Chattanooga Times Free Press

SCRATCHING THE TEFLON PRINCE

- Steven Roberts

Is Ron DeSantis qualified to be president? A small but growing number of Republican­s are starting to express their doubts.

Until now, DeSantis has been the Teflon

Prince of GOP politics: a clean slate, a distant ideal, promising to retain the loyalties of

MAGA Nation while avoiding the scars and scabs Donald Trump acquired during four tumultuous years in office. Plus, he is 32 years younger than Trump, and far better positioned to make Joe Biden’s age and frailty a campaign issue.

But DeSantis could not remain unmarked and undefined forever. And now that he’s started to fill in some blanks — to say what he actually believes — his drawbacks are starting to show. One prime example is a questionna­ire he filled out for Tucker Carlson, the Fox host and GOP power broker. In it, DeSantis dismissed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as a “territoria­l dispute” and argued that arming Kyiv’s resistance was not one of America’s “vital national interests.”

This was too much for Chris Sununu, the popular Republican governor of New Hampshire, who lambasted DeSantis in an op-ed piece for the Washington Post. “The Russian invasion of Ukraine is not a ‘territoria­l dispute,’ as Florida Gov.

Ron DeSantis described it this month,” he railed. “Russia is engaged in a war against an innocent people, and it must be condemned … .”

The 48-year-old Sununu, who might run for president himself, was not alone in calling out the DeSantis-Trump brand of isolationi­sm. Former Vice President Mike Pence, also a possible contender for the GOP nomination, asserted: “There is no room for Putin apologists in the Republican Party.”

Sununu and Pence are arguing that anyone like DeSantis — or Trump, for that matter — who does not understand America’s true interests in the Ukraine war, who does not grasp the gravity of appeasing tyrants, should not get near the Oval Office. But the case against the Florida governor is not just about policy, it’s about character. His opposition to American aid represents a headspinni­ng, jaw-dropping reversal from his previous positions.

As a member of Congress during the Obama administra­tion, DeSantis identified with “the Reagan school that’s tough on Russia.” In a radio interview, he explained, “I think that when someone like (Russian President Vladimir) Putin sees Obama being indecisive, I think that whets his appetite to create more trouble in the area. And I think if we were to arm the Ukrainians, I think that would send a strong signal to him that he shouldn’t be going any further.”

So what changed? Pure political opportunis­m, hypocrisy and ambition in their rawest forms. Ukraine fatigue is real in GOP ranks. A year ago, only 9% of Republican­s told the Pew Research Center that the U.S. was giving too much aid Ukraine, and today that’s jumped to 40%. Trump has staked his claim to that appeasemen­t vote, and DeSantis is determined not to be outflanked in a Republican primary.

Moreover, Biden is a fervent supporter of U.S. aid, and DeSantis’ political calculatio­ns are nakedly obvious — oppose anything favored by a Democratic president. So, in his view, Obama was too weak on Ukraine and Biden is too strong. If they’re for it, I’m against it, and principles be damned, except for one: Say whatever serves my ambition best.

Now, ambition is hardly an unusual or disqualify­ing trait in a politician, but some fellow Republican­s were quick to call out DeSantis’ flaming flip-flop. “I’m disturbed by it,” Sen. John Cornyn of Texas told Politico. “I hope he feels like he doesn’t need to take that Tucker Carlson line to be competitiv­e in the primary. It’s important for us to continue to support Ukrainians for our own security.”

Republican­s are right to question the credential­s of any party candidate who will not accept America’s global responsibi­lities. The Teflon Prince has been scratched.

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