By Rich
Lowry
Sunday,
December 04, 2022
Ron
DeSantis is gaining ground, not just in the polls and among Republican
donors, but by another key measure — the derangement primary.
An
important and unmistakable sign of the potency of a Republican presidential
candidate is the kind of treatment that he or she gets in the press and among
antagonistic commentators.
If it is
muted or even respectful, it’s a sign of weakness; if it is feverish and
absurd, it’s a sign of strength.
By this
metric, the Florida governor is getting bigger practically by the day —
DeSantis Derangement Syndrome, which began to take hold at the outset of the
pandemic, is real and growing apace.
You’d
think that it wouldn’t be possible for DeSantis to hold a candle to a Donald
Trump who is having dinner with antisemites and openly musing about suspending
the Constitution, but somehow the governor’s critics still find ways to deem
him worse and more dangerous.
The
coverage is part of a familiar pattern going back decades. Reporters dig back
into the teenage or college years of Republican presidents or plausible GOP
presidential candidates and, inevitably, find them wanting. These Republicans
are also made out to be budding authoritarians.
Looked
back on fondly today as a class act from a bygone era, George W. Bush got this
treatment and — perversely — was considered a semi-fascist throughout his
presidency despite being an advocate of democracy, literally to a fault.
The
hostile focus on DeSantis is now reaching back into teens and ’20s. The New
Yorker found someone from his Yale baseball team who said, “He has
always loved embarrassing and humiliating people. I’m speaking for others — he
was the biggest d*** we knew.”
The New
York Times did a report on his time briefly working as
an instructor after college at a prep school. One African-American former
student related that he was, as she put it, “mean to me and hostile toward me.
Not aggressively, but passively, because I was Black.” (He also attended “at
least two parties where alcohol was served.”)
This is
not to deny that Bush and DeSantis had their failings as young men — who
didn’t? — but these kinds of stories are so predictable that they almost write
themselves.
Then,
there are the outlandish attacks on DeSantis as a heartless would-be dictator who,
as president, would make Trump look like Dwight Eisenhower.
By not
talking about Trump’s antisemitic dinner controversy, DeSantis is supposedly
pandering to white nationalists. (Never mind that it’s obviously been the
governor’s approach, for entirely understandable political reasons, not to say
anything whatsoever about Trump for a long time now.)
He’s “as much a
threat to America as Trump.” His Stop WOKE Act is “the essence of authoritarianism,” and he has
“the profile of a constitutional ignoramus, a bully and a strongman.”
Or maybe
he’s “more dangerous
than Trump” (emphasis
added) because back in 2021 he issued an executive order letting parents decide
whether or not their children should wear masks at schools. (“There should be a
special place in hell — or potentially in prison — for politicians who put
their political goals ahead of the health and safety of our children.”)
Or,
alternatively, he is (emphasis added) “a far more
dangerous politician than Donald Trump.” (“Ron DeSantis is the governor of Florida, a
front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination, and quite possibly the
most dangerous figure in American politics.”)
Then,
there’s the matter that DeSantis is a bright guy, which, of course, makes him
even more terrible — of course, if DeSantis were stupid, that would also
somehow make him more of a threat than Trump.
It’s
perfectly fine to criticize how DeSantis is handling Trump and believe he
should be more outspoken; it’s fine to oppose his anti-woke moves, or to
question his handling of the pandemic. Many of his critics can’t leave it at
that, though, and feel compelled to raise the ante with irrational and
completely unsupportable allegations.
“Ron DeSantis
Would Kill Democracy Slowly and Methodically,” read the headline in New York
Magazine several months ago.
Note the
wording. It’s not that he “could,” or “might,” kill (!) democracy, which would
represent a large enough claim; it’s that he definitely would.
Yes, the
derangement is running strong, and clearly, the fear is that Ron DeSantis would
as well.
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