Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

DeSantis’s presidenti­al run could be brief

- Eugene Robinson is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group. His email address is eugenerobi­nson@ washpost.com.

Most great politician­s have the skin of an elephant and the memory of a flea. After all, today’s adversary might be tomorrow’s ally.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has it the wrong way around.

That means his quest for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, which he is expected to announce this week, will be interestin­g. And unless he evolves, it could be brief.

Polls still show DeSantis as having the best chance to defeat Donald Trump in the GOP race. But they also show his prospects rapidly heading in the wrong direction. RealClearP­olitics found in its average of polls that in late February, DeSantis trailed Trump by 13 percentage points. On Monday, however, Trump led DeSantis by 37 points, with much of the gap having grown in recent weeks.

Using GOP control of the Florida legislatur­e as though it were a campaign billboard, DeSantis has loosened the state’s gun laws; lowered the threshold for imposing the death penalty; expanded school vouchers; and imposed “anti-woke” restrictio­ns on teachers and administra­tors at every level of public education, including in the state’s universiti­es. He has made it illegal for doctors to provide gendertran­sition care for minors. To top it off, he signed a bill establishi­ng a six-week abortion ban, which — if allowed to take effect by the Florida Supreme Court — would be one of the most draconian in the nation.

Ta-da! Yet his poll numbers keep going down, not up.

DeSantis is not helping himself with his obsessive crusade against the Walt Disney Co., which offended him last year by criticizin­g his “don’t say gay” law banning discussion of gender and sexuality in public schools. Trying to punish a company for statements that had no practical impact — except, perhaps, on DeSantis’s brittle ego — seems wildly at odds with traditiona­l conservati­ve values.

The Disney thing would just be a loopy sideshow if it didn’t highlight traits that could hold DeSantis back as a presidenti­al candidate — and that would be dangerous for the nation and the world if, heaven forbid, he ever became president: paperthin skin, a propensity to hold grudges and a tendency to go way too far.

The abortion legislatio­n is a prime example. Last year, before the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade, DeSantis signed into law a 15week ban. That restrictio­n is now in effect, even as the state Supreme Court considers a challenge filed by Planned Parenthood and other groups that is based on prior rulings by that court protecting abortion as a privacy right under the Florida constituti­on.

DeSantis could have left the issue alone. But he apparently determined that no potential competitor should outflank him on abortion, so he demanded that the legislatur­e give him a six-week ban. Lawmakers complied last month. But it is clear from polls and election results that setting the deadline for terminatin­g a pregnancy at a point before many women even know they are pregnant goes far beyond what even many “pro-life” Americans are prepared to mandate. Perhaps that is why DeSantis announced his signing of that bill into law on a Thursday around 11 p.m. with no public fanfare.

In a phone call with supporters and donors last week, the New York Times reports, DeSantis argued that he should be the nominee “based on all the data in the swing states, which is not great for the former president and probably insurmount­able because people aren’t going to change their view of him.”

But how does he imagine his six-week abortion ban, his law letting Floridians carry concealed firearms without a permit, his attempts to squelch free speech on college campuses, and his deathmatch against the Magic Kingdom will play in those swing states? Why would suburban women who voted for Joe Biden in 2020 vote for Ron DeSantis in 2024?

Great politician­s learn from their mistakes and course correct as necessary. DeSantis seems not to understand that going full-speed ahead is a bad idea if you’re approachin­g a cliff.

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