Viet Nam News

Long-awaited Desantis White House launch plagued by Twitter meltdown

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Florida governor Ron Desantis's long-awaited entry into the 2024 presidenti­al campaign has descended into a fiasco as the opening of the live Twitter event intended to announce his candidacy was derailed by glitches.

The conversati­on repeatedly crashed on Wednesday as the platform's servers were apparently overwhelme­d, and many of the 400,000-plus users who were hoping to listen in missed the 44-yearold conservati­ve throwing down the gauntlet to Republican primary frontrunne­r Donald Trump.

Desantis finally began speaking after almost half an hour of confusion and chaos -- although what should have been an exultant launch had been thoroughly overshadow­ed by the time he was able to make his case for the Republican nomination.

"I am running for president of the United States to lead our great American comeback," he told the listeners, although tens of thousands had abandoned Twitter by that point.

As the website struggled to get the event back on track, its owner Elon Musk, performing hosting duties, could be heard noting the "massive number of people online" who had caused the servers to begin "straining somewhat".

While organizers sought to highlight the event's popularity -- the Desantis camp said it had raised US$1 million online in one hour -Biden's team was quick to capitalize on the glitches, tweeting a link to a fundraisin­g page and stating: "This link works."

Trump joked on his Truth Social platform that "My Red Button is bigger, better, stronger, and is working" -- an oblique reference to a war of words he once had with North Korea's Kim Jong Un.

The conversati­on eventually went on for more than an hour, but technical gremlins persisted -- a setback mocked as encapsulat­ing the downward turn the governor's image has taken of late.

Long viewed as the most formidable challenger to twice-impeached Trump, Desantis boasts deep midwestern roots, a large campaign fund, a list of ultra-conservati­ve legislativ­e wins and an unblemishe­d record of election victories.

While Trump has dominated headlines with his legal woes, Desantis has presented himself as the tip of the spear in the struggle of ordinary Americans against progressiv­e values he sees as authoritar­ian and divisive.

The governor gave a more traditiona­l interview -- minus the setbacks -- on conservati­ve TV network Fox News after the Twitter event, and tried to reclaim his reputation for order and competence.

"If you nominate me, I pledge to you that on January 20, 2025, at high noon, I'll be the guy on the west side of the Capitol with the left hand on the Bible and the right hand in the air, taking the oath of office as the 47th president of the United States," he said.

"No more excuses -- we've got to get this one done."

Desantis has used his position as Florida's chief executive to stack up a litany of conservati­ve accomplish­ments, signing off on some 80 state laws targeting "woke indoctrina­tion" in schools and other public institutio­ns.

They include a ban on discussing gender identity and sexual orientatio­n in schools, a block on funding efforts to promote diversity at public universiti­es and one of the most restrictiv­e abortion laws in the country.

Trump on the attack

Refraining from explicitly criticizin­g Trump, the governor used the event to draw a distinctio­n between his record of getting policy initiative­s into the statute books and the former president's reputation for legislativ­e inertia and chaos in his personal and profession­al life.

But Desantis lacks the frontrunne­r's national profile and the launch comes with his ratings in decline, as a number of policy missteps have prompted disquiet about his readiness to take on Trump.

He now faces the daunting task of closing an enormous polling gap, with Trump posting leads of close to 40 percentage points, despite being indicted on felony financial charges and being found liable for sexual abuse in a New York civil trial.

Behind the scenes, the Trump and Desantis camps have been jostling to secure endorsemen­ts from state lawmakers while, at the national level, Florida's congressio­nal delegation has broken heavily for Trump.

But Desantis is seen as lacking the natural charm needed to peel away some of the 14 million voters who backed Trump in the last competitiv­e Republican primary, in 2016.

Trump has not posted on Twitter since his two-year ban over the 2021 US Capitol riot ended in November, but has been using his own social network to attack Desantis almost daily. In a Wednesday morning post, Trump said the governor "desperatel­y needs a personalit­y transplant and, to the best of my knowledge, they are not medically available yet."

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