San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

DeSantis tells donors that only he can win

- By Maggie Haberman, Jonathan Swan and Nicholas Nehamas

Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida all but declared his presidenti­al candidacy Thursday afternoon, telling donors and supporters on a call that only three “credible” candidates were in the race and that only he would be able to win both the Republican primary and the general election.

“You have basically three people at this point that are credible in this whole thing,” DeSantis told donors on the call, organized by the super PAC supporting him, Never Back Down. “Biden, Trump and me. And I think of those three, two have a chance to get elected president — Biden and me, 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.”

The call, to which a New York Times reporter listened, came as the governor is expected to officially enter the presidenti­al race next week, according to three people familiar with his intentions.

DeSantis is expected to file paperwork declaring his candidacy with the Federal Election Commission before a major fundraisin­g meeting with donors in Miami on May 25 that is meant to act as a show of his financial force. He must formally enter the race before he can solicit donations for his presidenti­al campaign.

He is also likely to release a video to coincide with his official entrance into the race, and a blitz of events in the early nominating states will follow in the weeks ahead, according to one of the people. The Wall Street Journal first reported that DeSantis would file the paperwork next week.

During the donor call, DeSantis did not mention his battle with The Walt Disney Co., which Thursday pulled out of a $1 billion office developmen­t project in Orlando. And he spent little time discussing divisive cultural subjects on the call, which included many business officials who do

not favor his aggressive stances on those issues.

He said the attitude of Republican voters amounted to, “We’ve got to win this time.” And while he praised Trump’s policies, he said that Biden had undone many of them.

DeSantis quoted a voter he had talked with at an event in Iowa as saying, “You know, Trump was somebody, we liked his policies but we didn’t like his values. And with you, we like your policies but also know that you share our values.”

And DeSantis described his efforts to help the party, noting that Trump and other Republican­s had repeatedly attacked him. “There are some that kind of raise money just for themselves,”

he said, an unmistakab­le jab at Trump, who was criticized during the midterm elections for sitting on a large pile of cash in his political action committee and not doing enough to help others.

He also boasted of his successful visit to Des Moines, Iowa, over the weekend after Trump canceled his own rally in the area, citing a tornado watch.

DeSantis talked with pride about the Florida legislativ­e session and the state’s budget, walking through a list of items that he was happy to have accomplish­ed on environmen­tal issues and education. He described a “great body of work” and said he would not “cede any issues to the left.”

He did not take questions and was the only person who spoke

on the call. But he suggested that his ability to respond to what he described as months of attacks would soon change, a veiled reference to becoming a candidate.

“When we say we’re going to do something, we do it, and get it done,” DeSantis said of his approach in the state, an indirect contrast with Trump, whom some Republican­s have criticized for unfinished work when he was president.

DeSantis suggested that Trump had leaned too heavily on executive action instead of helping push measures through Congress, and pointed to his own work during legislativ­e sessions in Florida as a contrast.

DeSantis, who was a Navy officer during the Iraq War, noted

that he would be the only veteran in the race. And he drew a distinctio­n in another area of Trump’s record, one that harks back to DeSantis’ time as a congressma­n elected the cycle after the Tea Party wave of 2010, when the focus was on limiting government spending.

“Certainly in the Trump administra­tion, there wasn’t the emphasis” on curtailing spending that there was during the Tea Party era, he said.

At another point, DeSantis was blunt, saying, “I think the voters want to move on from Biden,” adding, “They just want a vehicle they can get behind” but “there’s just too many voters that don’t view Trump as that vehicle.”

 ?? Haiyun Jiang/New York Times ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis privately told his supporters Thursday that he would be able to win the presidency against Joe Biden.
Haiyun Jiang/New York Times Gov. Ron DeSantis privately told his supporters Thursday that he would be able to win the presidency against Joe Biden.

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