Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, whose scorched-earth battles over pandemic lockdowns and divisive cultural issues have endeared him to conservatives, will announce on Wednesday he is seeking the Republican presidential nomination, placing him on a collision course with former President Donald Trump.
Mr DeSantis will make the announcement at 11pm Irish time on Twitter during a discussion with Twitter chief executive Elon Musk, DeSantis’s political team confirmed. At the same time, he will file a document with the Federal Election Commission declaring his candidacy.
Mr DeSantis was re-elected handily to a second term as governor in November. His rising profile among Republicans and fundraising prowess likely make him the biggest threat to Mr Trump’s hopes of becoming the Republican nominee for the White House again.
The two men were close allies during Mr Trump’s four years in the White House – Mr Trump endorsed him during his first campaign for governor – but Mr DeSantis has since forged his own political identity. At 44 he may represent the future of the party more than the 76-year-old Trump.
‘We need Macron to act.’ The view in Mayotte, the French island territory steamrolled by cyclone Chido
Gisèle Pelicot has rewritten her story – and electrified women all over the world. But what about men?
Berlin culture cuts described as ‘death knell’ for city’s future
‘Shame has changed sides’: Supporters thank Gisèle Pelicot for her bravery as mass rape trial ends
During the coronavirus pandemic, Mr DeSantis became the national face of resistance to mask and vaccine mandates and has been a virulent critic of Dr Anthony Fauci, who headed the US government’s Covid-19 response in both the Trump and Biden administrations.
[ In California, we’re watching Ron DeSantis’s assault on LGBTQ+ rights with horrorOpens in new window ]
In stump speeches he has argued his policies made possible Florida’s economic recovery from the pandemic, turning the state into a magnet for hundreds of thousands of new residents. Florida has consistently outpaced the country in job growth over the last two years.
“His pandemic response effectively made him the governor of Red State America,” said Justin Sayfie, a Florida lobbyist and a former aide to former Florida Governor Jeb Bush.
In the months leading up to his presidential bid, Mr DeSantis has toured the country, visiting states like Iowa and New Hampshire that will hold early presidential nominating contests next year, and talking up his accomplishments in Florida.
But his decision to wait until now to join the fray has allowed Mr Trump to hit Mr DeSantis with a fusillade of attacks, costing him standing in national polls.
Mr DeSantis has rebuffed critics, pushed his priorities through the legislature and punished his enemies. His Democratic opponent in his 2022 re-election campaign, Charlie Crist, called DeSantis a “wannabe dictator.”
When Walt Disney Co, one of Florida’s biggest employers, opposed the so-called “Don’t Say Gay” law that limited discussion of LGBTQ issues in schools, Mr DeSantis moved to strip the company of its self-governing status.
Disney has since filed a federal lawsuit against the governor, accusing him of weaponising state government to retaliate against the company.
When an elected Democratic state attorney said he would not prosecute anyone for defying Mr DeSantis-backed limits on abortion, Mr DeSantis removed him from his position.
Mr DeSantis has made crusading against what Republicans call “woke” education policies a centrepiece of his politics while supporting conservative candidates for local school boards.
He backed a legislative measure that prohibits the teaching of “Critical Race Theory” – an academic doctrine that views US history through the lens of oppression – in state public schools despite little evidence it was being taught.
Republican lawmakers in Florida handed Mr DeSantis a series of conservative victories in its recent session: They expanded the state’s school voucher programme, prohibited the use of public money in sustainable investing, scrapped diversity programmes at public universities, allowed for permitless carry of concealed weapons and, perhaps most notably, banned almost all abortions in the state.
The widespread abortion ban may help Mr DeSantis appeal to the party’s evangelicals, but may damage him significantly in the November 2024 general election should he make it that far. Pro-business Republicans have also been critical of his feud with Disney, arguing that it is at odds with the party’s traditional hands-off approach to regulation.
Republicans nationwide have taken notice of his aggressive approach to governing. Mr DeSantis and his affiliated political action committee raised more than $200 million in support of his gubernatorial re-election bid.
Also watching has been Mr Trump, who has taken to deriding his one-time protege at rallies, nicknaming him “DeSanctimonious” and claiming credit for making Mr DeSantis the political rising star he is today.
On the stump, Mr DeSantis has a wholly different style than the bombastic Trump: low-key, buttoned-down and prone to favouring policy over personal attacks. His campaign speeches can sometimes feel like PowerPoint presentations.
A key question going forward will be how Mr DeSantis responds to what will certainly be a nearly endless stream of insults and insinuations from Mr Trump. So far, he has attempted to dismiss them as “noise” and said he is focused on “delivering results.”
It may not be in Mr DeSantis’s interest to fire back. He needs to win over some portion of Mr Trump’s supporters. Instead, he will probably try to walk a careful line between not denigrating Mr Trump while making clear he favours many of the same policies with perhaps a steadier hand on the tiller.
Before his election as governor in 2018, Mr DeSantis served as a US congressman for three terms. His wife, Casey DeSantis, is considered his closest political adviser. They have three children. – Reuters