The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

DeSantis advisers prepare for potential presidenti­al run,

- By Hannah Knowles

Advisers to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis are actively preparing for a possible presidenti­al run, according to two Republican­s with knowledge of the conversati­ons who described meetings and preliminar­y staffing moves — the latest indication that DeSantis is laying a foundation for a national campaign.

DeSantis’s political team has already identified multiple potential hires in early primary states such as New Hampshire and Iowa, according to one of the Republican­s, who said experience­d operatives have expressed interest. This Republican also said that Phil Cox and Generra Peck — two key members of DeSantis’s 2022 reelection team — are involved in ongoing talks about 2024.

Another Republican with knowledge of the conversati­ons said DeSantis advisers met recently to discuss the 2024 election. The Republican­s spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private talks.

Some in DeSantis’ orbit expect Cox and Peck would play roles in a DeSantis run, if it happens. Cox, a former executive director of the Republican Governors Associatio­n, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment, nor did Peck, who was the campaign manager for DeSantis’ decisive midterm victory over Democrat Charlie Crist.

Spokespeop­le for DeSantis did not respond to a request for comment Friday.

DeSantis is widely seen as a formidable potential challenger to former president Donald Trump, who is hitting the trail for the first time this weekend since his November campaign announceme­nt, with planned Saturday stops in New Hampshire and South Carolina. Some recent polling has shown DeSantis pulling ahead of Trump, including a survey released this week that had the governor leading the ex-president among likely Republican primary voters in New Hampshire.

Bill Bowen, a New Hampshire GOP delegate, said that enthusiasm for a DeSantis campaign is high in his state. “I’m convinced there’s a good network of establishm­ent party people in New Hampshire that will quickly have a very effective DeSantis campaign,” Bowen said.

But DeSantis has said little about his ambitions for 2024 and has dodged questions about his plans. His 19-point reelection margin in Florida this past fall cemented his status as a rising star in the party, just as many Republican­s grew newly doubtful of Trump’s ability to deliver conservati­ve wins after many of his endorsed candidates lost key races in the midterms.

DeSantis is one of many Republican­s making moves toward entering the 2024 presidenti­al race. Alternativ­e possible candidates include members of Trump’s administra­tion, such as former vice president Mike Pence, and a host of other governors some of them aligned with Trump, and others who have vocally criticized the former president.

DeSantis, a former congressma­n, won his first term as governor narrowly in 2018 after pitching himself as an ardent Trump ally and winning the former president’s endorsemen­t. He quickly gained national prominence for his response to the coronaviru­s pandemic, moving to lift restrictio­ns earlier than many other governors and opposing mask and vaccine mandates.

He has cast himself as an enemy of the “woke” left and embraced fights over divisive social issues, working with the Republican-led Florida legislatur­e to restrict school discussion­s of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity and feuding with Disney after its leaders criticized the policy.

In his second term, DeSantis has leaned further into fights that galvanize the GOP base. In the span of a few weeks he has sought to reshape a public liberal arts college with conservati­ve board members; faced backlash from civil rights leaders and Democrats over his administra­tion’s decision to bar an Advanced Placement high school course on African American studies; and announced measures against what his office called the “biomedical security state” while featuring a doctor who has baselessly claimed that coronaviru­s vaccines caused the death of Elvis Presley’s daughter.

GOP supermajor­ities in the state legislatur­e give DeSantis further power to enact his agenda this term, and Republican­s expect to tackle issues such as abortion, data privacy, “constituti­onal carry” for firearms and the use of “environmen­tal, social and governance” criteria in investing, which some conservati­ves have criticized.

Even as DeSantis has built a reputation beyond his state’s borders, he has never waged a national campaign and some Republican­s wonder whether his success will hold on the biggest political stage.

One measure of his ability to persuade political insiders came this week when he praised Harmeet Dhillon, a candidate for Republican National Committee chair, in an interview with conservati­ve activist Charlie Kirk, saying, “I think we need a change.” On Friday Dhillon was defeated by incumbent Ronna McDaniel.

 ?? David Becker/For The Washington Post ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during the Republican Jewish Coalition annual leadership meeting in Las Vegas in November.
David Becker/For The Washington Post Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during the Republican Jewish Coalition annual leadership meeting in Las Vegas in November.

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