Republicans massively underperformed expectations in the midterm elections, but there was a notable exception to the trend: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ re-election.
DeSantis didn’t just clobber his Democratic opponent, former Gov. Charlie Crist, by about 20 points — he also carried 62 out of 67 counties; secured an astonishing win in Miami-Dade, which was once considered a Democratic stronghold; and performed exceptionally well in areas with big Latino populations.
Republican political strategists instantly processed DeSantis’ strong performance through a 2024 lens. A proven ability to win over urban voters and Latinos is an eye-catching asset for any Republican presidential hopeful.
DeSantis’ win shone even brighter because it happened at the same time Donald Trump had a lackluster night. A number of Trump’s high-profile endorsed candidates failed to deliver, and the electorate displayed an apparent hesitation to embrace MAGA politicians despite Biden’s low approval ratings and highly visible inflation.
The coinciding of DeSantis’ win and Trump’s losses has inspired some on the right to push for the Republican Party to move on from Trump to DeSantis.
The coinciding of DeSantis’ big win and Trump’s big losses has inspired some on the right to push for the Republican Party to move on from Trump to DeSantis. Right-wing Rupert Murdoch-owned media outlets like Fox News and the New York Post immediately began banging the drums for DeSantis 2024. GOP operators and strategists are quietly complaining to Beltway media that Trump is a liability. Right-wing activists have showered praise on DeSantis for winning widespread support while embracing hot-button cultural issues like critical race theory.
During DeSantis’ victory speech, some of the audience chanted, “two more years!” implying that they expected him to cut short his second term to take the White House. (DeSantis, for his part, has gladly embraced the perception of himself as a national leader: “While our country flounders due to failed leadership in Washington, Florida is on the right track,” he said.)
Buzz must not be confused with viability, however. While Murdoch, the GOP strategist class and some DeSantis diehards are eager to capitalize on the moment to encourage DeSantis to run — and encourage donors to help him do it — that doesn’t mean that he can beat Trump.
Trump’s announcement of another presidential run appears imminent, and he will be entering the race as the presumptive nominee. He’s still far ahead of DeSantis in 2024 polls, has much more power to make and drive the news cycle, and there’s a good chance that he’ll have a big head start on DeSantis on building up hype for a presidential campaign if DeSantis waits until a few months into his term as governor — so he can get some more promised policy accomplishments under his belt — to declare.









