New York Daily News

DON’S BEAT-RON PLAN

Call him names and be nasty part of strategy in prez run

- BY DAVE GOLDINER

Strap yourself in, Ron, it’s about to get ugly.

Former President Donald Trump reportedly has hatched a five-point plan to take down Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, whom he views as his only viable challenger for the Republican presidenti­al nomination.

Trump plans to hammer the Florida governor with nasty attacks and name-calling, a strategy that he believes is already succeeding in knocking down DeSantis’s once towering favorabili­ty numbers, Axios reported Friday.

The ex-president has told confidante­s that he doubts DeSantis has the spine to stand up to months of personal and political attacks like the “Ron DeSanctimo­nious” moniker that Trump thinks is already sinking in with Republican base voters.

Trump will have the chance to test drive his new attacks during his keynote speech Saturday at the CPAC convention, which DeSantis is skipping.

Trump insiders say DeSantis is really a mainstream, moderate Republican who is masqueradi­ng as a hardcore MAGA populist.

They intend to expose him as a political chameleon and a less-than-reliable conservati­ve.

“There’s a pre-Trump Ron and there’s a post-Trump Ron,” one Trump confidant said. “He’s now awkwardly trying to square his views up with the populist nationalis­t feeling of that party.”

One of the most potent attacks Trump plans to unleash on DeSantis is that he would be open to cutting Medicare or Social Security, pointing to some votes he made in Congress.

He also plans to trash DeSantis for supposedly being too liberal on COVID pandemic restrictio­ns and vaccines, a huge issue with the anti-vaxxer right wing of the GOP.

That could be a tough sell because Trump himself championed the vaccines and DeSantis built a reputation as one of the strongest opponents of COVID shutdowns.

Trump also plans to accuse DeSantis of supporting aid to Ukraine, an issue that is popular with mainstream voters of both parties but anathema to the MAGA base.

Trump has already launched an ugly personal attack on DeSantis by reposting a photo of him cozying up to teenage girls during his stint as a high school teacher.

Trump’s attacks have the potential to severely damage DeSantis before he even has the chance to hit back. They could play into the hands of Democrats who fear DeSantis as a more youthful and potentiall­y more appealing opponent than the bombastic Trump.

The Florida governor has so far mostly kept his powder dry and has not hit back at Trump by name. He instead has stuck to bragging about his landslide reelection victory in November, while pointing out that some of Trump’s handpicked candidates lost winnable races.

 ?? ??
 ?? AFP/GETTY ?? Former President Donald Trump (right) has reportedly told confidante­s he doesn’t think potential presidenti­al challenger Ron DeSantis (below) has the strength to stand up to months of attacks.
AFP/GETTY Former President Donald Trump (right) has reportedly told confidante­s he doesn’t think potential presidenti­al challenger Ron DeSantis (below) has the strength to stand up to months of attacks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States