By Michael
Brendan Dougherty
Wednesday,
May 24, 2023
For political
junkies, today is a big day. One is tempted to shout, like boxing-ring
announcer Michael Buffer: “Let’s get ready to rumble!” Donald Trump’s most
credible challenger on the Republican side is entering the race.
It’s a
moment when the narrative is going to shift, but expect some resistance. For
months, Trump supporters, professional Never Trumpers who depend on Trump’s
persistence for their paychecks, and mainstream-media outlets who view Trump as
ratings gold and an electoral curse on Republicans have faked up a narrative
that Ron DeSantis is stumbling, that he’s the next Scott Walker, an
overhyped governor who doesn’t have the stuff to translate onto the national
stage.
First it
was that he gave Tucker Carlson an explanation of his views on Ukraine, namely
that it wasn’t a chief American priority. Next it was a rumor of a fund-raiser
getting spooked. Then Donald Trump was wooing Florida legislators to endorse
him. Soon we were told that the governor’s fight with Disney was “dragging on”
and making him look bad. Fake, fake, fake, fake. These stories, mostly sourced
to DeSantis rivals and then repeated endlessly, have created a psychic
whirlpool on social media meant to sink the DeSantis candidacy before it
begins. Today this effort is shown to have failed, and the dynamic tide will
shift quickly once DeSantis announces and begins energetically campaigning.
Ukraine
doesn’t rate as a top-five issue among Republican voters, and DeSantis’s “no
blank checks” answer offends nobody outside of a think tank or political
nonprofit. DeSantis is expected to launch with eye-popping fund-raising
numbers. Before launch he’s secured more than a third of the available
endorsements in Iowa’s state legislature. He seems to have the support of Bob
Vander Plaats, a potential Iowa kingmaker. And he has the backing of 99 out of
113 Republican lawmakers in the Florida state legislature. As for Disney, while
the New York Times headline made it look like the Mouse had
canceled the movement of 2,000 jobs from California to Florida for political
reasons, reporters on the Disney beat quickly corrected the record. Former CEO
Bob Chapek’s plan to move those jobs to Florida was widely opposed within the
company because it would take creatives away from the Hollywood studio. If
anything, Disney’s and Pixar’s lackluster performance at the box office,
slashed revenue projections for Disney+, along with lower foot traffic at the
parks indicate that perhaps it is conservatives alienated by Disney who are, in
part, driving the company to make unwelcome decisions.
It took
a lot of willfulness on the part of the media to forget that in a year when
many Republicans underperformed, DeSantis beat expectations in Florida by
roughly ten points and won the state by 20 altogether.
The only
part of the “DeSantis slipping” narrative that has any weight is his slip in
the national polls since Trump announced his campaign and then spent five
months trying to abort the DeSantis campaign. But scratch a little deeper, and
the fundamentals haven’t changed.
Among
Republicans, DeSantis has similar favorability ratings to Donald Trump, despite
being less well known. In fact, that is also an advantage for DeSantis because
almost 30 percent of adults in February 2023 didn’t have a favorable or
unfavorable opinion of the Florida governor. These are people he can win over.
Trump’s numbers are already locked in. Early polling has shown that Trump has a weakness
with Evangelical voters, who were so crucial in supporting his first nomination. Trump also has
a weakness with Republicans who have college degrees and with upwardly mobile
suburban voters, the ones with the highest propensity to vote in primaries.
These are voters who had trouble supporting Ted Cruz in 2016 as a Trump
alternative, but they seem to show no hesitation about DeSantis.
Trump is
running an incumbent campaign on the faulty premise that he won the 2020
election and was cheated out of the prize. But incumbents who command less than
90 percent of the party tend to lose in the end. Trump’s most favorable polls
have him nowhere near that mark, which means that voters in the early states
are going to give other candidates a serious look and a serious chance.
Many
Republicans nationwide started to see DeSantis as their leader even while Trump
was still in office. The launch of his campaign will show that, indeed, he’s
not afraid of a confrontation with Donald Trump, and it will be an occasion for
reminding so many Republican voters of the conversations they had about moving
to Florida during the pandemic. DeSantis will be able to make a generational
argument: America desperately needs a fresher-faced leadership class. He’ll be
able to make an argument about competence. Don’t be surprised if the candidate
who spent months blowing hot air starts to look winded when the race finally begins.
No comments:
Post a Comment