The Spectrum & Daily News

Can the GOP please have someone to root for in 2024?

- Rodge Reschini Columnist USA TODAY Rodge Reschini, a summer intern with USA TODAY Opinion, is a rising senior at Cornell University. He’s the editor-in-chief of the Cornell Review. Follow him on Twitter: @r_reschini

I am begging the Republican Party for a serious candidate for the 2024 presidenti­al election.

For months, so many of my young conservati­ve friends and I were sure Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was the future of the GOP. DeSantis was supposed to be Donald Trump but without the friendly fire, ridiculous staffing decisions, focus issues and all-around drama.

In short, with DeSantis we would have at least four years of solid, conservati­ve governance instead of four years of reality television.

Then DeSantis came out flat-footed with his own litany of staffing troubles and campaign faux pas. Now, by some polls, DeSantis is lagging behind biotech investor Vivek Ramaswamy in the GOP primary race.

Let’s review the state of the race.

At the top of the ticket is a man facing charges in no fewer than four criminal cases across three jurisdicti­ons. Setting aside the questions – controvers­ial on the right – of whether Trump should have been charged at all, is guilty or innocent, etc., the man is underwater by 27 points with independen­ts.

While Republican­s seemingly have a bottomless reservoir of patience for Trump and his scandals, the Capitol riot, 2020 election talk and indictment­s have made the 45th president toxic among independen­ts. That Trump is neck-and-neck with President Joe Biden in the polls is more indicative of Biden than Trump. Running a candidate anathema to the middle of the country is no way to win a national election.

Below him is DeSantis, whose campaign has gotten off to such a slow start that he just fired his campaign manager. This is the latest in a long line of staff issues that reveal a campaign with no sense of the GOP direction. Are young “online” voters the key to victory? Or Trump’s older demographi­c? Is the party thoroughly populist now, or reverting to Reaganite fusionism?

I don’t know, and DeSantis’ people don’t know, either.

It’s also worth pointing out DeSantis’ hemorrhagi­ng support among the GOP primary base, down 5 percentage points since he launched his campaign nearly three months ago.

The rest of the field is campaignin­g for vice president, with poll numbers that make Democratic presidenti­al candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. look like a serious contender by comparison.

However, because they are still all running and I can already hear the criticism of “there were serious candidates, everyone just ignored them,” the list includes entreprene­ur Vivek Ramaswamy, former Vice President Mike Pence, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum and former Rep. Will Hurd of Texas.

Those who do not follow politics religiousl­y and were not of voting age in 2012 and 2016 will be forgiven for not knowing the last four names.

If the best option the GOP can produce – notwithsta­nding the billionair­e with more indictment­s than I can count – is Ron DeSantis, we have some soul searching to do as a party.

It’s not DeSantis’ policies that test the patience of once-eager young social conservati­ves, it’s his failing campaign strategy. A coalition of Republican­s fed up with Trump and his drama turned to DeSantis, only for his poll numbers to crater immediatel­y after officially announcing his bid.

The sell with DeSantis was his competence – “he’s Trump but smarter!” the media exclaimed in horror, to the delight of Trump-fatigued Republican­s. The staffing issues, campaign direction and horrible social media surrogates tell another story.

If this mess is DeSantis’ primary strategy, do we have any hope of winning the general election? What about running the country for four years?

Who among the current crowd can capture the youngest voter generation – a generation trending in the wrong direction for the Republican Party? Disproport­ionately, Republican voters ages 18-29 support Trump.

Why? Why do so many Republican­s support a man who seemingly gets indicted every other week? Ultimately, we have these candidates because voters chose them, even if only in polls.

Tens of millions of Americans are red-hot angry about being ignored for decades while losing economic and social opportunit­ies. The GOP establishm­ent responded by ignoring these ever-angrier voters. Republican leaders provided no good, conservati­ve candidates with good, conservati­ve solutions to the problems faced by millions. So the people chose Trump, and kept choosing Trump, to send a message.

The party is rudderless, and the cacophony of candidates only displays how deep the division is. Sure, we can’t make up our collective mind on whether Trump won in 2020, but there’s far greater reasons for concern than the fate of a three-year-old election.

The pre-Trump GOP was, more than anything, predictabl­e. The Republican party line was predictabl­y pro-big business, anti-union, with some unsteady mix of libertaria­nism and social conservati­sm depending on the issue. Now, the Republican platform is chaos.

For example, DeSantis earned the adulation of social conservati­ves by putting the screws to Disney as part of his broader anti-“woke” agenda. Yet no less a voice than Pence – and more important, DeSantis’ now presidenti­al primary rival – has castigated the governor’s campaign as “following in the footsteps of the radical left.”

It’s not just corporate policy or the 2020 election that open fissures in the GOP. On every issue from abortion restrictio­ns to immigratio­n, there’s no semblance of widespread agreement. Worse still, candidates are seemingly uninterest­ed in hashing out these disagreeme­nts, engaging in hyper-online meme wars to the detriment of a serious presidenti­al campaign.

The only candidates talking about the issues are receiving no attention or interest from primary voters. It’s probably because people like Ramaswamy are talking about the issues that they’re no-name also-rans. GOP primary voters seem generally uninterest­ed in policy unless it’s accompanie­d by a captivatin­g persona.

We’re running out of time. With less than two weeks before the first Republican primary debate, the only candidate in striking range of Trump is busy defeating himself.

What does Trump have to say about his field of challenger­s? “Let them debate so I can see who I MIGHT consider for Vice President!”

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