The Capital

The curious case of candidate Ron DeSantis

- Carl P. Leubsdorf Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Early assessment­s of presidenti­al candidacie­s are dangerous — and often wrong.

“Ike is running like a dry creek,” the Scripps-Howard newspapers concluded in the summer of 1952, less than three months before World War II hero Dwight Eisenhower captured the presidency with more than 55% of the vote.

More recently, then-Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain were both tabbed as losers because of slow starts in the year before they won the 2008 Democratic and Republican presidenti­al nomination­s.

On the other hand, some highly touted candidates flopped, like Mayor Rudy Giuliani in 2008 and Govs. Scott Walker and Jeb Bush in 2016.

That brings us to the curious case of Ron DeSantis. Long touted as a top 2024 GOP prospect, some pundits are already counting the Florida governor out before he formally enters the presidenti­al race, possibly later this month.

“DeSantis loses momentum before his campaign has even started,” was a recent headline on NBC News’ daily “Meet the Press First Read” political column. “DeSantis, on defense, shows signs of slipping in polls,” was the header of a New York Times analysis.

Early polls, always quirky and often questionab­le, show Donald Trump’s margin over DeSantis among Republican­s has increased at a time when the former president’s principal headlines billboarde­d his New York indictment for allegedly paying “hush money” to a porn star.

Reelected last November by more than 1.5 million votes, the Florida governor is learning what many other politician­s have discovered over the years: Running for president is a lot harder than running for statewide office, even in so large and diverse a state as Florida.

When he recently stumbled by characteri­zing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as a “territoria­l dispute,” DeSantis attracted several days of headlines — and sharp criticism from Trump and other top Republican­s.

At the same time, DeSantis has seemed more eager to fight with Mickey Mouse and Bud Light than Donald Trump.

But as he tries to translate his Florida popularity into national success, DeSantis needs to realize they’re not his main problems.

His problems are that neither political defeat nor legal indictment has so far shaken Trump’s hold on the GOP electorate and DeSantis has yet to develop a strategy to loosen that hold.

Like other hopefuls, he has been reluctant to attack Trump directly, though he made several pointed personal comments about the former president.

Instead, DeSantis has adopted the questionab­le strategy of attacking Trump from the right, taking even more extreme positions on cultural issues like abortion and joining the current Republican effort to curb people identifyin­g as transgende­r.

“Florida is where woke goes to die,” DeSantis declared in his second inaugural address last January, touting a series of measures designed to protect Florida’s kids from conversing about racial and sexual issues.

He has continued to push such measures in the current Florida legislativ­e session, seeking to extend last year’s ban on classroom discussion of racial and sexual issues from the first three grades to grade 12 and signing a new Florida law restrictin­g abortions to the first six weeks of pregnancy.

At the same time, he escalated his fight with the Walt Disney Co. over the outspoken opposition by some Disney executives to his legislativ­e proposals.

In addition, DeSantis, who gained a reputation in Florida as not the most personable of politician­s, is paying a price for failing to cultivate friendship­s with fellow Republican­s.

That has been especially noteworthy in his inability to attract support from fellow Florida Republican­s. So far, 11 of its 19 GOP

House members have endorsed Trump, with just one, Rep. Laurel Lee, for DeSantis.

One Trump backer, Rep. Greg Steube, said, when he recently was injured from falling off a ladder, Trump phoned the ICU to check on him. “To this day, I have not heard from Gov. DeSantis,” Steube told Politico.

DeSantis’ recent Washington meeting to woo Republican House members failed to net him any additional endorsemen­ts. But Texas Rep. Lance Gooden walked out of the room and endorsed Trump.

Still, DeSantis remains the only Republican aspirant besides Trump with a national following. Despite current campaignin­g, the race won’t really be joined until the first televised debate in August in Milwaukee.

By then, Trump could face additional charges stemming from his efforts to overturn his 2020 defeat.

Meanwhile, polls show Trump’s support is less solid in Iowa and New Hampshire than nationally, a pattern that some years ago foretold the subsequent early caucus and primary problems of another front-runner, Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Unfortunat­ely for DeSantis, retail politickin­g is crucial in Iowa and New Hampshire. But he has yet to show he enjoys or excels in that, complicati­ng the effort to overcome his current deficit.

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