Former President Donald Trump remains the face of
the Republican Party and the leading 2024 GOP presidential contender,
but Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has made inroads to become a top
alternative amid his coronavirus pandemic response and his Trump-like
toughness.
"I think he's the odds-on favorite to be the next president,"
according to Florida GOP chairman Joe Gruters, a Florida state senator, told NBC News.
DeSantis' rise was quick after Trump endorsed him for governor of
Florida, and he holds a 53% job-approval rating in the latest
Mason-Dixon poll, including 59% among independents.
The straw polls taken at the Conservative Political Action Conference
last month, has DeSantis, 42, as the second option to Trump, but the
first when Trump was excluded from the survey's field.
"When you look under the hood of those numbers, DeSantis garners a
lot of support from Trump voters in the absence of Trump," Trump
campaign pollster Tony Fabrizio told NBC News. "As the media beat him up
as the anti-Cuomo and DeSantis stood up for himself, voters liked that.
They associate that type of scrappiness and speaking your mind with
President Trump. He is inheriting a lot of that."
DeSantis has remained focused on the near term, the 2022 Florida
gubernatorial reelection campaign, but most look ahead to 2024 include
his name near the top of GOP minds.
"Ron DeSantis has quickly become the most recognizable Republican
governor in the country, and I think that only bodes well for both his
re-election and what he wants to do after that," DeSantis' 2018 campaign
manager Brad Herold told NBC News.
That sure does help the fundraising efforts, according to Nick Iarossi.
"I've been doing this for 20 years, and you normally don't have
prominent donors from other states reaching out and saying, 'Hey, how do
I meet this guy? How do I support him? I think he's going to be
president one day, and I want to get to know him now. I want to support
him for his 2022 election to make sure he wins if we need him running in
2024,'" Iarossi, a DeSantis fundraiser, told NBC News.
Even former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, a bitter Trump rival, says he is
"a fan" of the Trump-backing Gov. DeSantis, an Ivy Leaguer and an Iraq
War veteran.
"I am out of the punditry business, but I am a fan of Ron DeSantis," Bush told NBC News.
Who is not fond of Gov. DeSantis? Democrats and the media.
Ron Be Gone has launched to oppose the surging MAGA Republican, who
has the job-approval thumbs up from just 15% of Democrats in the
Mason-Dixon polling.
"His arrogance and complete detachment from the pain and suffering of
our communities is very telling of someone that is in this position to
advance his political ambitions, and it's obvious because they're
already discussing 2024," former Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, D-Fla., a
Ron Be Gone group leader, told NBC News.
But moderates and Republicans have enjoyed freedom, security, health, and safety amid the pandemic under DeSantis' leadership.
"With all due respect to those who have gotten sick or who have
passed or who know someone who passed, I think we were able to ride the
storm without destroying people's businesses and people's economic
lives," Republican strategist Nelson Diaz told NBC News.
The leading challengers to DeSantis in 2022, including Rep. Charlie
Crist, D-Fla., and state agriculture and consumer services
commissioner Nikki Fried, per the report.
"I think this may be one of the easiest gubernatorial re-elects that
we've seen in Florida in a long time," former Florida GOP
chairman Blaise Ingoglia told NBC news.
"What people like in general is standing up for what you believe in.
Be a fighter, right? And this is why Ron DeSantis has endeared himself
to the Donald Trump base — a base I predict is not going to go away."
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