The Palm Beach Post

DeSantis ends his bid for president — and Florida awaits the result

- R. Bruce Anderson Columnist R. Bruce Anderson is a professor of political science at Florida Southern College, a columnist for The Ledger and a commentato­r for WLKF Radio in Lakeland.

Gov. Ron DeSantis is out. Nikki Haley’s stab at an upset in New Hampshire was doomed – probably from the start. South Carolina looms as a disaster in the making, unless your name is Donald J. Trump.

And we’re about to embark on the longest general election campaign in the nation’s history. The conversion from a policymaki­ng apparatus occasional­ly punctuated by elections to an endless election only very occasional­ly punctuated by something masqueradi­ng as policy has finally topped the horizon.

It’s a season made to consist of a feeble battle between two of the singularly most unpopular candidates ever to run for office. Something like 80% of polled voters identified this Trump v. Biden fiasco as the one thing they did not want in 2024.

Yet here we are. DeSantis did endorse Trump on his way out the door, but it seemed, at least to me, a decidedly lukewarm blessing of the anointed one. The campaign failed, and there will be far and away enough people out there taking delight in the autopsy of its failings and missteps. I’d rather have a harder look at the future.

Dropping off the vine means the governor is headed home to Florida, where there’s plenty to keep anyone busy as the legislativ­e season kicks off. There are some slight indication­s, I think, that we may see a different context; a slightly altered state.

Whatever one might think of the folly of the last legislativ­e agenda, it was aimed at a presidenti­al run. The new session has its own possibilit­ies – and it, too, may have political implicatio­ns for the governor.

While he was away, a number of lunatic bills have been dropped, including some half-witted nonsense about the state of Florida footing former President Trump’s legal bills. Despite the support of Florida’s CFO and the enthusiasm of several bright-eyed but flatly empty-headed senators, DeSantis swiftly indicated that he would likely veto such a measure, and the bill was withdrawn.

But the fact that anyone would publicly envision dedicating $5 millions of Florida’s tax dollars to an idiocy like this without first checking with the boss is a red flag. Has the governor lost authority since dropping out of the presidenti­al run? Are the fickle denizens of Tallahasse­e’s halls o’ power forgetting his margin of support back in 2022? Is it all over?

No. Or, it need not be.

I remember the guy who took over the reins in 2018 – before presidenti­al ambitions hijacked the agenda. If the governor is thinking of another grab at the presidenti­al brass ring, re-creating, reviving and reinventin­g that guy is the way forward.

DeSantis was a problem-solver; a conservati­ve, yes, but determined to preserve the Everglades, stop or mitigate beach erosion and take a firm hand with the sugar industry to stop the kind of pollution that is choking our streams with stinking algae and toxic goo.

DeSantis is an energetic, resourcefu­l guy. He is not likely to sit still for long. We should all hope that whatever drives him forward, he’ll take up the challenge of the red meat issues of Florida for the balance of his term.

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