Springfield News-Sun

Did no one tell Desantis Trump was running, too?

- Jamelle Bouie writes for The New York Times.

Despite the early enthusiasm for his policies and political persona in various corners of the conservati­ve media, it was easy to see from the start that Ron Desantis would not — and clearly does not — have the juice to defeat or supplant Donald Trump in a Republican presidenti­al primary.

Part of this was the Florida governor’s soft skills or rather lack thereof. He is not a people person. He does not excel at the task of retail politics. He is not, to put it gently, strong on the stump, and he has a bad habit of speaking in the esoteric and jargon-filled language of online conservati­ves.

Consider his first major performanc­e in Iowa last year, in front of an audience of likely Republican caucusgoer­s. “We say very clearly in the state of Florida that we will fight the woke in the Legislatur­e,” Desantis said, as he tried to rouse the crowd to applause. “We will fight the woke in education, we will fight the woke in the businesses, we will never ever surrender to the woke mob. Our state is where woke goes to die.”

There is a relatively small group of people for whom this is a resonant message. For everyone else, it is basically static. Desantis’ inability to create a compelling message, however, might not have been fatal to his campaign if he had been able to distance or distinguis­h himself from Trump.

But Desantis chose to run as Trump’s heir apparent and treated him as if he wasn’t actually in the race. He could not turn on the former president without underminin­g the premise of his own campaign. And so Desantis sat silent or even defended Trump against legal accountabi­lity for his actions in office. “Washington, D.C. is a ‘swamp’ and it is unfair to have to stand trial before a jury that is reflective of the swamp mentality,” Desantis wrote on X. “One of the reasons our country is in decline is the politiciza­tion of the rule of law. No more excuses — I will end the weaponizat­ion of the federal government.”

To the extent that Desantis tried to differenti­ate himself, it was by running to Trump’s political right. The Florida governor in this view would be a more competent Trump — the Trump who gets things done. It was a good pitch for the conservati­ve intellectu­als, but it was a terrible pitch to the Republican electorate, which did not nominate Trump because of his ability to clear a checklist of agenda items.

And the things Desantis emphasized — especially his record as governor during COVID — were just not relevant to the current state of politics and could not compete with a former president whose primary message was — and is — to get “retributio­n” on his enemies.

Desantis also refused to contest Trump’s election denialism, a choice that almost guaranteed his failure in the primaries. Can you seriously position yourself as a winner and Trump as a loser when the consensus of the voters you are seeking to win is that Trump didn’t lose?

The fact is that the only way Desantis — or any other Republican candidate — could have prevailed is if Trump were not in the race to begin with. As it stands, he’s just the latest Republican presidenti­al candidate to bend the knee to Trump after a ritual humiliatio­n at the polls. Nikki Haley will probably be next.

If there is anything else to take away from Desantis’ failure to launch — besides the apparent truism that what plays in Florida doesn’t necessaril­y play anywhere else — it’s that nearly a decade after Trump announced his first real campaign for the White House, elite conservati­ves still don’t understand the source of his appeal or his connection to Republican voters.

The two groups ultimately want two different things. Elite conservati­ves want a president who will reconfigur­e and consolidat­e the executive branch and cement conservati­ve influence on the federal judiciary and in the federal bureaucrac­y.

Republican voters, on the other hand, want a fighting champion. They want a spectacle. Desantis promised a Trump presidency without the drama, but Republican voters want the drama. The chaos isn’t a distractio­n; it’s the point. Republican voters like Trump not despite his failings; they like Trump because he is Trump. And there’s nothing any other Republican can do about it.

 ?? ?? Jamelle Bouie
Jamelle Bouie

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