Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is devoting his summer to playing catch-up on the campaign trail. After he spent most of last year as the presumed toughest challenge to former President Donald Trump’s reclaiming the GOP nomination, his poll numbers have slowly eroded. You’d think, then, that given the chance to explain why he’d be a better choice than Trump, he’d seize on the moment.
That wasn’t the case Tuesday as DeSantis campaigned in New Hampshire, one of four early primary states offering chances to put dents in Trump’s armor. It’s obvious that Florida’s governor would much rather talk about his track record than his top rival, despite having been given several opportunities to address the latter. That very much tracks, though, for DeSantis, a politician whose whole shtick as governor has been to punch down at minorities and others he sees as easy targets.
The irony is that DeSantis’ entire administration has been geared toward making him look like a strong leader.
At his New Hampshire town hall, DeSantis took unscripted questions from the audience, something he’d avoided doing during his last swing through the state. He may have regretted that choice, though: A high school student stumped him by asking whether Trump had “violated the peaceful transfer of power” after the 2020 election and leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. DeSantis said he “didn’t enjoy seeing what happened” that day but quickly pivoted to an attack on President Joe Biden. If the election is “about relitigating things that happened two, three years ago,” DeSantis insisted, “we’re going to lose.”
That’s a hell of a missed chance to hammer home how Trump’s recklessness isn’t what the country needs moving forward. It might have gotten some side-eyes from some in the crowd, but it would have at least reminded them why they were there and not at the rally Trump was holding 30 miles away. While DeSantis has at least started to (very, very) mildly criticize Trump, he has held back from the sort of all-out denunciations that we’ve heard from former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson.
The irony is that DeSantis’ entire administration has been geared toward making him look like a strong leader, one who’ll fight what the terminally online now call the “Woke Mind Virus.” He has tried to pitch his agenda in Florida as a “blueprint” for the country writ large. In practice, that has involved suppression of the very freedoms DeSantis claims to champion even as actual problems that Floridians face run amok.








