others.