(C) Common Dreams
This story was originally published by Common Dreams and is unaltered.
. . . . . . . . . .
Ron DeSantis Might Have Already Blown His Shot at 2024 [1]
['Joan Walsh', 'Amanda Moore', 'Maria Bustillos', 'James Steichen', 'Jeet Heer', 'Steve Brodner', 'Suchitra Vijayan', 'Hasan Ali', 'The Nation', 'Mychal Denzel Smith']
Date: 2023-04-19 14:54:58+00:00
Subscribe to The Nation Subscribe now for as little as $2 a month! Subscribe now for as little as $2 a month!
Get The Nation’s Weekly Newsletter Fridays. The best of the week. Email By signing up, you confirm that you are over the age of 16 and agree to receive occasional promotional offers for programs that support The Nation’s journalism. You can read our Privacy Policy here. Fridays. The best of the week.
Thank you for signing up for The Nation’s weekly newsletter.
Repro Nation A monthly newsletter on the global fight for reproductive freedom. Email By signing up, you confirm that you are over the age of 16 and agree to receive occasional promotional offers for programs that support The Nation’s journalism. You can read our Privacy Policy here.
Thank you for signing up. For more from The Nation, check out our latest issue
Subscribe to The Nation Subscribe now for as little as $2 a month! Subscribe now for as little as $2 a month!
Support Progressive Journalism The Nation is reader supported: Chip in $10 or more to help us continue to write about the issues that matter. The Nation is reader supported: Chip in $10 or more to help us continue to write about the issues that matter.
Sign up for our Wine Club today. Did you know you can support The Nation by drinking wine?
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has been spending plenty of time out of state as he promotes his book and continues his maybe run for president. He signed an unpopular six-week abortion ban just before 11 pm Thursday, then headed to Liberty University in Virginia, where he weirdly didn’t discuss it with the heavily right-wing students and staff. Huh.
On Tuesday he visited Washington, D.C., for a “policy discussion” geared at shoring up his standing with House GOP members, especially Floridians—he’d already lost five of the state’s 20-member GOP congressional delegation, who have endorsed former president Donald Trump. Representative Greg Steube announced his Trump endorsement Monday night, a nice “Welcome to Washington” gesture for old “pudding fingers” (watch this video).
On Tuesday afternoon, as DeSantis prepped his DC confab, Trump added Representatives Brian Mast and John Rutherford as the sixth and seventh House GOP Florida men behind him. DeSantis grabbed one endorsement, Representative Laurel Lee, former Florida secretary of state and a longtime ally. “His leadership and his vision made Florida a shining beacon of freedom,” Lee said. Right now, she is the only member of the Florida delegation to back the Florida governor. Greg Steube complained to Politico that he’d never heard from DeSantis in the governor’s five years in office, not even when Steube was hospitalized early this year after a tree-trimming accident (Trump called immediately). To know him, I guess, is not to love him.
Still, DeSantis found time, on his way out of town, to take another shot at the Disney Corporation, the largest employer in Central Florida, as he prepared for D.C. He’s been sparring with the company since its leaders came out against his anti-LGBT “Parental Rights in Education” law last year. He botched a recent power grab for the theme park’s land, but now he’s threatening to take over responsibility for monitoring safety and working conditions. And he made an even crazier threat, suggesting that the state could build a prison on land adjacent to Disney World. Related Article The West Coast Think Tank Helping to Orchestrate DeSantis’s War on the Woke Jennifer C. Berkshire
“Someone even said like, maybe you need another state prison,” he told reporters. “Who knows? I mean, I just think that the possibilities are endless.”
Who knows, indeed? It’s the threat that matters. DeSantis is trying to rival Trump in spite and meanness: The Bulwark’s JV Last says DeSantis’s move is intended to signal to Republicans that “I will use every power of the state to hurt the people you hate.” Of course, I’d have to assume some Republicans like the state’s giant employer, which bills itself as “The Happiest Place On Earth.” Even when DeSantis’s pettiness rivals Trump’s, he doesn’t seem to be having as much fun with grievance as TFG does. He just seems grumpy. Popular "swipe left below to view more authors"Swipe → Undercover With the New Alt-Right Undercover With the New Alt-Right Feature / Amanda Moore A Book Is a Book Is a Book—Except When It’s an e-Book A Book Is a Book Is a Book—Except When It’s an e-Book Maria Bustillos The Worlds of Balanchine The Worlds of Balanchine James Steichen The Limits of Vivek Ramaswamy’s Racist Con Game The Limits of Vivek Ramaswamy’s Racist Con Game Jeet Heer Popular "swipe left below to view more authors"Swipe → Undercover With the New Alt-Right Undercover With the New Alt-Right Feature / Amanda Moore A Book Is a Book Is a Book—Except When It’s an e-Book A Book Is a Book Is a Book—Except When It’s an e-Book Maria Bustillos The Worlds of Balanchine The Worlds of Balanchine James Steichen The Limits of Vivek Ramaswamy’s Racist Con Game The Limits of Vivek Ramaswamy’s Racist Con Game Jeet Heer
Meanwhile, DeSantis’s stand on abortion and his support for radical book bans have at least one major donor putting plans to support a presidential run by the Florida governor “on hold.” GOP megadonor Thomas Peterffy told the Financial Times that he and “his friends” are no longer backing a run because of DeSantis’s “stance on abortion and book banning.” Along with other former DeSantis backers, Peterffy says his widely expected presidential bid has lost “momentum.” While you can still find Florida polls that show him with a slight lead over Trump, the former president has recently boosted his standing in national polls. Current Issue View our current issue
“If I were one of his advisers, I’d be like ‘Dude, what are you waiting for?’” Mike Murphy, a Michigan sheriff and DeSantis supporter, recently complained to reporters. “The shots are coming regardless, whether you’re a presidential candidate or in the exploratory phase or dropping hints.… I would’ve already announced.” Other nominal supporters tell journalists anonymously that there’s concern that DeSantis has little or no organization in early GOP primary and caucus states like Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, and South Carolina.
A heralded New Hampshire appearance last Friday night generated some tension with state Republicans, who balked at paying for the metal detectors required by DeSantis’s camp (two protesters with “Jews Against DeSantis” signs disrupted the event anyway). Once again (this always kills me), DeSantis supporters spread word that he stayed after the event and actually shook hands with voters—just more evidence of how much DeSantis hates that kind of exposure and thinks he should get a participation trophy for it.
DeSantis went into his Tuesday meeting with only two congressional supporters—Representatives Chip Roy of Texas and Thomas Massie of Kentucky (seven other Republicans sponsored the event, but they have not yet endorsed him). He picked up Lee’s endorsement just before the event, where he was met outside by more protesters and media members than Republicans.
Meanwhile, the top #MAGA joke on Twitter Tuesday afternoon was:
Toddler crawls through White House fence
https://t.co/noNh2oSVWW
—Jim Lokay FOX 5 DC 📺 (@LokayFOX5) April 18, 2023
Punchline: The toddler was DeSantis.
His perfectly average five-foot-nine height really riles up the #MAGAs and almost makes me feel bad for him. Almost.
The settlement of the Fox-Dominion lawsuit crowded out all other political news on Tuesday afternoon. I have to say: DeSantis might be grateful that Fox and Dominion obscured his D.C. visit. He won no new supporters; in fact, in what Politico called “a stone-cold act of political brutality,” Texas Representative Lance Gooden walked out of the meeting and endorsed Trump. It seems like the better Republicans know DeSantis, the less they like him. Maybe he’d like a do-over on his foray to Washington. Or maybe he’d rather stay in Tallahassee.
[END]
---
[1] Url:
https://www.thenation.com/article/politics/desanti...
Published and (C) by Common Dreams
Content appears here under this condition or license: Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 3.0..
via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds:
gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/commondreams/