60% RH @ 60F isn't much of a mold or rot hazard for the floor joists of the porch the way 60% RH @ 80F is. The "relative" part of "relative humidity" is "relative to TEMPERATURE". Mold and rot hazard doesn't begin in earnest until it's 70% RH @ 70F. Cool the same air down to 60F and the RH of that air becomes 99%- on the hairy edge of condensing. Heat 70F/70% RH air up to 80F and it's RH is 50%.
If you're going to vent it to the interior, use rigid foam board to insulate and the whole thing, including the floor and the underside of the porch joists, sealing the edges with 1-part spray foam. Then just leave the door open to the rest of the space. Using 2" of EPS or XPS would be best (R8-R10), but even 1" of either is probably "good enough." The rigid foam is vapor-retardent, but at least somewhat vapor permeable. It'll slow the rate of moisture migration from the walls/slab into the space, and from the space to the underside of the porch joists, and it'll be warmer.
If that's too pricey a proposition, use 6-mil poly stapled to the foundation sill to vapor-seal it from the ground moisture. Use duct mastic to seal the edges and seams (overlap sheets by a foot or so). Then leave it unvented, with the access door closed, and monitor the the RH in that space. Use housewrap to air-seal the porch floor, which is fairly vapor permeable even air tight, which lets any moisture finding it's way in to be able to dry upward. Moisture getting into that space would then be primarily whatever leaks or diffuses through the porch floor, but as long as it's air-tight there won't be much air-leakage to cause summertime condensation.
Running a fan to ventilate it with conditioned space air doesn't fix the problem, it only moves it indoors, adding unhealthy moisture into your house.