The Day

How DeSantis can secure his lead

- By HeNry olseN

If Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis decides to enter the 2024 Republican presidenti­al race, he almost certainly will do so after his state’s legislativ­e session ends in early May. Until then, he should use that session to burnish his already formidable national identity by focusing on three areas of interest to GOP primary voters: immigratio­n, education and abortion.

Immigratio­n remains a hot-button issue, especially for conservati­ves. DeSantis has already highlighte­d his opposition to illegal immigratio­n with his politicall­y brilliant stunt over the summer of flying migrants to Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., a vacation mecca for elite liberals. Nonetheles­s, he would benefit from having something tangible to bring to the national stage to show he is even stronger and more successful than former president Donald Trump on the issue.

He could do that by requiring Florida businesses to use E-Verify to check the employment eligibilit­y of job applicants. Eight states already mandate the use of E-Verify, and DeSantis expanded Florida’s use of the system in 2021, when he signed a law requiring public employers and private employers who contract with them to use the system. But that law exempts purely private-sector employers, which hire the bulk of Florida’s workers. That means migrants who arrive in the Sunshine State illegally can still find plenty of jobs.

DeSantis would make national news and differenti­ate himself from Trump if he moved to close that loophole. Florida would be the largest state to require E-Verify if he were to succeed. Trump, on the other hand, has never made the idea a significan­t component of his immigratio­n policy, relying instead on his signature idea of building a wall on the Mexican border.

On education, DeSantis has done a good job promoting conservati­ve school board candidates and generally battling against “woke” ideology in school curriculum­s. But again, he needs a signature education policy that can unite moderates and conservati­ves. Universal school choice could be that idea.

Many conservati­ves have abandoned their old emphasis on vouchers and instead embraced “education savings accounts.” That is somewhat of a misnomer as the idea does not involve savings at all. Instead, it allows the parent of any school-age child to use the state’s allocation for K-12 education however they want.

Four GOP-controlled states have enacted such a program since the pandemic, but none are as large or diverse as Florida.

Finally, there is abortion. This is a difficult issue to address for many Republican­s, but DeSantis could take a novel stance by embracing modest reform to public sex-education classes. Florida currently does not mandate sex-ed instructio­n, but it does provide certain requiremen­ts and guidelines for local districts that choose to teach it. DeSantis could begin to change the debate over abortion by moving to require all sex-education instructio­n include a thorough discussion of fetal developmen­t and its effect on the health of the mother.

This idea places facts at the center of a child’s understand­ing of the consequenc­es of sex.

Adopting this approach would place DeSantis in the realm of someone who is pro-life but also temperate.

DeSantis will surely push for other, less-striking accomplish­ments during the next few months. Focusing on these three would give him something most aspiring candidates can only dream of: the appearance of a president in the making.

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