The Guardian (USA)

A once or future king? Floridians ask if DeSantis is looking forward or back

- Richard Luscombe in Miami

Two weeks have passed since Ron DeSantis crashed out of the race for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, but many in Florida are questionin­g if the rightwing governor is still auditionin­g.

On his return to Tallahasse­e following his national humiliatio­n there was no period of quiet contemplat­ion, or pause to refocus on his day job. Instead, DeSantis got straight down to business, little of it having immediate consequenc­e to Florida or its voters.

This week, insisting that the US looked to Florida for “leadership”, he called for constituti­onal reforms in Washington, including term limits for elected officials. Days later, he announced he was sending the Florida state guard to Texas to “fortify” its battle with the Biden administra­tion over border security.

And anybody in his home state figuring DeSantis was ready to move on from his obsession with the culture war issues that helped bring down his White House run was quickly disabused. One month into the year, Florida Republican­s’ priorities have included banning Pride flags and stopping transgende­r drivers from changing their sex on licenses.

Prominent questions circulatin­g in the state are, now he is back to serve his final three years as governor: what are DeSantis’s intentions? And what is his ultimate goal?

There is no shortage of theories. Some suggest he is ostensibly still in the race for the 2024 nomination, running a shadow campaign that would leave him ready to step in if legal troubles or other factors force Donald Trump out of contention.

Others think he’s plotting further ahead. “He’s still running for president, just changed the timeline from 2024 to 2028,” Bob Jarvis, a constituti­onal law professor at Nova University, told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

Another possibilit­y is gaining traction among those who have studied DeSantis since he evolved from a nondescrip­t and aloof US congressma­n to the helm of the third largest state: that he simply wants to be remembered for something when he’s termed out of office in January 2027.

Such a hypothesis has plausibili­ty if, as some observers believe, his future political career was mortally wounded by the implosion of a profligate presidenti­al campaign that blew through $160m to garner barely 23,000 votes in Iowa, the only state he competed in.

“My personal opinion is that he’s finished, that he’s going to go the way of Rick Perry in Texas, Tim Pawlenty in Minnesota, Scott Walker in Wisconsin, all of these great governors who were going to be president, who were like shooting stars and then disappeare­d into the darkness,” said the political analyst Mac Stipanovic­h, a former Republican strategist.

“If he were to resign today, he would have a legacy in Florida unlike almost any governor in my lifetime. It would be a legacy of anger, outrage and highly centralize­d top-down vitriol.

“He can’t turn on a dime and sprint left because that would make him seem even more inauthenti­c than he normally does. But if he’s patient, if he takes time, he can move to the center and become, I shouldn’t say more likable, but likable at all since he has been

a black hole of anti-charisma.”

The “legacy” theory resonates with Susan MacManus, distinguis­hed professor emeritus of political science at the University of Florida. “He’s still got a good while in office, and right now he’s carrying on with points he was making on the campaign trail, but this happens with governors that run and come back home after having not done well, governors are always thinking about their legacy,” she said.

“Some want to be known as the education governor, the tax relief or tax reform governor, the environmen­tal governor. There’s that possibilit­y, but if he’s going to take that direction it is probably best to just get through this legislativ­e session being consistent with what you’ve been on the campaign trail.

“Maybe he’s comfortabl­e with his legacy being the ‘anti-wokeism’ governor, we will see. Some Republican­s say they see the environmen­t as a possibilit­y for him, making inroads and having a good legacy because he’s been fairly proactive spending a lot of money on water issues and so forth, but it looks right now there’s been no break in his commitment to anti-wokeism.”

To that end, on Wednesday, DeSantis celebrated a ruling by a Trump-appointed district court judge dismissing Disney’s lawsuit against the state for “political retaliatio­n”, the stripping of powers from Florida’s largest private employer for opposing his “don’t say gay” law banning classroom discussion of gender identity and sexual orientatio­n.

His backing of the Texas governor, Greg Abbott, by sending state and national guard personnel, and law enforcemen­t officers paid by Florida taxpayers, to bolster his fellow Republican’s fight with federal authoritie­s over immigratio­n is to critics another example of DeSantis placing his political agenda above the needs of his own state.

There’s also growing evidence it could backfire. A survey by Mi Vecino, a grassroots voter registrati­on and advocacy group, found 58% of Republican respondent­s rated as “very poor”, and an additional 18% as “poor”, the effectiven­ess of Florida’s political leaders to handle issues that mattered most to them: in order, the cost of living, healthcare and gun violence.

“People are feeling the squeeze. They are struggling with real world issues, and they feel like the governor and the legislatur­e are spending their time on manufactur­ed outrage, and not legislatin­g or improving their lives in any tangible way,” said Alex Berrios, the group’s co-founder.

“Ron DeSantis has created an engaged segment of the Republican party that will vote, is involved, and is also incredibly unhappy with him and the Republican legislatur­e. They have become exhausted by this firehose of outrage and legislatio­n and policy.”

He can move to the center and become, I shouldn’t say more likable, but likable at all since he has been a black hole of anticharis­ma

Mac Stipanovic­h

 ?? ?? Ron DeSantis’s presidenti­al campaign blew through $160m to garner barely 23,000 votes in Iowa. Photograph: Nikhinson Julia/ABACA/ REX/Shuttersto­ck
Ron DeSantis’s presidenti­al campaign blew through $160m to garner barely 23,000 votes in Iowa. Photograph: Nikhinson Julia/ABACA/ REX/Shuttersto­ck

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