Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

DeSantis’ challenge: When and how to counteratt­ack Trump

- By Michael C. Bender and Maggie Haberman

Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida prizes preparatio­n and the way it allows him to control his political narrative. But suddenly, he was on the verge of going off message.

He had traveled to a Central Florida warehouse last week to promote a $2 billion tax cut proposal when he was confronted with the inevitable: an especially ugly attack from former President Donald Trump that seemed to warrant a strong response.

Trump had insinuated on social media that DeSantis behaved inappropri­ately with high school girls while he was a teacher in his early 20s. As a reporter asked for his reaction, the Florida governor — standing amid kitchen stoves and boxes of baby diapers — inhaled sharply. He straighten­ed the papers in front of him and raised his open palms to interrupt the question.

But instead of slamming the former president, DeSantis demurred.

“I spend my time delivering results for the people of Florida and fighting against Joe Biden,” he said. “That’s how I spend my time. I don’t spend my time trying to smear other Republican­s.”

For months, DeSantis has pursued a strategy of conflict avoidance with his top rival in the shadow 2024 Republican presidenti­al primary, delaying what is likely to be a hostile and divisive clash that forces the party’s voters to pick sides.

But now he faces the pressing question of how long this approach can work. Trump, who has spent weeks trying to goad DeSantis into a fight with rude nicknames like “Ron DeSanctimo­nious,” is stepping up his social media-fueled assault, even as polls and interviews show that DeSantis has become the leading alternativ­e to the former president for many voters and donors.

DeSantis must also decide just how forcefully to counteratt­ack once he engages with Trump and whether he has left himself enough room to effectivel­y parry the former president’s taunts and smears without offending his loyal supporters.

Seventeen months before the Republican nominating convention, the future of Trump’s political movement seems likely to be decided by a battle between the 76-year-old former president, who has redefined the party in his image as centered primarily on grievances, and the 44-yearold governor, who has presented himself as a new and improved heir — younger, smarter and more strategic, policy-focused and discipline­d.

Many conservati­ves who dislike Trump’s constant dramas, the myriad criminal investigat­ions he is facing and the stain of his efforts to cling to power after losing the 2020 election have put their hopes in a DeSantis candidacy, in a way their predecesso­rs never did with any of Trump’s challenger­s in 2016.

DeSantis has captured the attention of Republican voters and the party’s activist base by leaning into polarizing social issues from his perch as governor of a key battlegrou­nd state, while so far refraining from attacking Trump and other potential 2024 rivals. He has instead insisted that he is focused on governing Florida, where the legislativ­e session is scheduled to run from March to May.

But DeSantis’ abovethe-fray posture carries risk. One of the central tenets of the modern Republican Party under Trump has been the willingnes­s to fight, ruthlessly and tirelessly.

While the Florida governor has successful­ly portrayed himself to conservati­ves as a cultural warrior, his actual experience mixing it up with powerful opponents is thinner. He was barely tested last year during his reelection bid, his first since emerging as a national political figure.

In a memorable debate moment, DeSantis stood by, stiffly staring ahead, as his Democratic opponent, Charlie Crist, demanded that the governor say whether he would serve all four years of a second term. When called upon next, DeSantis shot off a sharp canned retort, but the exchange left Crist looking like the more nimble combatant.

Some deep-pocketed Republican donors have privately expressed concern about how DeSantis will perform when forced to directly engage with an opponent as combative and unbothered by traditiona­l rules of decorum as Trump.

“No Republican has ever emerged from an exchange with Donald Trump looking stronger, so the natural tendency is to deflect his attacks and avoid confrontat­ion,” said Liam Donovan, a Republican strategist.

“That’s easy to do and maybe even wise when his barbs are confined to Truth Social,” Donovan added, referring to Trump’s social media site, on which he has fired off many of his attacks. “The question is what happens when DeSantis finds himself on a debate stage opposite Trump and GOP voters want to see whether they are getting what they were promised.”

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