The Guardian (USA)

DeSantis fatigue grows among Florida Republican­s as 2024 campaign falters

- Richard Luscombe in Miami

Ron DeSantis is facing growing backlash in Florida as his presidenti­al campaign flails across the country. Analysts and political opponents are seeing signs of a tail-off in his support, and evidence of Republican­s recoiling at his extremist positions on slavery, education, abortion and immigratio­n.

Hints at a shift in his standing came towards the end of the recently concluded legislativ­e session in his home state, when several Republican lawmakers defied the governor by voting against new laws restrictin­g abortions or expanding his feud with Disney. They passed anyway.

But observers say the strength of the resistance appears to have gathered pace since DeSantis’s glitchridd­en presidenti­al campaign launch in May, and subsequent missteps on the stump.

They include his prevaricat­ing position over the approval of new Florida curriculum teaching that forced labor during slavery benefited Black people, simultaneo­usly giving it his full backing while claiming, “I didn’t do it and I wasn’t involved in it” during the same press appearance.

This week he fired a campaign aide, only after they were exposed for creating and sharing a video containing Nazi symbolism. And as a property insurance crisis spiraled in Florida, DeSantis

was sharply criticized for prioritizi­ng the bolstering of his profile in other states.

Polling by Florida Atlantic University shows DeSantis holding on to his favorable rating among Floridians as governor, but with the 54%-41% margin much reduced from his blowout reelection in November.

“What we’re seeing with Florida voters is that DeSantis is still above water, but he’s starting to lose his edge. And people are starting to rethink their support for him,” said state congresswo­man Fentrice Driskell, Democratic leader of the house minority in Tallahasse­e.

“He’s started to stumble more and more nationally. He was squirming at that podium when he had to defend those comments: ‘It wasn’t me, and also, by the way, here’s the bright side.’ No, there is no bright side to slavery.

In Tallahasse­e, Driskell had a frontrow seat to Republican legislator­s’ conduct during a lawmaking session that passed DeSantis’s “slate of hate” bills cracking down on transgende­r rights, banning discussion­s of sexuality and gender identity in classrooms, restrictin­g Black voting and approving permitless carry of firearms.

She jokes it was actually a backrow seat given the Republican supermajor­ity, but said she observed a noticeable weariness among politician­s in the governing party as the session drew towards its close.

“We saw crossover where some Republican­s, a handful of them, felt those bills were untenable,” she said. “But beyond that, there were quiet conversati­ons, maybe you step to the restroom during a committee meeting and run into a Republican member rolling their eyes and saying how much they’re over it.

“They could be in their office in a meeting and someone from the governor’s office would walk in with an amendment to file on a bill, courtesy of the governor, not giving them a choice or making them feel like they even had a choice. You know, they were tired of it.”

Driskell believes it’s a portent for DeSantis: “If things don’t go well for him on the national stage, I think he comes back as a lame duck,” she said.

None of the elected state Republican­s contacted by the Guardian for this article responded, but the party’s former US congressma­n for Florida and political strategist David Jolly said he had spoken with colleagues who were exhausted.

“I would use the term fatigue more than a drop in his support, because at least from the state legislativ­e standpoint it remains highly gerrymande­red where Republican­s kind of meet an echo chamber, so the affirmatio­n of the rightwing policies is always there,” he said.

“But you’re looking at a governor who has been running so hot for so long. He does risk burning out and I’ve heard among some Republican­s his level of influence in the next legislativ­e session will likely not be what it was this past session.

“He can’t run again and he’s now barnstormi­ng the country leaving Florida behind, so part of it is just the inevitable exiting of an incumbent governor in the second term, but there’s also this element of it’s just been too intense for too long, his agenda and his regime.”

Direct criticism of DeSantis from Republican­s in Florida has been mostly muted. Three state representa­tives who voted for his hardline new immigratio­n policies, which among other restrictio­ns criminaliz­e the transporta­tion of undocument­ed aliens, attempted to distance themselves at an awkward

press conference last month, but did not mention DeSantis by name.

Two who have broken cover are supporters of DeSantis’s rival for the 2024 nomination, former president Donald Trump. State senator Joe Gruters, a former chair of the Florida Republican party, attacked the governor last month, accusing him of vetoing funding for projects in his district as retaliatio­n for his endorsemen­t of

Trump.

Meanwhile the US congressma­n Byron Donalds, who is Black, demanded DeSantis’s education department “correct” its position over the “personal benefits” of slavery. Manny Diaz, Florida’s education commission­er, responded with an insult, slighting Donalds as “a supposedly conservati­ve congressma­n”.

Donalds, notably, was a former DeSantis ally who, along with several other Florida Congress members, frustrated the governor by switching their allegiance to Trump.

Jolly expects more pushback from Republican­s if DeSantis’s presidenti­al run blows up. “I don’t think he will be significan­tly weakened, but he won’t have the star power that he’s had the last five or six years as a result of all these acts,” he said.

“To say it kindly, he’s resilient. To say it critically, he’s stubborn. He’s not going to leave his ego behind even after losing that presidenti­al race.”

Kevin Wagner, a professor of political science at FAU, who conducted this month’s poll, said DeSantis’s conflict with Trump could affect his future popularity among Republican­s. Trump, who has previously taken credit for elevating DeSantis to the Florida governor’s mansion, is now a sharp critic, creating demeaning nicknames such as “Meatball Ron”, and calling him a candidate “with no personalit­y”.

“Assessed independen­tly, DeSantis is actually still relatively popular. In respect of his conflict with the former president, he’s having some issues, and I would suspect that that would cause him to lose some popularity among Republican­s,” Wagner said.

“I didn’t see a lot of that but it is something to keep an eye on. It’s important to remember it’s a snapshot in time and sometimes polls can be lagging indicators.”

 ?? Photograph: Charlie Neibergall/AP ?? Ron DeSantis speaks to reporters following a meet and greet at the Hotel Charitone in Chariton, Iowa, on Thrusday.
Photograph: Charlie Neibergall/AP Ron DeSantis speaks to reporters following a meet and greet at the Hotel Charitone in Chariton, Iowa, on Thrusday.
 ?? Fentrice Driskell. Photograph: Diana Zapata/BFA/Shuttersto­ck ??
Fentrice Driskell. Photograph: Diana Zapata/BFA/Shuttersto­ck

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