The Sunday Telegraph

Trump meets his match in nomination race

Anti-lockdown Florida governor DeSantis leads economic surge and could be Republican candidate

- By Nick Allen in Washington

RON DESANTIS, the combative anti-lockdown governor of Florida, is the early joint frontrunne­r with Donald Trump in the race for the Republican presidenti­al nomination in 2024.

Mr DeSantis, 42, has become a US national figure as he lambasted pandemic restrictio­ns and aggressive­ly campaigned to keep schools open in his state.

His stance has attracted companies to relocate from New York and California and led to a surging economy, low unemployme­nt and house-price boom.

In betting markets, Mr Trump and Mr DeSantis have been neck and neck for weeks, swapping places in the lead.

This week, the governor moved to suspend all remaining coronaviru­s restrictio­ns in Florida. He signed a new law giving himself sweeping powers to abolish emergency pandemic measures put in place by Democrat-led local authoritie­s, including mask-wearing.

Democrats accused him of “spiking the ball on the 10-yard line”. Mr DeSantis also signed a controvers­ial voting rights bill live on Fox & Friends – Mr Trump’s favourite Fox News show.

It introduces restrictio­ns on voting by post, and at drop boxes, and is virulently opposed by Democrats. Mr Trump recently told Fox News that Mr DeSantis is a “great guy” who had “taken off like a rocket ship”.

The former president said he would “certainly” consider Mr DeSantis as a running mate if he himself runs in 2024. Mr DeSantis, a Yale and Harvard Law School graduate, began reopening Florida a year ago.

As tourists poured into Disney World, and on to the beaches to party, critics compared him to the mayor in Jaws who lets people swim to their deaths.

Florida has a large elderly population – it is home to The Villages, the largest retirement community in the world, with over 100,000 residents.

Yet the state’s coronaviru­s death rate is lower than the US average. Instead of closing schools, Mr DeSantis chose to isolate nursing homes. The death rate remained relatively low, children were saved from online learning, and their parents were able to keep the economy going.

His approval ratings have risen accordingl­y. Senior Republican­s see Mr DeSantis as Mr Trump’s heir apparent, the perfect post-Trump candidate.

Mr Trump supporters also back Mr DeSantis, and the governor is less alienating for moderate Republican­s and independen­ts. Like the former president, Mr DeSantis has a confrontat­ional relationsh­ip with media. CBS flagship 60 Minutes recently broadcast an investigat­ion into Florida’s vaccine rollout, suggesting it had been influenced by a $100,000 donation to Mr DeSantis. The suggestion was debunked by Democrat officials in Florida, and served to increase Mr DeSantis’s popularity.

This week, another report suggested that former employees of Mr DeSantis had formed a “support group” and that he had a high turnover of staff. Adrian Lukis, his chief of staff, said that was “false and merely designed to manufactur­e a partisan narrative”.

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