New York Post

Enter Ron DeSantis

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Ron DeSantis’ entry into the 2024 race for the White House offers a fighting chance for America to dodge a Donald Trump vs. Joe Biden rematch that almost nobody (except Trump and Biden) craves: According to most polls, this punch-drunk nation just wants to move on.

Trump clearly sees the danger in DeSantis, judging by the increasing velocity, ferocity and downright absurdity of his attacks on the Florida gov. Consider the $15 million Trump’s SuperPAC dumped into dumping on DeSantis before he even announced.

But he failed to strangle the candidacy in its cradle: DeSantis enters with the warchest (north of $110 million, well ahead of Trump) and polling numbers to potentiall­y de-throne the frontrunne­r.

Yes, other talented Republican­s might yet rise to the top or even enter the race: It’s a long way to Iowa, let alone the ’24 convention. But at the moment, it looks like an exclusive heavyweigh­t bout between the two.

DeSantis is a proud son of the working/middle class — mom a nurse, dad a TV tech — who played elite baseball as a kid and at Yale, working his way through college while managing to graduate magna cum laude before heading to Harvard Law and then to the Navy, where he served our country as a JAG in Iraq and elsewhere.

The bio alone is huge contrast with silver-spoon-born Trump and lifetime politician/ grifter Biden. And, at 44, he’s just over half their age. And as Florida governor he’s proved tough, smart and independen­t-minded.

Crucially, he showed immense courage and leadership once COVID hit. He sought out independen­t advice, really looked at the science and rapidly reopened his state despite a savage onslaught from the establishm­ent and media, who wrongly hurled grievous claims that he was condemning the masses to a certain death.

He fought off the DC “expert” advice, the major-media scolds and even then-President Trump, who wound up following almost to the letter whatever Dr. Tony Fauci ordered.

The result? The Sunshine State boomed without the doom that was predicted as COVID fortresses such as New York and California still reap the harm wrought by their lockdown fanaticism.

Other DeSantis policies drove that boom: He’s controlled state spending, taxes and regulation to nurture the economy, and even reformed Florida’s once-insane liability laws. And he delivered big-time on other issues. His 2022 Parental Rights in Education Act handed power back to families by preventing schools from hiding woke brainwashi­ng and social transition­s — and he expanded it this year. He defunded racist “Diversity, Equity & Inclusion” initiative­s at public colleges across the state, moved against Critical Race Theory in the private sector with his

Stop W.O.K.E. Act and cracked down on migrant trafficker­s and businesses that illegally employ the undocument­ed.

He’s proved that he doesn’t just talk the talk, but also walks the walk. And now DeSantis is taking it up a notch. In just his first night in the race, he did multiple events displaying a mastery of subjects far beyond showman Trump or senescent Biden.

While Trump played golf (for the Saudis!) on Thursday and Biden got ready to leave his basement for yet another vacation, DeSantis prepped for a four-day, multi-state tour packed with events in Iowa and New Hampshire — where voters pride themselves on giving prez candidates a good grilling.

He’ll need that energy and his COVID cojones for the central mission of our next president: ripping out the roots of radical ideology that the majority never voted for, but has nonetheles­s burrowed deep into every foundation of American public life far beyond just the federal government.

He’s taken the fight to Disney; as president, he’ll need to take it to BlackRock, the Justice Department and the Ivy League.

DeSantis would also have time to undertake this momentous task — the potential for eight years in office while Trump would be term-limited.

For all his strengths, there are weaknesses he must accept and face. Voters expect in their president not just a mastery of detail but also a likable looseness. They expect them to wear the great burden of office lightly (or at least appear to do so).

The campaign trail is long and it may well be that as DeSantis gets in his stride he finds he can relax a bit more.

Voters want to know their president by his most humble human nature, too. They also want to be soothed, not just girded for each morning’s new life-and-death battle.

The greatest statesmen can also connect all those concrete plans to something higher, nobler and more hopeful: a vision of a healed, prosperous America, confident of her place in the world and her domestic stability.

DeSantis must also explain more fully his position on the issues that will likely dominate the next general election. With recession looming and the world in growing turmoil, the election will turn on pocketbook issues and facing down the nation’s overseas adversarie­s.

As Trump dodges and feints left and the wider GOP grapples with competing views on the ballooning deficit, welfare budget and Ukraine (plus America’s role in the world at large), DeSantis must robustly articulate where he stands. Man does not live (nor Republican­s win) by culture wars alone.

We look forward to the campaign to bring debate clarity on all of this, from DeSantis and the rest of the pack. With his much-anticipate­d entry, the race is truly on.

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Ron DeSantis

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