A battle is underway for the Republican party’s heart and Trump is winning

Florida governor Ron DeSantis, a protégé of Donald Trump, has been pitching himself as a younger, more electable, version of the 76-year-old

WASHINGTON EDITOR

20 August 2022 •

They have been waiting for a new warrior to reclaim the White House: a Donald Trump for the next generation.

Ron DeSantis promised just that as he strode onto stage in Pittsburgh vowing to don the “armour of God” and lead Republicans to victory.

Casting himself as a battle-hardened leader, he pledged to “never, ever surrender to woke ideology” to a rapturous reception from the 1,000-strong audience.

Mr DeSantis’s appearance in Pennsylvania was part of a mini-tour also taking in Arizona and Ohio, ostensibly to boost Republicans in key battleground states ahead of November’s midterm elections.

But the 900-mile trek from his governor’s mansion in Tallahassee, Florida’s capital, is just the latest indication Mr DeSantis is dipping his toe in the waters of the 2024 presidential race.

Doug Mastriano, Ron DeSantis
Republican nominee for Pennsylvania governor Doug Mastriano (left) and Ron DeSantis gesture to the crowd at the end of a Turning Point Action rally in Pittsburgh CREDIT: Emily Matthews/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

His 40-minute speech had all the hallmarks of a presidential pitch: a potted personal history; a laundry list of policy achievements; and a laser focus on national issues.

It also highlighted the struggle underway for control of the Republican party after a series of primaries, including a bruising loss for party stalwart Liz Cheney, crystallised Mr Trump’s hold on the base.

Mr DeSantis, the self-styled “anti-woke” governor, has pitched himself to voters as a younger, more electable version of the 76-year-old firebrand politician. At 43, he is more than three decades Mr Trump’s junior.

Entering the hotel ballroom to “Sweet Florida” in Pittsburgh on Friday night, he took a page from the Trump playbook as he tossed baseball caps with his name on them into the adoring crowd.

His speech also echoed Mr Trump’s uncompromising approach to fighting violent crime, illegal immigration and banning transgender athletes from women’s sports.

“Woke ideology is a really destructive mind virus,” he said, adding with Churchillian flair: “We must fight the woke in our schools, we must fight the woke in our businesses, and we must fight the woke in our government agencies.”

The crowd reacted with jubilation, frequently jumping to their feet as Mr DeSantis railed against liberal policies.

The new darling of the conservative base, Mr DeSantis sees a winning strategy in modelling Mr Trump’s stoking of culture wars, but with a less combative approach that broadens his appeal.

It involves walking a fine line: avoiding attacking the former president, and thus alienating his base, while also subtly hinting that the Republican Party is no longer beholden to the former president.

Liz Cheney
A bruising loss in the primaries for Republican party stalwart Liz Cheney has crystallised Mr Trump’s hold on the base CREDIT: Jae C Hong/AP

Friday’s event was a rally for Doug Mastriano, a Trump-backed candidate in the Pennsylvania governor race who has parroted Mr Trump’s claims of voter fraud. But not once did Mr DeSantis allude to his maker by name.

Instead, Mr DeSantis namechecked other former leaders to attack Joe Biden, suggesting the 79-year-old was ill-equipped for the role.

“I think back to some of the other presidents we’ve had. Think about John Kennedy … think about President Reagan,” he told the crowd as he listed the country’s great leaders.

Whether it will work remains to be seen. Mr Trump retains a vice-like grip on the party base, as evidenced by this week’s ousting of his nemesis Ms Cheney from Congress.

Her outspoken criticism of the former president made her a top target and led to her crushing defeat by his hand-picked challenger, Harriet Hageman, in the Wyoming GOP primary.

Ms Cheney has vowed to do all she can to block Mr Trump should he enter the 2024 race, hinting at a White House bid of her own.

She is just the latest prominent Republican to put a break with Mr Trump at the heart of a prospective bid.

His former vice-president Mike Pence, Maryland governor Larry Hogan, and former New Jersey governor Chris Christie have all made similar rumblings.

But Ms Cheney’s landslide loss has put a spotlight on the former president’s power to exact revenge.

In all, Mr Trump has weighed into more than 200 primary races this year. His candidates have triumphed in more than 90 per cent of them, according to one analysis.

Mr Trump also remains the Republican Party’s undisputed leader in a string of polls, although most suggest there is ample room for a challenger.

They include a NYT/Siena College poll last month that found almost half of Republican 2024 voters would prefer another candidate to Mr Trump.

Mr Trump’s potential 2024 contenders spy a further opening in the 76-year-old’s mounting legal woes.

Laura Ingraham, a Fox News anchor and influential ally of Mr Trump, is among those to suggest voters may be ready to “turn the page” on the former president in the wake of the FBI raid on his home.

“They’re exhausted by the battle, the constant battle, that they may believe that maybe it’s time to turn the page if we can get someone who has all Trump’s policies, who’s not Trump,” she said.

Ron DeSantis
Mr DeSantis has pitched himself to voters as a younger, more electable version of Donald Trump CREDIT: Hannah Beier/Reuters

Young activists have signalled Mr DeSantis might be just the man for the job.

He is “one of the most popular leaders in America. He has become the model for a new conservative movement”, said Charlie Kirk, founder of Turning Point Action, a conservative youth group organising Mr DeSantis’s multi-state tour.

Hundreds of his supporters queued in the streets of downtown Pittsburgh for hours to hear him speak, equipped with red “MAGA” hats, and shorts and t-shirts in the style of the US flag.

“He’s very level-headed, very intelligent. I love what he did with the state of Florida, a lot of people are flocking down there because of him,” said Deb, a 68-year-old retiree who had come to hear Mr DeSantis in Pittsburgh.

It is the Florida governor’s “even temper” that would earn him her vote over Mr Trump in a hypothetical contest, she said. “These two guys have two different personalities. You could see that,” she added.

But for all the enthusiasm for Mr DeSantis, he has a difficult battle ahead if he is to wrest control of the Republican party from its current leader.

As Mr Trump continues to tease a third White House bid, many of those in the audience in Pittsburgh declared they would remain loyal to him.

Donna Ninehouser, 65, was unequivocal. “He is the only one who can save this country right now,” she said.

Travis, a 22-year-old university student, said he admired Mr DeSantis’s “backbone”, and his ability to “speak to everyday people”.

But faced with the choice in 2024, he still leant towards Mr Trump. He said: “President Trump has shown results over four years already.”

In stepping into the national limelight, Mr DeSantis may find that simply echoing Mr Trump may not be enough to supplant him.

…………………….

A well known kremtroll; “Biscui Lan” has commented:

“The headline is false. Ron DeSantis is very young. He will be POTUS, another cycle. He’s not trying to compete with Trump for 2024, but if Trump doesn’t run, Ron likely would get the nomination, if he ran. The old time GOP guys are toast. Former VP Pence? No way. He would never have been anything if Trump hadn’t brought him in as V.P. The rest of the pack followed the old script, and Republican voters have moved on.

Newsmax, if you get it via phone app or tv streaming, has been running amazing documentaries (mostly Sundays) of Trump and the other 16 wanna bees on the stage during 2016 primaries. Omg. I had forgotten how brilliantly he brushed them off, with great humor (they had to laugh at themselves when he made fun). Intelligence. Presence. Charisma. Success in the real world.

DeSantis is achieving amazing things in Florida. Look at the number of people flooding that state (fleeing lefty states). Let him make a bigger mark there, and then . . ..”

Chris Beasty comments:

“He will one day lead the Republican ticket in a Presidential election. Maybe not 2024 though – I’ve heard rumours that they’ve done a Blair-Brown style deal for him to be the running mate to Trump in return for Trump’s support in 2028.

But he’s a solid leader. I just think the American media is so corrupt and dishonest, and some are frankly unhinged, that he’ll get identical treatment to Trump. The permanent bureaucracy will stop at nothing to make sure they have another term of pulling the strings of a weak Joe Biden to serve their interests.”

Nick Bacon comments:

“I’m a former Brit now living in New York, where Trump has long been known for the criminal that he is.

The sight of his sturmstruppen attempting a putsch at the Capitol on Jan 6 last year was both nauseating and terrifying.

His odious racist and misogynistic rants have “enabled” the worst of the hard right fascists in this country.

Whilst in the White House, he used his office to enrich himself. How many influential foreign leaders paid to stay at either his Washington DC hotel or his vulgar golf resort in Florida? This in clear beach of the law.

He is a bigger crook than Nixon, and from what is emerging about the documents that he stole as he vacated the White House, quite probably a traitor as well.

Hopefully the multiple legal issues that he and his corrupt businesses – his CFO has pleaded guilty to fraud, and is headed for jail – will scupper any chance this Nazi has of ever holding office again.

He should learn about the mid term elections from a Corrections Officer in Riker’s Island.”

Maga Gam comments :

“What would a protentional Trump presidency be towards Ukraine? that’s the big question.

He likes Putin and hates Zelensky. If America folds, can the UK and Europe hold out against russia?”

A horde of filthy kremtrolls replied to Mr Gam. I won’t bother to publicize them.,

6 comments

  1. “Laura Ingraham, a Fox News anchor and influential ally of Mr Trump, is among those to suggest voters may be ready to “turn the page” on the former president in the wake of the FBI raid on his home.

    “They’re exhausted by the battle, the constant battle, that they may believe that maybe it’s time to turn the page if we can get someone who has all Trump’s policies, who’s not Trump,” she said.”

    Ingraham is a massive putlerite. Charming, quite attractive for a mature woman and as dangerous as her vile colleague Tucker Carlson.
    A fluent Russian speaker who has adopted Russian kids, she is of course a friend of Michael Savage. They have decided that DiSantis will deliver all Trumpkov’s pro-putler policies but can be elected.
    At the moment it does not seem very helpful for Ukraine that clapped-out Biden will face Trump or DiSantis.
    Since Ron Reagan, America exclusively elects pro-Russia presidents, or weaklings like Biden.
    The candidates who would have dealt with putler decisively; Romney and McCain, were defeated by the worst ever president (until Trump and Biden came along): Obama.

  2. The next presidential elections are in 2024. I hope and expect this war to be long over by then. Maybe we’ll get someone who will help Ukraine more, maybe someone who will do so less. But, if the war is finished, it won’t matter much anymore.

    • I think it matters quite a lot Frankie Facts!

      Damn good Republicans like Lindsay Graham, Liz Cheney, Roger Wicker, Marco Rubio etc are doing a great job of pressuring the Biden administration to do more to help Ukraine. But now there is a danger of them being drowned out by scum from the Trumpkov-putler wing of the GOP, such as Taylor-Greene, Rand Paul, DiSantis and Trump himself.

      Some top notch professionals provided brilliant satirical portraits of Carlson and Ingraham just after putler unleashed his Holocaust:

      In this second video are the actual words spoken by Trump when the Holocaust started. Prepare to puke very hard. It is at the 1.40 mark.

      • My admiration of DeSantis has waned as I still don’t get a straight answer from him regarding Ukraine. I understand politicians don’t want to alienate a part of the party so they tend to be circumspect but then that tells me he has no balls. I’m equally concerned over politicians who are so singularly focused that they forget what they are there for.

      • I know all about the Trumpet and his asinine remarks. Call me a hopeless optimist, but I will only fret over the coming elections when they’re over, and we have another loser in the White House.

  3. What about dissolving the Republican party and the Democrat party and start a true multi-party system so there is actually something to choose.

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