Analysis-Ron DeSantis' big election night shakes 2024 White House field
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[November 11, 2022]
By James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Florida Governor Ron
DeSantis arguably had the best night of anyone on Election Day,
trouncing his Democratic opponent on his way to re-election and
cementing himself as the Republican Party's top rising star.
What comes next is trickier. With Donald Trump expected to announce a
2024 presidential bid on Tuesday, DeSantis must decide if he's ready for
the political fight of his life by challenging the former president for
the Republican nomination.
DeSantis' calculus undoubtedly will be affected by the fact that Trump
is increasingly viewed as toxic by some Republicans who blame him for
the party's underwhelming performance in this week's midterm elections.
Trump and the candidates he supports, they argue, lack the broad appeal
necessary to win elections – and they fear that having failed two years
ago, he would do so again in 2024.
The man who beat Trump in 2020, President Joe Biden, said this week that
he intends to run for re-election and will make a final decision by
early next year. The Democrat is already the oldest president in
American history and will turn 80 later this month.
Trump would be the favorite in a primary matchup against DeSantis or any
other Republican. He remains intensely popular with the party's base and
is sitting on a massive campaign war chest that will only grow larger.
But signs of Republican discontent are growing. On Thursday, the New
York Post, owned by conservative titan Rupert Murdoch and long friendly
to Trump, mocked him on its cover, calling him "Trumpty Dumpty," and
beseeched others in the party to put it "back together again."
A day earlier, the Murdoch-owned Wall Street Journal ran an editorial
calling Trump the party's "biggest loser" and blamed him for staging
self-serving rallies that stoked Democratic turnout.
Trump showed signs of worry about DeSantis on Thursday, lashing out at
him in a lengthy statement.
"Ron DeSanctimonious is playing games! The Fake News asks him if he's
going to run if President Trump runs, and he says, 'I'm only focused on
the Governor's race, I'm not looking into the future,'" Trump said in
the statement. "Well, in terms of loyalty and class, that's really not
the right answer."
Some Republicans are concerned Trump could doom the chances of Herschel
Walker, the former football star he recruited to run for the Senate in
Georgia, in his run-off against Senator Raphael Warnock next month.
Republican U.S. Representative Mo Brooks on Thursday implored Trump to
stay out of the race.
A source close to Trump's advisory team who asked not to be identified
said the former president seemed intent on going ahead with his Tuesday
announcement because to do otherwise would be seen as a "sign of
weakness." Some Trump allies were trying to persuade him to delay.
MAN IN A HURRY
DeSantis, conversely, has been basking in positive coverage since easily
defeating Democrat Charlie Crist on Tuesday. Although he has been coy
about a presidential run, supporters at his victory party chanted "Two
more years!"
At 44, the former U.S. congressman is more than three decades younger
than the 76-year-old Trump and would provide a forward-looking contrast
to the octogenarian Biden.
He is especially popular with conservatives for taking the lead on
culture war issues concerning race and gender. Last year, he got into a
well-publicized spat with The Walt Disney Co over his support of the
controversial law, nicknamed "Don't Say Gay" by opponents, prohibiting
the teaching of gender identity concepts to young children.
A dynamic fundraiser, DeSantis has raised more than $200 million since
early 2021, smashing previous records for gubernatorial fundraising.
Trump raised more than $170 million during the same period across
several fundraising groups.
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Republican Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
celebrates onstage during his 2022 U.S. midterm elections night
party in Tampa, Florida, U.S., November 8, 2022. REUTERS/Marco
Bello/File Photo
DeSantis spent time away from Florida this year campaigning for
other Republicans and building his national profile.
He has held back from criticizing Trump to avoid alienating the
party base. Trump, on the other hand, has grown more combative
toward DeSantis, ridiculing him as Ron "DeSanctimonious" and
bragging that he received more votes in Florida in 2020 than
DeSantis did this week.
"I think there's going to be a huge appetite from the more normal
wing of the Republican Party for Ron DeSantis to run," said Sarah
Longwell, a Republican pollster and frequent Trump critic. "There's
going to be a lot on paper that will make it look like he should
run, but if Trump announces, he's scorched earth. He's out to
destroy DeSantis."
Even if Trump mounts another presidential run, he will continue to
face a dizzying array of legal headaches, including probes of his
efforts to overturn the 2020 election and his removal of classified
documents from the White House.
Some former Trump supporters say they would not back him again.
"He's divisive. I don't like him," said two-time Trump voter Gordon
Nelson, 77, as he voted for Republican candidates in Michigan on
Tuesday.
BIDEN BACK?
At a Wednesday press conference, Biden seemed amused at the prospect
of Trump and DeSantis going head-to-head.
"It'll be fun watching them take on each other," Biden said.
Voters are not enthusiastic about a second Biden term. About
two-thirds of voters surveyed don't want Biden to run again,
including 43% of Democrats, according to exit polls conducted on
Tuesday by Edison Research.
Jesse Ferguson, a Democratic strategist who was a top aide on
Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign, expects Biden to do so
anyway.
"Every time Joe Biden's been told that he can't or shouldn't do
something, he's managed to succeed at it and get it done," Ferguson
said.
If Biden were not to run again, the Democratic field would likely be
wide open, as it was in 2020 when more than 20 candidates lined up
to take on Trump. While Vice President Kamala Harris might be looked
at as a potential favorite for the nomination, she is saddled with
even worse approval ratings than Biden.
Former candidates such as Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg,
as well as Senators Cory Booker, Amy Klobuchar, Bernie Sanders and
Elizabeth Warren could mount another try.
A new class of Democratic governors could also jump in, including
California's Gavin Newsom, New Jersey's Phil Murphy, Illinois' J.B.
Pritzker and Michigan's Gretchen Whitmer, who just won a decisive
victory after a bruising re-election campaign.
Beyond DeSantis and Trump, other Republicans viewed as potential
candidates include former Vice President Mike Pence, former
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, former South Carolina Governor Nikki
Haley and Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin.
(Reporting by James Oliphant; Additional reporting by Gabriella
Borter, Dawn Chmielewski, Steve Holland, Jason Lange, David Morgan,
Gram Slattery and Andy Sullivan; Editing by Scott Malone and Suzanne
Goldenberg)
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