Chattanooga Times Free Press

FOR GOP, DESANTIS THE BEST OF TWO WORLDS

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WASHINGTON — The convention­al wisdom about Republican­s after the disastrous 2022 midterms is that they need to choose between two different types of candidates: forward-looking, reform-minded governors who won overwhelmi­ngly by appealing to swing voters, and populist rabble-rousers who made the conservati­ve base swoon but could not win over independen­ts.

Or maybe they don’t: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is both.

DeSantis is a conservati­ve populist who takes on Disney, sends migrants to Martha’s Vineyard and fights the left’s woke agenda. “The woke mind virus is basically a form of cultural Marxism,” DeSantis said Wednesday in announcing his presidenti­al campaign. “And because it’s a war on truth, I think we have no choice but to wage a war on woke.”

But DeSantis is also a conservati­ve reformer who delivers concrete results. During the pandemic, he kept Florida open and running, banning vaccine passports, suspending local emergency orders that forced businesses to shut down and opening schools. When storms hit, he was the model of a chief executive in action, getting the bridge to Pine Island rebuilt in less than three days, reopening the Sanibel Causeway in 15 days and cleaning up thousands of miles of debris. And he has pushed a raft of conservati­ve reforms through the Florida legislatur­e: He signed one of the most comprehens­ive school choice laws in the country while also raising teacher salaries in traditiona­l public schools. He cracked down on predatory lawsuits that steal the livelihood­s of honest business owners. He passed “constituti­onal-carry” legislatio­n, made child rape eligible for the death penalty and cracked down on left-wing “bail reform.” And he barred “environmen­tal, social and governance” investing of state assets, saying he wants to make sure investment decisions are made only on the basis of what will deliver the best return for Floridians.

In other words, DeSantis offers the best of both worlds: He delivers hard punches to the left, and results for the right. That mix seems to have appeal. More than 3 million people have listened to or viewed his Twitter Spaces campaign announceme­nt, Twitter shows.

It also seems to work at the polls. DeSantis won re-election by nearly 20 percentage points, with the support of the majority of independen­ts, Hispanics and women — and carrying several Democratic-leaning counties that went for Joe Biden — in 2020.

To take on Biden, DeSantis first has to beat Donald Trump. And right now, Trump is leading him by a 3-to-1 margin, according to an Emerson College poll released Thursday. But the race is not nearly as locked in as some suspect. A recent CBS News poll found that just 24% of Republican­s said they will consider only Trump, 27% said they won’t vote for Trump at all, and 49% said they were deciding between Trump and other candidates. That means 76% of the GOP electorate appears either ready or open to supporting someone other than the former president.

Trump is ahead, but he is vulnerable — and he knows it. That is why he has spent $15.3 million on ads attacking DeSantis as insufficie­ntly MAGA — more than he spent supporting all the candidates he endorsed in last year’s midterms combined. Trump has a 77% approval rating among Republican­s. Many GOP voters would love a candidate who echoes the best of Trump while shedding his worst instincts. “Trump without the baggage” isn’t an attack — it’s an endorsemen­t.

The fact that DeSantis is getting hit from both sides shows how appealing his message is. He poses a threat to Trump and his non-Trump rivals because he is, for now, the only declared candidate who delivers the best of both sides. He is a disrupter who isn’t self-destructiv­e, a populist policy wonk who loves the minutiae of legislatin­g as much as he loves taking on the woke left.

We’ll soon see whether that is a combinatio­n that sells in Republican primaries.

 ?? ?? Marc Thiessen
Marc Thiessen

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