Houston Chronicle Sunday

GOP’s future lies in Florida — but not in Mar-a-Lago

- Marc Thiessen SYNDICATED COLUMNIST Marc Thiessen is a columnist for the Washington Post.

Voters did the Republican Party three big favors Tuesday: First, they re-elected Gov. Ron DeSantis by historic margins, turning Florida into a red state and showing the GOP the path out of the political wilderness.

Second, they appear to have given Republican­s a majority in the House of Representa­tives — if a narrow one, from what’s clear so far — which means that President Joe Biden’s power to spend trillions of dollars with Democratic-only budget reconcilia­tion bills is revoked.

Third, and most important, they gave the GOP a muchneeded wake-up call. According to the Fox News voter analysis survey, 75 percent of respondent­s said the country is on the wrong track. The same share was dissatisfi­ed or even angry with the way things are going. Yet on Tuesday, millions voted for the status quo.

Think about that: On Biden’s watch, we have experience­d the worst inflation in 40 years, the worst collapse in real wages in four decades, the worst murder rate since 1996, the worst border crisis in U.S. history, the highest gas prices ever recorded, the worst increase in the cost of shelter since 1984. Biden is the least popular president in the history of presidenti­al polling (besides Donald Trump) going all the way back to Harry S. Truman. Six in 10 voters say Biden does not have the mental capacity to be president.

Yet despite this unpreceden­ted litany of disasters, voters looked at the alternativ­e presented by Republican­s and said: No, thanks. Not only did the historic red wave fail to materializ­e, Biden might actually end up doing better in this midterm election than most of his far more popular predecesso­rs.

How did that happen? It’s not because voters approve of Biden’s job performanc­e; it’s because they disapprove­d of the GOP. It’s because in key House and Senate races, Republican­s nominated candidates whose main qualificat­ion was their fealty to Trump — and voters rejected them. Americans are desperate for change, but not the kind of change that Republican­s offered. And because the GOP didn’t give voters what they considered reasonable alternativ­es to Democrats, Republican­s lost winnable races across the country.

Still, there was a red wave Tuesday — in Florida. DeSantis won reelection by almost 20 points, the largest vote margin ever in a Florida gubernator­ial election (and 17 points more than Trump won the state by in 2020). DeSantis won by just over 32,000 votes four years ago but by more than 1.5 million votes this time. According to DeSantis’ campaign, he won independen­t voters by 20 points — a 30-point net increase from 2018. He won female voters by at least seven points, a 16-point net increase from 2018. And he won Hispanic voters by 14 points, a 22-point increase from 2018 and the highest share of the non-White vote for a Republican in Florida history. He also won in Democratic stronghold­s like Palm Beach, Miami-Dade, St. Lucie and Osceola counties, which had rarely voted Republican.

In other words, DeSantis did what Trump failed to do: He won over hundreds of thousands of people who did not vote for him the first time around. He was able to do this because he seems to understand something that Trump does not: Politics is not a zero-sum game. You can broaden your coalition while energizing your base at the same time.

DeSantis is a political counterpun­cher who does not hesitate to take on the woke left.

But he is also a policy wonk, with a command of the details of the bold conservati­ve reforms (in taxes, education, parental rights and ending pandemic lockdowns) that he has implemente­d to make life better for his constituen­ts. And when Hurricane Ian hit, he became the model of a chief executive leading in a crisis. Just days after taking a shot at the Biden administra­tion by sending a planeload of illegal migrants to Martha’s Vineyard, he worked with the Democratic president to get power restored and bridges rebuilt — without getting into needless fights with reporters. As a result, DeSantis excited hardcore Republican­s without alienating swing voters — and won in a landslide.

If Republican­s nominate someone who can do on a national scale what DeSantis has done in Florida, they could win the 2024 election in a landslide, too. If they nominate Trump, they may feel the same bitter disappoint­ment again in two years.

I say this in sadness, not anger, because I have spilled more ink in these pages than any other human being defending Trump’s accomplish­ments in office. I don’t regret a word. With the mute button on, his was one of the greatest conservati­ve presidenci­es in my lifetime. But his conduct in office drove away millions of swing voters who liked his policies but not him — which is why he lost the 2020 election. And his abysmal behavior after the election was disqualify­ing to millions of Americans, who made their views clear this week.

By nominating candidates in Trump’s image, Republican­s squandered a historic opportunit­y. They had the most promising political environmen­t in decades, and they blew it. But the dark cloud of these midterms has an important lesson if the GOP chooses to take it:

The future of the Republican Party lies in Florida — in Tallahasse­e, not Mar-a-Lago.

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