South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

DeSantis outpaces Trump on Fox mentions for first time

Network coverage a GOP primary measure

- By Anthony Man

Gov. Ron DeSantis has for the first time passed former President Donald Trump in mentions on Fox, the all-important source of informatio­n for Republican primary voters, a shift that could have an impact on the contest for the 2024 Republican presidenti­al nomination.

Media Matters for America, the liberal organizati­on that monitors conservati­ve media, reported Tuesday that Fox mentioned DeSantis more often than Trump from March 5-11, the first week that’s happened in 2023.

Fox played a major role in DeSantis’ rise from a junior member of the U.S. House to governor and now contender — all but officially declared — for the Republican presidenti­al nomination.

It’s a favorite venue for DeSantis, and he’s a favored guest for Fox.

It was in response to Fox host Tucker Carlson’s questionna­ire that DeSantis made presidenti­al campaign news, declaring that

he didn’t see that defending Ukraine, which was invaded by Russia, as vital to U.S. interests. Some leading Republican­s disagree.

And it was on Saturday night, March 11, when he was the subject of a glowing profile on “One Nation with Brian Kilmeade,” during which DeSantis and Kilmeade played catch on the Dunedin field where DeSantis played Little League baseball.

Until the week of March 5, Media Matters reported, Fox personalit­ies and guests mentioned Trump more often than DeSantis every week this year.

For the first 10 weeks of 2023 Fox mentioned Trump at least 1,571 times and DeSantis at least 791 times.

From March 5-11, the score switched to at least 177 mentions of DeSantis and 142 for Trump. DeSantis’ mentions are likely inflated by his nationwide book tour stops and visits to key states in the presidenti­al nominating process.

“Over time, slowly, it will wear into Trump’s base,” said Jim Kane, who has polled for Democratic and Republican clients and is former adjunct professor teaching graduate students in political science at the University of Florida.

Susan MacManus, a retired political science professor at the University of South Florida, where one of her courses was on media and politics, said Fox is enormously influentia­l among Republican voters who watch television.

Fox nighttime host “Tucker Carlson, he’s an opinion leader” for those voters, she said.

Younger voters, regardless of parties, aren’t big television watchers — preferring other ways to get informatio­n — so the

impact from Fox is limited for them, MacManus said.

“The podcasts really seem to be grabbing the young conservati­ves,” she said.

Since the beginning of this year DeSantis has appeared on the network seven times, Media Matters said. Trump, by contrast, has not had any appearance­s this year.

The Murdoch family, which controls Fox and other right-leaning outlets such as the New York Post, has been seen as leaning toward DeSantis for some time.

On Nov. 9, the day after the Florida governor won reelection by 19 points last year, the New York Post put him on the front page with a headline proclaimin­g, “DeFUTURE,” called him a “young GOP star” and relegated the much closer reelection win of the New York governor to a line at the bottom of the page.

The paper’s Nov. 10 cover depicted the former president as “Trumpty dumpty” about to have a great fall. And on Nov. 16 it relegated Trump’s announceme­nt that he’d seek the 2024 presidenti­al nomination to the bottom of the front page with the headline “Florida man makes announceme­nt.”

DeSantis’ book, “The Courage to Be Free,” is published by HarperColl­ins, part of the Murdoch media empire.

Even before the recent uptick in DeSantis mentions, Trump hasn’t been happy with Fox. He’s labeled it the “RINO Network,” which stands for Republican In Name Only, after court filings showed executives and on-air personalit­ies didn’t believe Trump’s claims that the 2020 election was stolen and disparaged the former president.

In a Presidents Day speech to supporters in West Palm Beach, Trump expressed his displeasur­e with the channel.

Close contest

Polling shows a potentiall­y close race for the n o m i n a t i o n b e t we e n Trump and DeSantis.

In a Quinnipiac Poll r e l e a s e d We d n e s d a y, 46% of Republican and Republican-leaning voters support Trump and 32% support DeSantis. No other declared or potential candidate had more than 5%.The numbers are a slight uptick for Trump and decline for DeSantis. In a February poll, Trump led DeSantis 42% to 36%.

The Quinnipiac survey of 677 Republican and Republican-leaning voters was conducted March 9-13 with live callers to landlines and cellphones. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

A CNN poll released Tuesday, showed 40% of Republican­s who indicated they might participat­e in the nominating process cited Trump as their top choice, with 36% naming DeSantis.

All other declared or potential candidates were in single digits.

Trump’s backers were enthusiast­ic, with 76% reporting they’d definitely support him and 59% of DeSantis supporters saying they’d definitely support him.

The CNN poll of 1,045 Republican­s and Republican-leaning independen­ts was conducted online and by telephone March 8-12 by SSRS.

Anthony Man can be reached at aman@ sunsentine­l.com, on Twitter @browardpol­itics and on Post.news/@ browardpol­itics.

 ?? RON JOHNSON/AP PHOTOS ?? Former President Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis both spoke at campaign events in Davenport, Iowa in March.
RON JOHNSON/AP PHOTOS Former President Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis both spoke at campaign events in Davenport, Iowa in March.
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