
While he still claims the second spot in GOP primary polls, the distance between Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and frontrunner Donald Trump keeps expanding. Republicans won’t vote in their primaries for some time, but DeSantis’ problems are widely acknowledged [Ron DeSantis’ Campaign Is Flailing, by Cameron Joseph, Politico, August 18, 2023]. Why? What could DeSantis have done differently? My answer: he should have hammered the National Question and position himself for 2028.
Running against Trump was always going to be tough. But DeSantis could’ve made himself a much stronger candidate. Specifically, he could have been more pro-Trump and focused on sharpening his message.
He can’t do much about the former, but he can still change the latter
DeSantis’ chief problem: his (necessarily) fraught relationship with Trump. Prior to 2021, he and Trump were practically simpatico. DeSantis won the party’s nomination for Florida governor in 2018 thanks to Trump’s endorsement. DeSantis positioned himself as a Trump guy early in his term, adapting to the then-president’s style.
But the relationship between the two seemed to sour after Trump departed the White House. DeSantis, probably at the behest of anti-Trump donors, positioned himself as Trump’s replacement, and of course, Trump wasn’t ready to be replaced. Soon after leaving office, Trump made clear that he planned to run again in 2024. DeSantis made the bet that voters were as willing to ditch Trump as he was [Friends to foes: How Trump and DeSantis’ relationship has deteriorated over the years, by Adriana Gomez Licon, The Associated Press, May 25, 2023].
That was a mistake.
[Source]
Granted, tension between the two was inevitable. But DeSantis could have minimized it at least enough so that Trump didn’t see DeSantis as his mortal enemy.
DeSantis has tried to walk a fine line. He has criticized Trump, but not quite to the extent Never Trumpers want. He’s mostly stuck to barely-veiled attacks that don’t mention Trump by name. He will semi-defend Trump over his legal troubles. But again, he doesn’t name Trump.
Needless to say, that middle ground pleases no one. The Never Trumpers think it’s weak, while Trump supporters think it goes too far. Who DeSantis wins over with these passive-aggressive attacks, although his supporters on social media like them, is unclear [DeSantis sharpens critique of Trump but faces huge odds, by Stephen Collinson, CNN, August 1, 2023].
Understandably, DeSantis wants to make the case for why voters should pick him instead of Trump. That would naturally result in him pointing out Trump’s failings. But DeSantis faces the problem that the base still loves Trump, as the polls attest. Voters aren’tswayed by social media videos about Trump’s not firing Anthony Fauci or Christopher Wray.
Anyone running against Trump must leap that hurdle. DeSantis doesn’t want to be Chris Christie and look like an Establishment shill, yet he wants to convince voters to support him.
Vivek Ramaswamy offers an imaginative alternative strategy. Ramaswamy is always pro-Trump. He vigorously defends him against the communist prosecutors trying to throw him in prison. He has promised to pardon Trump if elected, and he praises Trump’s record as president. He never really criticizes the former president, although at times, he explains how he will be better than Trump or finish the job Trump started. In other words, he’s implicitly making the case to Trump supporters that he can be a better version of Trump [Vivek Ramaswamy’s Challenge: Embrace Trump and Take His Supporters, by Eliza Collins and Aaron Zitner, The Wall Street Journal, August 25, 2023].
And it’s working in the polls. Despite having zero political experience and a strange name, Ramaswamy is gaining on DeSantis. The Real Clear Politics average of polls has Ramawasmy just 7 points behind DeSantis.
DeSantis has likely earned permanent enmity from Trump. But he can still win Republican support with a different argument.
Indeed, his own staffers apparently recognize that he should be more pro-Trump. The leaked campaign strategy memo for the first GOP debate told the governor that one of his “musts” is to “Defend Donald Trump in absentia in response to a Chris Christie attack.” [Defend Trump and ‘Hammer’ Ramaswamy: DeSantis Allies Reveal Debate Strategy, by Jonathan Swan et al., The New York Times, August 17, 2023].
Significantly, DeSantis didn’t heed the advice. Unlike Ramaswamy, he didn’t defend Trump in the debate.
DeSantis has spoken of Trump’s legal persecution in vague terms. He hasn’t guaranteed a pardon. Worse still, he’s mocked Trump for his problems. And many of his online supporters openly relish Trump’s legal predicaments [DeSantis Jabs at Trump’s Legal Trouble as He Resets His Campaign, by Nicholas Nehamas, The New York Times, July 30, 2023].
Fore example, DeSantis really blew it when he was asked about Trump’s turning himself in at Fulton County Jail. Instead of forcefully denouncing the politicization of the law and Democrat Witch Hunts, DeSantis awkwardly said he was glad to be at the “Field of Dreams.” He could have used the moment to great advantage, but instead he literally dropped the ball [Far away from Trump’s jail drama, Ron DeSantis and his family head to Iowa’s ‘Field of Dreams’, by Thomas Beaumont, The Associated Press, August 24, 2023].
But Republican voters strongly oppose the indictments. More than 80 percent say they are politically motivated. Trump still boasts the highest rating of “strong favorability” among all Republican candidates…and by a significant margin. The ordinary Republican wants his leaders to defend Trump, not throw a baseball at the Field of Dreams [Republican voters think Trump is electable. They may be right, by Harry Enten, CNN, August 19, 2023].
My view: DeSantis should have ignored Trump’s attacks and strongly defended him. He must make the case to voters that he stands with Trump; but that he will be a better Trump in the White House. He should start with a loud and clear promise to pardon Trump, stop subtweeting Trump, and focus on explaining how and why he would be a true America First president.
He’s never going to beat Trump in the insult game. He should try to be more like Vivek and less like Nikki Haley.
One more thing: DeSantis also lacks focus. He hasn’t hit a strong, distinctive stride. His campaign touts the rather bland “Great American Comeback”—not as captivating as Make America Great Again. But the slogan is just a symptom. Rather, he hasn’t found a central issue to propel him.
In 2016, Trump made immigration his issue. It made him the Republican nominee and then the president.
DeSantis has struggled to find that defining issue. He set out to make the China Virus and the lockdowns his chief issue, but discovered that it wasn’t a big hit. Subsequently, he’s largely downplayed that topic other than reiterating that he kept Florida open in 2020 [Private GOP Polling Data Reveals Why DeSantis’ Campaign Is Sputtering, by Asawin Suebsaeng and Adam Rawnsley, Rolling Stone, July 17, 2023].
So he settled on anti-Wokeness, but hasn’t reckoned the best way to sell it. Of course, Anti-Wokeness is a broad topic that means different things. It can mean from anything defending Columbus Day and Confederate statues to stopping Critical Race Theory or gender ideology in schools and workplaces.
Ron DeSantis Has Big Plans for Ridding the Military of Wokeness https://t.co/Nuxo3Zrmx8
— Adam Paul Laxalt (@AdamLaxalt) June 14, 2023
DeSantis has tried to make himself a star on the issue, constantly repeating the term in his speeches. He made “where Woke goes to die” a slogan for the Sunshine State. He constantly hyped his war with Disney. He even pledged to investigate Anheuser-Busch over its brief partnership with “transgender” TikToker Dylan Mulvaney to sell Bud Light [DeSantis’ Bud Light brawl marks his latest move in anti-corporate gambit, by James Oliphant, Reuters, July 28, 2023].
But the approach hasn’t inspired with Republican voters as much as his campaign hoped. Polls show that Republicans overwhelmingly prefer candidates who stress Law And Order over anti-Wokeness [Are G.O.P. Voters Tiring of the War on ‘Wokeness’?, by Jonathan Weisman, The New York Times, August 6, 2023].
Now DeSantis appears to be dropping the issue. He’s that he’s “moved on” from his battle with Disney [Ron DeSantis Says He Has “Moved On” And Disney Should Drop Its Lawsuit Against Him, by Ted Johnson, Deadline, August 14, 2023]. He’s cut down on using anti-Wokeness on the campaign trail and shifted to talking more about “school choice” rather than Woke schools. His campaign theme is also focused more on attacking “Bidenomics” than the “Woke mind virus” [Where’s ‘Woke’? Republicans Test a Different Education Message, by Trip Gabriel and Nicholas Nehamas, The New York Times, August 28, 2023].
The economy and fiscal issues matter to voters, of course. But they don’t set DeSantis apart from the rest of the pack. Every Republican attacks Biden because of the economy. DeSantis needs a visceral issue to make his own. It’s not an obscure matter either: it’s immigration and Law And Order.
Trump has released a solid immigration plan. But he appears too distracted (exactly as in the 2020 campaign) to make it his central issue.
That’s an opportunity for DeSantis. He should present himself as the man to fulfill Trump’s 2016 campaign agenda with actions to curb illegal immigration and reduce legal immigration—above all, propose (“enough is enough”!) an Immigration Moratorium.
Giving a major press conference on immigration could easily make DeSantis the candidate on the National Question.
Establishing Law And Order in a lawless America would not just encompass immigration. It would also address the growing crime and violence in our streets. It would attack the communist Soros prosecutors who care more about jailing patriots than actual criminals. And it would aim to stop the Justice Department’s Leftist vendettas. It’s a message that resonates deeply with American audiences.
DeSantis has time to correct his course. It will be a tough task to defeat Trump. But to have any hope, he must heed this (my!) advice.
DeSantis must defend Trump and adopt the National Question as his own.
Then, even if he loses next year’s primaries, he could establish himself as the GOP heir in 2028.
Washington Watcher II [Email him] is an anonymous DC insider.
Trump needs a vice president that is not a traitor, like Pence and Barr. That can replace Trump, when needed. Strongly support Trump otherwise
DeSantis just excluded himself from that post. I heard rumors that Ramaswami rejects the VP post. True? He would be near ideal.
Trump, president, Trumper than Trump, Vice president.
4HONESTY dot com is for utter honesty and full disclosure. How does that fit in here?
Honest disclosure of conflicts of interests, of donors, of never Trumpers.
Honesty about policy issues, Honesty about NATO’s guilt poking Russia militarily and inciting the war.
Honesty about race realism, that would be asking too much, that is outside the Overton Window of permitted speech. But it would explain why quotas are unjust, and pre-emptively explain why ditching quotas would NOT lead to anything like equity and more black rocket scientists.
DeSantis is a leader and a doer as evidenced by his reign in Florida. He would be an excellent President.
DeSantis doesn’t stand a chance, so he should just stop wasting time and get back to Florida and do his job. Just because he beat that old geezer “Chain Gang” Charlie Crist he thinks he’s Presidential timber, he ain’t. While running for his second term he said he had no intentions of seeking higher office, so right off the bat the guy’s a liar. There are a lot of problems here in Florida and I don’t mean trannies at Disneyworld. Didn’t you get the memo the Great Tranny War is over, the good guys lost, but there is still a lot of other things here that need fixing. You owe us Gitmo Ron after all you did sell our right of free speech for thirty pieces of silver.
A TALMUDIC RAT CLOWN AND HIS USEFUL IDIOTS!
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Fool me once, shame on you; Fool me twice, shame on me.
Let’s see if any of them pick up on the ADL issue. I’ll wait.
Jews and their ill-gotten revenue are behind all that is wrong in America and other parts of the world. The Federal Reserve System pushed on Americans was a Jewish concoction. All things are possible through the enormous amount of interest money paid to the Jew-owned fed.
The American Congress bought lock, stock, and barrel with Jewish money. Those that can’t be bought are assassinated; the list of those assassinated is long. Jews have been behind all wars America has been involved in for one reason or another. The plethora of Jews now found in the Biden administration is responsible for what is happening in Ukraine. As if that isn’t enough, now they are in the process of sending congressional stooges out to hype the American people up for war with China psychologically.
With Jew ears everywhere, plotting a strategy for change is extremely difficult–think JFK and others.
A king has a reign, a governor has a term.
There does not seem to be a way to break the GOP voting base’s loyalty to Trump. The manifest incompetence and broken promises have all been forgotten. Now he is the persecuted hero who will save us all if only given another chance. Disgusting and infuriating to watch.
“Great American Comeback?” Fat chance.
How about campaigning on the need to prepare for the “Great American Comeuppance.”