Ron DeSantis prepares for 2024 White House bid as
Trump hits campaign trail
Moves spur Trump into attacking Florida governor
during low key events over the weekend in Iowa and New Hampshire
Maya Yang
Sun 29 Jan
2023 21.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jan/29/desantis-trump-2024-white-house-bid
America’s
2024 presidential race is showing signs of kicking into gear amid reports that
Florida’s rightwing Republican governor Ron DeSantis is now laying the
groundwork for a White House bid as Donald Trump finally hit the campaign
trail.
DeSantis’s
moves even spurred Trump into attacking him directly as the former US president
held relatively low key events over the weekend in the key early voting states
of New Hampshire and South Carolina.
“Ron would
have not been governor if it wasn’t for me… when I hear he might run, I consider
that very disloyal,” Trump said, before seeking to slam DeSantis’s actions over
fighting the Covid-19 pandemic.
DeSantis
began his time as Florida’s governor in the shadow of Trump, whose political
messaging he closely emulated. But he has since emerged as Trump’s most
powerful political rival in the Republican party, increasingly popular with
many party officials who are wary of the scandals and chaos that accompanied
Trump’s time in office.
The
Washington Post has reported that DeSantis’s political team has already
identified potential campaign hires in states like Iowa and New Hampshire,
whose traditional early spots in the nomination contest give them outsize
influence on the race.
Citing two
Republican sources with knowledge of conversations and staff meeting on
DeSantis team, the paper said the Florida governor was in close talks with two
current and experienced members of his current team – Phil Cox and Generra Peck
– about possible senior roles in any 2024 effort.
Bill Bowen,
a New Hampshire Republican delegate, told the paper that his state would likely
be receptive to DeSantis. “I’m convinced there’s a good network of
establishment party people in New Hampshire that will quickly have a very
effective DeSantis campaign,” Bowen said.
DeSantis
has carved out turf in the Republican party that invites conflict with Trump.
He has tacked to the extremist right, especially on social issues. His state
has restricted LGBTQ+ rights and abortion, sought to demonize further education
in the state as a bastion of liberal power and he has enflamed tensions over
immigration with a series of political stunts.
In response
to DeSantis’s likely presidential bid, Trump has issued threats against the
governor. Last November, Trump appeared to warn DeSantis by hinting at
political blackmail against DeSantis’s potential 2024 run.
“I think if
he runs, he could hurt himself very badly. I really believe he could hurt
himself badly… I would tell you things about him that won’t be very flattering
– I know more about him than anybody – other than, perhaps, his wife,” Trump
told Fox News.
It was once
widely expected that Trump – the only so far declared major candidate for the
Republican nomination – would be largely unopposed. But a series of scandals,
including meeting with white nationalists, and the flop of high-profile
Trump-backed candidates in November’s midterm elections, has seen his grip on
the party loosen considerably.
Now a swath
of other Republicans seem poised to enter the race.
Trump even
appeared to give his blessing to his former US ambassador to the United
Nations, Nikki Haley, after she informed him that she is considering a 2024
presidential bid.
“I talked
to her for a little while, I said, ‘Look, you know, go by your heart if you
want to run’… She’s publicly said that ‘I would never run against my president,
he was a great president,’” Trump told reporters on Saturday, CNN reports.
He added
that he told Haley that she “should do it”.
In a Fox
News interview earlier this month, when asked about her previous comments about
not running for president if Trump ran, Haley responded that the “survival of
America matters”.
“It’s
bigger than one person. And when you’re looking at the future of America, I
think it’s time for new generational change. I don’t think you need to be 80
years old to go be a leader in DC… I think we need a young generation to come
in, step up, and really start fixing things,” she said.
Other
former Trump cabinet members have also hinted at their presidential bids.
Earlier this week, CBS asked former national security adviser John Bolton if he
is considering a 2024 run. Bolton said that characterization is “exactly
right”, the outlet reports.
Bolton also
criticized Trump’s 2024 presidential bid, calling it “poison” to the Republican
party.
“I think
Republicans, especially after the November 8 elections last year, see that he’s
poison to the ticket. He cannot be elected president. If he were the Republican
nominee, he would doom our chances to get a majority in the Senate and the
House. I don’t think he’s going to be the Republican nominee,” he said.
On Tuesday,
former secretary of state Mike Pompeo said that he will decide whether he will
run for president. Speaking to CBS, Pompeo said: “Susan and I are thinking,
praying, trying to figure out if this is the next place to go serve,” referring
to his wife.
“We haven’t
gotten to that conclusion. We’ll figure this out in the next handful of
months,” he added.
When asked
whether Trump’s 2024 presidential bid is having an impact on his own
decision-making, Pompeo said: “None.”
There are
also likely to be a host of other Republicans eventually in the race with
people like Georgia governor Brian Kemp and Virginia governor Glenn Youngkin
among names often touted as likely runners.
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