Florida governor Ron DeSantis announces 2024
presidential bid
Republican seen as Trump’s top challenger launches
campaign with glitch-riddled Twitter event
Martin
Pengelly and Maanvi Singh
Thu 25 May
2023 02.54 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/may/24/ron-desantis-announces-2024-presidential-bid
The
governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis, has officially declared his candidacy for
the Republican nomination for president, rolling out the news with a campaign
video and a glitch-riddled event on Twitter with the owner of the social media
site, Elon Musk.
DeSantis
filed paperwork on Wednesday with the Federal Election Commission, before his
planned event with Musk and an interview with Fox News later on Wednesday
evening.
As governor
of Florida, DeSantis has pursued divisive, culture war-focused policies,
including signing a six-week abortion ban and targeting the teaching of LGBTQ+
and race issues in public schools.
In his
campaign video, DeSantis said he was running to “lead our great American comeback”
and pitched Florida as a model for the nation. “We proved it can be done,”
DeSantis said in a voiceover. “We chose facts over fear, education over
indoctrination, law and order over rioting and disorder.”
The
announcement was long expected. DeSantis won re-election in a landslide last
November, published a campaign-oriented memoir in February and was widely
reported to be staffing up while visiting states that will vote early in the
primary next year.
He retains
support from powerful donors, has amassed significant campaign funds and is
consistently a clear second to Donald Trump in polling of the Republican field.
DeSantis
kicked off his campaign with an hour-long live interview on Twitter Spaces with
Elon Musk. The event, billed as “groundbreaking” by the billionaire Twitter
owner, got off to a rocky start after technical issues crashed the audio live
stream several times, leading to minutes of silence.
“We got so
many people here that we are kind of melting the servers, which is a good
sign,” said David Sacks, the Republican donor and friend of Elon Musk who
moderated the audio event.
Once things
got rolling, DeSantis took swipes at the media, Covid public health mandates,
and what he branded the “woke Olympics” of the left. Reinforcing his hardline
agenda on education and immigration, realms where he has pushed unprecedented,
authoritarian measures as governor, he vowed to go further than Donald Trump
had been able to.
“We must
end the culture of losing that has infected the Republican party in recent
years,” DeSantis said in the event with Musk after the technical issues were
largely resolved.
Taking a
veiled swipe at Trump, his biggest rival for the Republican nomination,
DeSantis said: “Government is not about entertainment, not about building a
brand.”
Boosted by
firm control of his state legislature, DeSantis has established a significant
presence on the hard right of the Republican party, seeking to offer Trumpist
policies favoured by the party base without the drama and controversy of Trump
himself.
But
DeSantis has not managed to reel Trump in, lagging in polling even as the
former president faces extraordinary and mounting legal problems.
Amid
widespread reporting of donor dissatisfaction with DeSantis’s perceived lack of
interpersonal skills – a weakness gleefully seized on by Trump – a string of
Florida Republicans have endorsed the former president.
DeSantis
has also embroiled himself in a controversial power struggle with Disney, one
of the largest employers in his state.
Disney
opposed DeSantis’s so-called “don’t say gay” law, targeting the teaching of
gender and LGBTQ+ issues. In return, DeSantis sought to remove self-governing
powers the company has long enjoyed around its resort near Orlando.
The fight
has both ensnared DeSantis in a courtroom battle and damaged his standing with
pro-business Republicans.
Democrats,
political observers and pollsters say DeSantis has moved too far right to
appeal to general election voters, should he overhaul Trump to win the
Republican nomination.
Protesters
gathered on Wednesday outside the Four Seasons Hotel in Miami, Florida, as Ron
DeSantis was expected to publicly announce his run for president.
Protesters
gathered on Wednesday outside the Four Seasons Hotel in Miami, Florida, as Ron
DeSantis was expected to publicly announce his run for president. Photograph:
Marco Bello/Reuters
On
Wednesday, Maxwell Frost, a progressive Democratic congressman, told the
Guardian: “What’s happened in Florida should scare every single person across
the entire country.
“Governor
Ron DeSantis running for president and even being within striking distance of
the Oval Office should frighten anyone who values democracy, voting rights, civil
rights, freedom and the pursuit of happiness.
“He’s
repeatedly supported cuts to Medicare and social security, a lot of his focus
is on toxic culture wars, book bans, attacking LGBTQ+ youth, erasing history …
his quote-unquote ‘Florida blueprint’ is actually a disaster for families
across the state.
“The next
part of his story is to get the far-right, Maga extremist part of the
Republican party on his side to out-Trump Donald Trump. Ron DeSantis is not fit
to be president because he has not once proven he can and will do the right
thing for the people he’s supposed to represent.”
DeSantis
entered Congress in 2012 and became governor in 2018. Before entering politics,
he was a navy lawyer. Questions have been raised about his actions while posted
to Guantánamo Bay, the prison camp leased from Cuba at which prisoners were
tortured in the years after 9/11. DeSantis has said he was “a junior officer”
without “authority to authorise anything”.
In April,
DeSantis mounted an overseas trip. Formally meant to strengthen Florida trade
links with Japan, Israel and the UK, the excursion was widely seen as
preparation for a presidential run, an attempt to strengthen foreign policy
credentials questioned after gaffes including calling the Russian invasion of
Ukraine a “territorial dispute”.


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