Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump upstages DeSantis as Fla. GOP gathers

- By Adriana Gomez Licon and Bill Barrow

KISSIMMEE, Fla. — A booth at the Florida Republican Party’s Freedom Summit made swift business of Donald Trump merchandis­e Saturday, selling everything from socks to bathtub rubber ducks that paid tribute to the former president.

Vendor Peter Crotty also had Ron DeSantis T-shirts. But he reduced those items from their original $25 down to $5, an 80% discount on the Florida governor’s name. The excess inventory needed to go, Crotty said.

It was just one sign of DeSantis’ challenges in the 2024 Republican primary fight. Barely two months from the first nominating ballots being cast, Trump is flaunting his advantages by trying to embarrass the governor in the two rivals’ shared home state, where party activists on Saturday cheered any mention of the former president and booed at any criticisms of the GOP 2024 front-runner.

“We’re going to win the Florida primary for the third straight time, and we’re going to win the state by a landslide next November,” Trump told a boisterous crowd Saturday evening, before calling to the stage several Florida lawmakers who switched their endorsemen­ts from DeSantis ahead of Saturday’s Florida Freedom Summit.

Trump and his newest backers stood beneath graphics that read: “Florida is Trump Country.”

It was a show of strength for Trump in a state where DeSantis has controlled state politics since garnering Trump’s endorsemen­t in 2018 on his way to winning the first of two gubernator­ial elections. Now, two months before the first balloting in the 2024 presidenti­al nomination process, the two men have an increasing­ly personal and crude rivalry, and the second-term governor faces the reality that Trump has dominated national Republican politics since he launched his first White House bid in 2015, when DeSantis was a little-known Florida congressma­n.

Trump was more than a half-hour into a stemwindin­g speech Saturday before he mentioned DeSantis, and he did so by ticking through polling results suggesting his wide national lead among Republican voters.

Trump later said, in a mocking tone, that DeSantis begged for his backing in 2018: “I endorsed him and he became a rocket ship in 24 hours. … Now he’s like a wounded, falling bird from the sky.”

DeSantis sidesteppe­d the former president altogether while on stage Saturday afternoon, instead sticking with his argument that his results in Tallahasse­e prove his conservati­ve mettle.

“Florida has shown the way forward for the Republican Party,” DeSantis told the crowd, drawing applause for a litany of conservati­ve policy victories in the state. “No state has done more to beat the left at the institutio­nal level than we have in the state of Florida.”

DeSantis, Trump and other candidates signed qualifying paperwork Saturday for Florida’s March 2024 primary. The primary could prove critical, but only if the governor or other candidates can diminish Trump’s strength in the early nominating states that come before.

“Weakening DeSantis’ standing in Florida is a clear objective of the Trump campaign,” said Alex Conant, a Republican strategist who worked on the 2016 presidenti­al campaign of Florida Sen. Marco Rubio. “His entire message is built on the idea that he is a terrific governor. When Republican officials in Florida are choosing Trump over DeSantis, it really weakens the core of DeSantis’ pitch.”

Trump’s campaign first announced the new slate of Florida endorsemen­ts hours before DeSantis took the stage. Trump already had secured support from a majority of Florida’s U.S. House delegation. The latest flips, first reported by The Messenger, came two days after U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, DeSantis’ predecesso­r as governor, announced his support for Trump, and when Scott reaffirmed his choice Saturday, Florida Republican­s roared.

“You might have seen that I endorsed President Trump,” Scott said with a smile, pausing for the sustained ovation. “I don’t think there’s any question in my mind. He is the one person running that can really bring strength back to our country.”

Scott never mentioned DeSantis. Another 2024 candidate, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, drew boos when he said Trump is wrong for the country and his party. He alluded to Trump’s multiple pending indictment­s. The former president also is set to testify Monday in New York as part of a civil fraud trial in which Trump is accused of deceiving banks and insurers by exaggerati­ng his wealth on his annual financial statements.

 ?? PHELAN M. EBENHACK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former President Donald Trump acknowledg­es attendees Saturday before speaking at the Republican Party of Florida Freedom Summit in Kissimmee, Fla.
PHELAN M. EBENHACK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former President Donald Trump acknowledg­es attendees Saturday before speaking at the Republican Party of Florida Freedom Summit in Kissimmee, Fla.

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