Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis joins presidential race, taking on Trump for GOP nomination
The move sets DeSantis against former President Donald Trump in the race for the GOP nomination.
Republican gubernatorial candidate for Florida Ron DeSantis with his wife Casey DeSantis speaks to supporters during an election night watch party at the Convention Center in Tampa, Florida, on November 8, 2022.
Giorgio Viera | AFP | Getty Images
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced the launch of his 2024 presidential campaign on Wednesday, setting the Republican contender on a collision course with former President Donald Trump in the race for the GOP nomination.
DeSantis was set to personally announce his run during a Twitter Spaces conversation with Elon Musk on Wednesday evening, but the plan was derailed after the site crashed repeatedly and suffered numerous other massive glitches. Investor David Sacks, who was on the call with DeSantis and Musk, blamed server issues stemming from the 500,000 or so users who signed on to listen. Musk then started a new Twitter Spaces where DeSantis announced his presidential bid.
That second stream hosted more than 300,000 listeners at its peak — far below the average primetime viewership for most cable news networks, even those that have recently suffered a ratings drop.
DeSantis' press secretary, Bryan Griffin, asserted in a tweet after the stream ended that the glitch-filled rollout merely proved there was high enthusiasm for the candidate. He added that the campaign had raised $1 million online in one hour.
DeSantis was slated to appear on Fox News on Wednesday night at 8 p.m. ET.
In a video posted Wednesday before the Twitter event started, DeSantis criticized Democratic policy on immigration, crime and education in rhetoric similar to that deployed by Trump and his other GOP rivals.
"I'm running for President to lead our great American comeback," he said.
Meanwhile, DeSantis, who officially filed paperwork to kick off his campaign Wednesday, also signed a bill that makes it easier to run for president, changing Florida's so-called resign-to-run law.
The long-anticipated announcement marks the culmination of years of buzz around DeSantis, 44, whose resistance to Covid-era lockdown rules and willingness to engage in polarizing cultural fights have quickly made him a Republican darling.
It also makes official DeSantis' simmering rivalry with Trump, burying their once-close relationship as some in the GOP look to replace the former president as their party's standard bearer.
Trump has already pummeled the governor with relentless attacks for months. Trump and his allies have assailed DeSantis' record, his political abilities and even his personality, while amplifying negative news about the governor. One pro-Trump PAC even cut an ad depicting an anecdote about DeSantis eating pudding with his fingers, which the governor has denied.
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Trump's aggression may have paid off. Polls of the potential primary field have showed DeSantis, once Trump's close competitor, consistently losing ground for months, even as the governor toured key battlegrounds and racked up policy wins with his state's GOP-held Legislature.
A Quinnipiac University poll released earlier Wednesday underscored the governor's slide: Republican and GOP-leaning voters chose Trump over DeSantis by more than a two-to-one margin, 56% to 25%, in a matchup of the hypothetical primary field. That result showed Trump extending his gains and DeSantis losing ground from a previous Quinnipiac survey in late March.
A long-expected campaign
The move was hardly a surprise: DeSantis has been eyed as a 2024 presidential contender even before the end of the 2020 election cycle. While he has been mostly tight-lipped about his presidential ambitions, the governor in recent months has published a political memoir, hosted events for donors and conservative groups, embarked on a multi-state speaking tour and released campaign-style videos touting his achievements in Florida.
In the meantime, his allies have been hard at work mounting a well-funded political operation that has acted as a de facto campaign for the governor's impending presidential bid.
The super PAC Never Back Down, founded by former Trump administration official Ken Cuccinelli, has already raised tens of millions of dollars as it encouraged DeSantis to run for president. A person familiar with the group's activities confirmed to CNBC that it is expecting to work with an overall operating budget of at least $200 million.
That figure, first reported by The New York Times, could include more than $80 million that DeSantis' allies are expected to try to move out of the governor's old state-level political committee — a controversial transfer that has divided campaign finance experts.
A Yale- and Harvard-educated lawyer, DeSantis was elected to the U.S. House in 2012 and became a founding member of the conservative Freedom Caucus before resigning to run for governor of Florida in 2018.
Trump endorsed DeSantis in that gubernatorial primary, giving DeSantis a polling bump and leading him to cut an ad featuring his family embracing an array of Trump's political slogans and catchphrases. DeSantis' closeness to Trump went beyond just his rhetoric, with critics noting that the governor's body language and hand gestures seemed to mirror Trump's at times.
DeSantis handily won the primary and went on to narrowly defeat Democrat Andrew Gillum in the general election.
Stark divisions
As governor, DeSantis' populist rhetoric and focus on divisive social issues quickly gained him a national reputation.
During the coronavirus pandemic, DeSantis pushed faster than other states to lift public health-related lockdown measures, arguing that the closures had harmed Florida's economy. Those and other moves coincided with an influx of new residents to the state, but drew the ire of health experts and local officials, especially when Covid cases later surged.
DeSantis also courted controversy when he joined GOP efforts to protest President Joe Biden's border policies by flying planeloads of migrants to the Massachusetts island of Martha's Vineyard.
Meanwhile, his support for a controversial bill limiting discussion of sex and gender in public schools, dubbed "Don't Say Gay" by critics, has morphed into an ongoing fight with Disney that has lasted well over a year.
Disney, one of Florida's largest employers, publicly opposed the bill, joining critics who argued its vague language could lead to the targeting and marginalization of LGBTQ teachers and kids. DeSantis and his allies responded to Disney's criticism by targeting Walt Disney World's long-held special tax district and vowing to end the "corporate kingdom." Disney has since sued DeSantis and others in federal court, accusing the governor of orchestrating a campaign of political retribution against the company.
DeSantis also received a major pre-presidential boost from Republican supermajorities in the Florida Legislature, which rushed to pass the governor's sweeping agenda and cleared a path for him to launch a White House bid.
DeSantis has spent recent weeks signing reams of new legislation, burnishing his carefully crafted image as a get-things-done conservative fighter. He signed laws imposing stark new abortion restrictions, loosening rules on carrying concealed weapons, expanding his state's school voucher system, restricting ESG investing and banning public colleges from spending funds on diversity programs, among others.
The powerful anti-abortion group Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America praised DeSantis in a statement Wednesday afternoon, while stopping short of fully endorsing his candidacy.
The governor has taken Florida "from a late-term abortion haven to one of the best states in the nation for unborn children and mothers," the group's president said. "We look forward to DeSantis and all contenders further outlining their pro-life vision and platform as the primary unfolds."
In a state where population is growing but Democratic registration has fallen, DeSantis' resistance to Covid safety rules and his perceived left-wing political foes were mightily rewarded. He trounced his Democratic opponent, former Rep. Charlie Crist, in Florida's 2022 gubernatorial election, winning by more than 20 percentage points.
This time, he did it with virtually no help from Trump.
With DeSantis' profile on the rise, Trump's view of the governor has soured. Shortly after the November midterms, Trump wailed at "Ron DeSanctimonious," one of several wonky nicknames for DeSantis, along with "Ron DeSanctus" and, reportedly, "Meatball Ron."
Trump has been damaged by his loss to Biden, the fallout from the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot and the underperformance of many of his handpicked candidates in the midterms. Yet despite those bruises — and his escalating legal woes, including his indictment in a Manhattan hush money case and being found liable for sexual abuse and defamation in another case — Trump is the Republican Party's current top choice for 2024.