Las Vegas Review-Journal

Desantis now a bigger threat to Trump, and not just because he won Florida

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Donald Trump had better watch out. Florida Gov. Ron Desantis just got a lot stronger.

The growing tension between Republican kingmaker and former protege is not new. Both are rumored to be seeking the 2024 presidenti­al nomination, and Trump is expected to announce his candidacy soon.

In the Tuesday elections, Desantis reigned supreme, securing a historic win and carrying Democratic stronghold Miami-dade County. That’s no small feat in Florida. But what makes Desantis a threat to Trump isn’t only his near 20-point victory. It’s also that Trump had a less stellar night.

Trump wasn’t on the ballot but he made the midterm elections about him, anyway, when he put his finger on the scale to support his loyalists. Indeed, some of them won. Votes are still being counted in some states, but his hand-picked candidates for U.S. Senate and governor in pivotal states like Pennsylvan­ia and Michigan clearly underperfo­rmed. The GOP seems poised to win a narrow majority in the House. Yet the much-vaunted red wave was looking more like a ripple. All of that reflects on the former president who continues to insert himself into national politics.

Florida, on the other hand, saw a red tsunami. Whether that was thanks to Desantis, Trump, voter concern about inflation or Democratic ineptitude will be debated over the coming weeks. But Desantis emerged as the star of Tuesday night with plenty of bragging rights.

As the Herald reported Tuesday, Desantis has already been telling wealthy donors he’s the policy-minded alternativ­e to Trump who also speaks the language of the MAGA base. Trump remains the leader of the Republican Party and Desantis will have to make a calculatio­n on whether it’s wise to jump into the 2024 race and take on the pugilistic former president.

And Desantis has weaknesses. He’s good at delivering bombastic statements in his news conference­s and Fox News appearance­s, but he’s not much for more intimate, retail politics, and he’s not an experience­d debater. Desantis comes off as tense and uncomforta­ble on the debate stage.

He is also just 44, with plenty of time to run for president — though he may decide to capitalize on this undeniable political upswing.

It’s not just Desantis’ decisive victory that sets him apart. It’s how he won, and how that might translate into victories for Republican­s elsewhere — with the caveat that what happens in Florida doesn’t always translate in other states.

Desantis built on Trump’s 2020 inroads with Hispanic voters, a crucial bloc of swing voters. He won roughly 65% of the vote in majority Hispanic precincts in Miamidade, a 16-point improvemen­t from his 2018 performanc­e. He secured the largest margin any Republican candidate for governor has achieved in the county in at least the past 40 years, the Herald reported.

Trump lost reelection in the middle of a pandemic he dismissed. Desantis’ approach to COVID-19 was a risk but it paid off. He reopened the economy and schools early. Like Trump, he showed little regard for the 82,000 Floridians who died from the virus but he became a hero to many Floridians and people from other states who grew tired of lockdowns and school closures. His courtship of anti-vaxxers and attacks on public health experts didn’t backfire.

Trump recognizes the threat Desantis represents. He held a Miami rally for Sen. Marco Rubio from which Desantis was conspicuou­sly absent. The ex-president coined a derogatory nickname for the governor: “Ron Desanctimo­nious.” He recently warned that if Desantis runs against him he “would tell you things about him that won’t be very flattering.”

Perhaps Trump understand­s that a more discipline­d, less gaffe-prone version of himself could be his Achilles heel. Desantis carries the Trump essence in a more statesman-like package. He has a better chance of winning back moderate conservati­ves and independen­ts who want a forceful leader but are turned off by Trump’s baggage. Desantis would first have to survive a bloody primary against Trump.

Tuesday’s election results — that 20-point win, that popularity with Hispanic voters — leave Desantis in a strong position. For now, anyway, it looks as though the student has become better at winning elections than the teacher.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Florida Gov. Ron Desantis holds his son Mason on Tuesday as he celebrates his reelection at an party in Tampa, Fla.
REBECCA BLACKWELL / ASSOCIATED PRESS Florida Gov. Ron Desantis holds his son Mason on Tuesday as he celebrates his reelection at an party in Tampa, Fla.

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