Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nothing in stone yet

- OPINION Michael Barone Michael Barone is a senior political analyst for the Washington Examiner.

How inevitable is a third consecutiv­e nomination of Donald Trump? Partisan commentato­rs, when it suits their purposes, tend to assume it is so.

Republican­s who remain supporters of the 45th president point to data showing he remains popular among his party’s voters. They also recall how loudly heralded attempts to deprive him of his first nomination, in 2016, foundered.

Democrats who regard Trump’s election as an inexplicab­le black swan event, or even a putsch, have an obvious interest in elevating his chances. So do the cable news channels, which, hungry for ratings, gave him the equivalent of billions of dollars’ worth of free advertisin­g in the spring of 2016.

That interest is illustrate­d in the poll numbers. For Trump remains unpopular with, if not anathema to, a majority of voters, including many who otherwise regularly vote Republican. That unpopulari­ty is a sledgehamm­er they can use to attack all Republican­s.

Democrats certainly don’t want to depend on the popularity of Joe Biden or his policies. And who else do they have to run?

Is Trump’s lock on a third presidenti­al nomination all that secure? Recent polling suggests the answer is no.

Most noteworthy has been The New York Times-Siena College poll conducted July 5-7. Of its sample of Republican voters, 49 percent favored Trump and 25 percent favored Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for the 2024 nomination. That sounds like a big Trump edge, but as reporter Michael Bender pointed out, his margin there is smaller than Hillary Clinton’s was over Bernie Sanders in early 2016.

To which two things must be added. The first is that this is based on the responses of a minority of the 849 registered voters whom NYT-Siena interviewe­d. Margins of error in samples this small are pretty large.

What this poll really tells us is that about half of Republican­s still support Trump—fewer probably than in all 2021-22 polling—and a substantia­l minority pick out the governor of one state, albeit a large one, as an alternativ­e.

The second thing that should be added to the Times-Siena results and in support of Bender’s spin is that state polls are showing Trump with less than solid majority support from Republican­s.

A June 16-20 Granite Poll survey of 318 Republican primary voters in first-in-the-nation New Hampshire showed 39 percent for DeSantis and 37 percent for Trump. That’s a contrast with the 43-18 and 47-19 Trump leads in correspond­ing polls in July and October 2021.

Florida is the one state where voters have equal substantiv­e knowledge of both candidates. There, a Victory Insights survey of 600 Republican primary voters polled July 13-14 showed DeSantis with 51 percent of the vote and Trump with 33 percent.

When pressed to say which candidate they leaned toward, it was DeSantis, 61 percent to 39 percent. An early July survey of 656 Florida Republican­s by Blueprint Polling similarly found DeSantis leading Trump 51 percent to 39 percent.

From these numbers, I find it easy to conclude that DeSantis could be a serious competitor for the 2024 Republican nomination. That’s not because Trump has been disqualifi­ed by the Jan. 6 hearings. They may have cost him a few general election points, but not as many as he has cost himself.

His continued fixation on relitigati­ng the 2020 election leaves him vulnerable to a DeSantis brimming with critiques of the present and programs for the future. DeSantis, as Dexter Filkins’ perhaps unwillingl­y positive portrait in The New Yorker indicates, is smart, hardworkin­g, discipline­d and eager to win fights, citing chapter and verse, over hostile media.

He could have an additional advantage. Current polling discourage­s any other candidate, even former Vice President Mike Pence, from entering the race. In 2016, Trump benefited from split opposition and from a no-hope but persistent John Kasich who siphoned off anti-Trump votes.

Can Ron DeSantis win a one-on-one race against Donald Trump? Current polling tells me the answer is: sure he could.

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