Early 2024 salvos foreshadow unpredictable Trump vs DeSantis fight
Send a link to a friend
[March 29, 2023]
By Tim Reid, Alexandra Ulmer and James Oliphant
(Reuters) - The battle for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination
has for months been seen as a two-man race: a fight between Donald Trump
and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, a rising national star long viewed as
the only candidate capable of defeating the former Republican president.
Yet missteps by DeSantis on foreign policy and a doubling down by Trump
on politically violent rhetoric in recent days – the type of grievance
politics that has alienated some previously loyal Trump supporters – has
underscored the volatility of a race still in its earliest stages, party
strategists and donors say.
While both Trump and DeSantis, who has not yet declared, remain top
contenders for the nomination, both are displaying vulnerabilities that
could mean a long and bitter dog fight between both men, but also
provide opportunities to other Republican hopefuls.
DeSantis' muddled messaging on Ukraine and the multiple legal
investigations into Trump mean that this year’s primary race “is a vast
sea of uncertainty,” said Whit Ayres, a Republican strategist and former
DeSantis pollster. “The nomination fight is wide open.”
Recent Republican primary races serve as a reminder of how unpredictable
the race could be: Trump, a former reality TV star, was initially
dismissed as a longshot candidate before his shock rise to capture the
2016 nomination; Senator John McCain won the nomination in 2008 months
after his campaign ran out of money and he was counted out by pollsters.
DeSantis, fresh off a landslide re-election victory as Florida’s
governor in November, has cultivated a national profile as a
conservative culture warrior who upset liberals by forbidding classroom
instruction in Florida about sexual orientation and gender identity.
With polls and interviews showing many Republicans looking for an
alternative to Trump, DeSantis’s message in a recent national book tour
has been that he can deliver on conservative priorities but without the
legal woes, palace intrigue and track record of defeats linked to Trump.
Last week, however, DeSantis was forced to backtrack after calling
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine just a “territorial dispute.” It was an
attempt to appeal to the “America First”, isolationist Republican base
but backfired badly, drawing condemnation from many inside his own
party.
Trump has also recently stepped up his attacks on DeSantis, who has
largely declined to fight back, and has also called for widespread
protests and warned of "death and destruction" if he is charged by
Manhattan prosecutors investigating an alleged hush money payment to a
porn star in 2016.
DeSantis's Ukraine comments and Trump’s stepped-up attacks on his former
protege have unnerved some Republicans, including deep-pocketed donors,
who would rather see DeSantis as the nominee because they view Trump as
too damaged to win a 2024 general election.
Two longtime and wealthy Republican donors told Reuters that DeSantis’s
comments betrayed a lack of national experience and made them concerned
that he is not ready for the prime-time exposure of a presidential
campaign.
[to top of second column]
|
Former U.S. President Donald Trump and
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speak at midterm election rallies, in
Dayton, Ohio, U.S. November 7, 2022 and Tampa, Florida, U.S.,
November 8, 2022 in a combination of file photos. REUTERS/Gaelen
Morse, Marco Bello
Metals magnate and donor Andy Sabin backed Trump in 2016 and 2020
but is now planning to spend money in the Republican primary on
“anybody but Trump."
Sabin gave $55,000 to DeSantis’ re-election campaign last year, but
told Reuters the Ukraine comments shook him. “I’m not happy about
it. I want to see how it plays out. It’s certainly going to affect
me a lot.”
Sarah Longwell, a Republican strategist and longtime critic of
Trump, has conducted regular focus groups with Republican voters.
"How good is Ron DeSantis? I think we have just seen nobody is quite
sure," Longwell said.
A source close to DeSantis, who asked to remain unidentified because
of the sensitive nature of the topic, said the Florida governor
would be “staying the course” in his ramp-up toward a presidential
bid. Trump's attacks are viewed by the DeSantis camp as an attempt
to knock him out of the race before it begins in earnest, the source
said.
TRUMP MEDIA FRENZY
In recent days, Trump has strengthened his position in some national
primary polls as he has again dominated the news cycle by
publicizing what he says is his imminent arrest. He has used the
huge media exposure to try to rile up his base.
But Trump’s current advantages of near-universal name recognition,
media attention and a core base of supporters could quickly
dissipate, said Stu Rothenberg, a non-partisan political analyst.
Political analysts said Trump's attacks on DeSantis could also hurt
him. Enthusiastic crowds of Trump supporters were mostly quiet when
he mocked DeSantis at two recent rallies.
The vulnerabilities of the two leading contenders for the nomination
could provide openings for other Republican hopefuls, political
analysts said.
Trump's former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley, the only other big-name
candidate officially in the running, and Trump's former vice
president, Mike Pence, have criticized DeSantis for his Ukraine
comments.
For now, despite the volatility, Trump and DeSantis remain the two
leading contenders, said David Tamasi, a Republican donor and
lobbyist.
"You have two candidates getting 75-80% of the vote," said Tamasi,
who previously backed Trump but is not this time. "It's ups and
downs. Ping pong."
(Reporting by Tim Reid in Los Angeles, Alexandra Ulmer in San
Francisco and James Oliphant in Washington, Editing by Ross Colvin
and Alistair Bell)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|