Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ main argument to voters in the GOP presidential primary centers on electability. In this mythology, DeSantis has propped himself up as a winner, in comparison with former President Donald Trump.
In some conservatives’ eyes, DeSantis’ re-election victory last fall, and Florida Republicans’ role in winning back the U.S. House of Representatives for the GOP, made the governor a shining star in an otherwise disappointing election season.
“We are not getting a mulligan on the 2024 election,” DeSantis said at Wednesday’s GOP primary debate. “Republicans have lost three straight elections in a row. We were supposed to have a red wave with inflation at 9%. It crashed and burned — not in Florida, it didn’t. We delivered it in Florida.”
But reality is starting to set in. And the facade is beginning to melt away. Or, better put, courts are melting it away.
But reality is starting to set in. And the facade is beginning to melt away. Or, better put, courts are melting it away.
In early September, a Florida judge ruled that the state’s gerrymandered district map — which DeSantis proposed, signed into law and then used in 2022 over the objection of voting rights activists — illegally harmed Black voters. In other words, a redistricting map that DeSantis himself imposed on Florida’s Legislature, and which helped the Republican Party regain control of the House, was deemed illegal and in need of a redraw. The DeSantis administration is appealing the ruling.








