Chattanooga Times Free Press

RON DESANTIS IS BEATING TRUMP AT HIS OWN GAME

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He’s younger, prettier and speaks in complete, comprehens­ible sentences. And he speaks directly to former President Donald Trump’s rock-solid base — which is showing a few cracks.

As reported by Politico, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis beat out Trump in a straw poll of attendees at the recent Western Conservati­ve Summit in Denver. Among the participan­ts, 71% want Desantis to run for president in 2024; Trump came in at an irritating 67% — irritating to Trump, at least. And Texas Sen. Ted “Have one door into and out of the school” Cruz? He lagged at 28% — somewhat of a relief to many, we guess.

Florida’s governor bested Trump at last year’s conference, too. Although straw polls are far from being a scientific or accurate measure of the overall electorate, they show that DeSantis’ support among core voters is growing.

DeSantis is Trump’s creation. The mentor remains a force in the Republican Party — hell, he is the Republican Party — anointing candidates for Congress and still bloviating, untruthful­ly, about his election loss in 2020. But DeSantis, the mentee, is doing in Florida what Trump could not, except through reversible executive orders. He is wielding direct power over policy, enshrining conservati­ve values in the law.

With singular ambition — and a malleable Republican Legislatur­e — he has intimidate­d, handcuffed or struck down anything or anyone who doesn’t sit right with him or the voters he needs to win in the 2024 Republican primary: Disney’s support for gay rights; Black representa­tion in Congress; the truth of Black history and the present-day experience­s of Blacks and other minorities; LGBTQ+ existence; women’s continued fight for reproducti­ve rights. Gun-control advocates. Some immigrants are OK in his book; others, not so much. And in excoriatin­g Democrats’ alleged socialist leanings and supposed indoctrina­tion, he is employing the same autocratic methods he decries.

According to the investigat­ive and corporate-accountabi­lity newsletter Seeking Rents, DeSantis is hellbent on tightening his grip on public universiti­es; strengthen­ing his authority to remove independen­tly elected school board members and state’s attorneys; clamping down on citizen campaigns to amend the state Constituti­on; and stripping oversight authority from the state’s independen­tly elected Cabinet members.

Americans who fled dictatorsh­ips of all ideologies should see where this is headed. Yet many of them are among his — and Trump’s — most ardent supporters, and eating it up.

DeSantis’ poll numbers clearly are the result of his carefully cultivated moves to gain the national stage. He deployed law enforcemen­t from Florida to Texas to help stem the tide of migrants trying to cross the U.S.-Mexico border, then paid agents a photo-oppable visit. He reopened the state during the coronaviru­s pandemic earlier than blue states. And though his COVID policies put so many people in danger, he still looked like a boss. He didn’t pitch bleach as a possible cure to COVID-19, he pitched personal freedoms and economic strength.

Of course, DeSantis is not the only Floridian with his eye on this particular prize. U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, the state’s former governor, clearly is itching to run for the White House in 2024. It’s also clear that he lacks the popularity that DeSantis has among the base. Even Sen. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell rebuked the senator’s 11-point plan to, allegedly, “Rescue America.”

“We will not have as part of our agenda a bill that raises taxes on half the American people, and sunsets Social Security and Medicare within five years,” McConnell vowed. “That will not be part of a Republican Senate majority agenda.”

However, Scott has something DeSantis lacks: boatloads of personal money and the ability to easily raise tons more. DeSantis has already been crisscross­ing the country raising money for his gubernator­ial reelection, but he’s simultaneo­usly locking up support for 2024.

As governor, Scott was effective at wielding the powers of the executive office, but DeSantis has taken that art and elevated it to a science. Scott had to negotiate with legislativ­e leaders. DeSantis has the leaders doing his bidding and waiting on him hand and foot.

Scott’s ongoing cold war with DeSantis might turn whitehot in the coming year.

And Florida’s other senator, Marco Rubio, once dubbed the “savior” of the Republican Party, is still in the mix, likely looking for a pathway to victory in 2024.

Last weekend’s straw poll results, according to Politico, follow the results of a University of Nevada, Reno, survey finding Florida’s governor neck-and-neck with Trump there. Nevada voters were asked to rate potential 2024 candidates. DeSantis received the highest favorabili­ty score of any Republican with all voters — 48% compared to Trump’s 42% — but Trump beat DeSantis when just Republican­s were counted.

That’s telling: DeSantis is catching the eye of independen­ts and Democrats, too, boding better for him than for Trump in a general election.

DeSantis clearly is a player for a residence far grander than the Governor’s Mansion. Trump, indeed, has some competitio­n. As a politician, Florida’s governor is more skilled, more experience­d, more palatable and, possibly, more dangerous.

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