Eight months ago, Donald Trump’s third presidential run was generating little enthusiasm — and plenty of mockery. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, meanwhile, was hailed as the GOP’s newest star.
Now, with the first debate of the GOP primary less than a month away, Trump is the clear frontrunner for his party’s presidential nomination, while DeSantis has been fading in the polls — and the Republican establishment has been desperately looking for another candidate able to attract both MAGA voters and moderates.
Trump isn’t going anywhere
The most recent New York Times/Siena poll of Republican voters finds Trump easily leading the Republican field, with 54% of respondents saying they were most likely to vote for him over other GOP contenders for the presidential nomination.
DeSantis is a distant second, at 17%.
Multiple indictments have done nothing to chip away at Trump’s support. If anything, they have solidified his popularity with the GOP base, which shares many of his grievances.
“If they can do it to Trump, where he can defend himself,” one focus group respondent recently said, “I can only imagine how it would be if it was just a normal person. I feel like he stands for the small people.”
Mounting legal troubles
Trump has already been indicted by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg on improprieties related to a payment he made to adult-film actress Stormy Daniels; he also faces 37 counts related to his alleged mishandling of classified documents, boxes of which he removed from the White House after his presidential term concluded. Three more charges were added to the original 37-count indictment in a superseding indictment that describes, with added detail, extensive efforts at obstructing a federal investigation into the documents’ whereabouts.
Special counsel Jack Smith is also expected to file more charges related to Trump’s participation in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol. In Atlanta, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is reportedly preparing to charge Trump with trying to meddle with Georgia’s results in the 2020 presidential election.
A guilty verdict in any one of those cases could result in a lengthy prison sentence.
DeSantis continues to struggle
Has Ron DeSantis missed his chance to become the Republican nominee?
When Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis began his campaign for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, he said it was the start of a “great American comeback” — but now it appears his campaign could need a comeback of its own. Yahoo News explains how DeSantis, once considered the presumptive nominee by some in the GOP, climbed the political ladder to become a household name, and analyzes the headwinds he now faces in his bid for the White House.
Ron DeSantis was supposed to be “DeFuture,” as the New York Post called him after the Florida governor defeated his Democratic competitor, Charlie Crist, by 19 points in last November’s election.
But ever since he launched his presidential campaign during a Twitter Spaces event full of technical malfunctions, DeSantis has struggled to convince voters that he is a superior candidate to Trump. His “electability” argument has been severely damaged by several mistakes, including a homophobic campaign ad, a video containing Nazi symbolism and an argument over slavery.
For now, however, DeSantis stands alone in second place in the primary field. His political action group, Never Back Down — which can boost his candidacy but cannot coordinate with the campaign — has more than $100 million it intends to spend in early-voting states like Iowa and New Hampshire. His supporters say he may be down but not out.
Read more from Yahoo News: DeSantis disappoints, and some Republicans seek new Trump-slaying savior
Republican alternatives
Donors and establishment Republicans are desperately looking for a candidate who can fulfill the promise they once thought DeSantis had.
With his optimistic personality and inspiring personal story, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina has drawn comparisons to Ronald Reagan. “He’s the one guy running who’s got some personality and charisma. His delivery is terrific,” a top Republican donor told Politico earlier this month.
The problem for Scott is that he’s stuck at 3% in the latest New York Times/Siena poll, well behind DeSantis.
Rupert Murdoch, whose conservative media empire helps set the national Republican agenda, is reportedly a fan of Glenn Youngkin. The primaries are still six months away, giving the Virginia governor time to build out a campaign, but he would be entering a crowded field dominated by Trump. He may thus conclude that it is safer to wait until 2028, as some believe DeSantis should have done.
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