The Arizona Republic

A Trump v. DeSantis battlegrou­nd

- Jill Lawrence Columnist USA TODAY USA TODAY NETWORK Jill Lawrence is a columnist for USA TODAY and author of “The Art of the Political Deal: How Congress Beat the Odds and Broke Through Gridlock.” Follow her on Twitter and Post.News

It was inevitable that less than two weeks after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis asked a dozen colleges for detailed medical informatio­n on transgende­r students, his latest move to restrict care for transgende­r people, former President Donald Trump would feel the need to attack transgende­r rights and health care at a South Carolina rally, release a video bashing “Left-Wing Gender Insanity” and vow that “under my leadership, this madness will end. ”

The shape of the contest between the Republican Party’s top 2024 White House aspirants is already clear: When one goes low, the other goes lower.

The GOP race so far not only turns Michelle Obama’s high-minded advice on its head, it gives new life and meaning to the phrase “punching down.” Why attack the rich and powerful, the white, the heterosexu­al, the Christian, the Ivy Leaguers and those who don’t have to worry about not fitting in or not being safe, when you can go after people who are simply trying to be themselves in a society that makes that uncomforta­ble and even dangerous?

DeSantis expanding control of Florida

DeSantis, whose wife once posted a video portraying him as sent by God to save Florida or America or maybe the world, has taken Trump’s 2016 “I alone can fix it” pitch to impressive new heights as he ponders and prepares for a 2024 race. In education, DeSantis dove into local school board races to shape them to his liking.

At New College in Sarasota, he is turning a small, unconventi­onal college into a small, Christian conservati­ve college, starting with new trustees who include critical race theory agitator Christophe­r Rufo.

Florida’s Republican legislatur­e just finished a special session expanding his powers. That special self-governing Disney tax district he eliminated last year? A new law will replace local property owners with five supervisor­s named by DeSantis to oversee Disney’s theme parks. (That makes Disney the governor’s “political prisoner,” said Democratic state Rep. Anna Eskamani.)

That new election police force DeSantis created to arrest Floridians for voting? Another new law will make it easier to prosecute election crimes. That time DeSantis had a few dozen confused migrants flown from Texas to Massachuse­tts’ Martha’s Vineyard? The legislatur­e also authorized him to “relocate” migrants anywhere he wants from any state he wants using Florida taxpayer money.

DeSantis months ago banned or limited classroom teaching and conversati­on about LGBTQ people and Black history, and tried to limit the First Amendment right to protest. Now he’s trying to ban diversity, equity and inclusion programs at Florida universiti­es.

Trump opens with fighting words

Trump opened his 2024 campaign with fighting words on transgende­r issues and CRT, a college-level framework for analyzing systemic racism. “We’re going to stop the left-wing radical racists and perverts who are trying to indoctrina­te our youth, and we’re going to get their Marxist hands off of our children,” he said in South Carolina late last month. “We’re going to defeat the cult of gender ideology and reaffirm that God created two genders: men and women.”

Speaking in a “packed foyer” at the statehouse, Trump reprised his 2015 attacks on immigrants as undesirabl­es. “They’re coming from prisons, and they’re coming from mental institutio­ns, and they’re coming from a lot of bad places, that’s going to cause us a lot of problems,” he said. In New Hampshire, he told GOP leaders: “I’m more angry now and I’m more committed now than I ever was.”

Oh joy.

You would think some Republican prospects might provide respite from election lies and cultural warfare. For instance, former South Carolina Gov. and United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, 51, who is announcing her presidenti­al bid Wednesday. The daughter of Indian immigrants, Haley was the first woman and first ethnic minority to be governor of South Carolina, and as U.N. ambassador in 2017, she was the first Indian American in a Cabinet-level position.

Big Lie and culture war detours

She was governor when white supremacis­t Dylann Roof murdered nine Black people in a shooting rampage at a Charleston church. She had backed the Confederat­e battle flag at the state Capitol but after the massacre led the drive to remove it.

In a 2010 New York Times article that called her “the different one,” she talked about navigating race, religion and gender throughout her life.

Other governors (Chris Sununu of New Hampshire, Glenn Youngkin of Virginia) and former governors (Larry Hogan of Maryland, Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas) also seem like they could bring a degree of fact-based moderation to the primary campaign. But almost every GOP prospect, Haley included, has made disturbing detours into Big Lie territory, supporting and sometimes campaignin­g for 2022 election deniers like Arizona’s Kari Lake and New Hampshire’s Don Bolduc.

Most are not sitting out the culture wars, either. Youngkin banned CRT and set up a tip line to report “divisive” teaching, but it closed down for lack of use. He also supports restrictin­g abortion but has been thwarted by Democrats and reluctant Republican­s.

Haley recently called Democrats “extremists” on abortion. And though as governor she dealt with both the church massacre and the killing of an unarmed Black man by a white police officer, she recently tweeted that “CRT is un-American.”

How is that not denialism?

Trump and DeSantis are the pair most animated by the culture wars. It’s easy to see Haley as a running mate for either of them. But it’s hard to see her or anyone else dislodging them from the headlines and their pole positions. Even once and possibly future Trump critics are hedging their bets.

Charlie Sykes, editor in chief of the Never-Trump Bulwark website, calls them “maybe-Trump Republican­s” performing “normie Kabuki theater” to avoid having to swear off Trump forever. Just in case.

Biden is a welcoming contrast to GOP

There’s a deep fear among conservati­ves that a splintered field would be 2016 all over again – so many Trump rivals that no one consolidat­ed enough support to beat him. Sununu recently said “yes” when CNN recently asked whether he were considerin­g a 2024 run, only to provoke a plea from conservati­ve Jim Geraghty to set a GOP example and stay out.

Yet a large field could be the least of the GOP’s problems. The American story, as President Joe Biden said in his State of the Union address, is “progress and resilience“and seeing each other as “fellow Americans,” from Republican­s who didn’t vote for him to “LBGTQ Americans, especially transgende­r young people,” who want to “live with safety and dignity.”

The goal is to give everyone the space and opportunit­y to live their best life by their definition. Not mine. Not yours. Not Biden’s.

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, responding to Biden for the GOP, conjured phantom threats of “woke” mobs, radicalism, indoctrina­tion and children taught “to hate one another.”

This is the Republican identity now, and the Trump-DeSantis battlegrou­nd. It’s going to be a long campaign – especially for people who, with good reason, fear what might happen to their American dreams if Trump or DeSantis becomes president.

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