Now a candidate for president, DeSantis starts taking on Trump by name [Miami Herald]
The comments, made over the course of a 12-interview media blitz with conservative news outlets on Thursday, signaled that the
They also indicated how DeSantis plans to attack the former president, using subjects like
“I’ll tell you, I don’t know what happened to Donald Trump,” DeSantis told
DeSantis in particular chided Trump for, in the governor’s words, “siding with Disney” during the ongoing dispute between the
“It seems like he’s running to the left,” said the governor, who in the same interview also knocked Trump’s position on abortion rights and his record on the national debt. “And I’ve always been somebody moored in conservative principles.”
Calibrating how often — and how harshly — to respond to Trump has been a longtime predicament for Republican politicians, many of whom have found that ignoring the attacks makes them look weak but often emerge the worse for wear when they do entangle with a man who revels in insults, many of them untethered to facts. No
In a statement, the Trump campaign dismissed DeSantis’ attacks, saying he was trying to distract attention from a faulty campaign launch Wednesday on Twitter, during which the governor was unable to speak for more than 20 minutes as the online platform kept crashing.
“Ron DeSantis can’t run away from his disastrous, embarrassing, and low-energy campaign announcement,” said Trump campaign spokesman
DeSantis enters the
Governor had avoided criticism, no more
In light of that deficit, allies of the governor have been waiting months for him to start firing back against Trump, cognizant that it was awkward to do so before he became a candidate, but now eager to see him more forcefully defend his record.
DeSantis had said repeatedly that he was focused on Florida’s legislative session, and made only passing references to Trump when speaking of the former president at all.
But the governor shed his hesitation to engage on Thursday, with a forcefulness that might have caught even some of his supporters by surprise.
Trump, DeSantis told conservative talk show host
“When he turned the country over to Fauci in March of 2020, that destroyed millions of lives,” DeSantis said.
The comment was quickly amplified online by DeSantis aides, who spent much of Thursday arguing with Trump officials over the pandemic and how both the governor and former president responded to it. That directness was in and of itself new from the governor’s aides, who had previously shied away from arguments with Trump aides and surrogates.
“What’s WORSE than caving to Fauci?,” tweeted DeSantis campaign spokeswoman
Whether the criticism will successfully convince Republican voters is not yet clear. Trumpwas regularly attacked as insufficiently conservative on issues ranging from abortion rights to gun control during the 2016 primary, but managed to overcome those doubts through force of personality and a promise to fight for Republican principles while in office. His policies as president were broadly popular with
The governor had not totally avoided criticizing Trump before this week, including when he chided him earlier this month for suggesting the state’s new six-week abortion ban was too strict. During the balance of his interviews DeSantis focused on his national agenda, repeatedly outlining his support for ending “woke” overreach in government.
The governor expressed his criticisms of Trump as a response to his rival’s attacks, arguing that he’s only defending himself and his record.
He added, however, that he’s happy to draw contrasts with Trump where necessary.
“He’s running attacks, attacking me for voting against an omnibus spending bill that he signed when he was president,” DeSantis told RealClearPolitics during a Wednesday interview. “Absolutely, I think he should not have signed those omnibus spending bills. He added almost
©2023 Miami Herald. Visit miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



UniCredit and Mastercard Expand Payments Partnership
Senate Oks school safety boost
Advisor News
- Industry groups applaud House passage of Financial Exploitation Prevention Act
- Younger workers more likely to be eligible for a retirement plan after changing jobs
- Bank of America community event unpacks sales tax hike, small business struggles
- CONGRESSMAN VALADAO DEMANDS ANSWERS FROM CALIFORNIA OVER HEALTHCARE TAX HIKE
- How executive benefits impact an estate plan
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- State Farm’s agency overhaul: What distribution can learn
- IRI, ACLI express support for CLEAR Forms Act
- A new era at the Federal Reserve
- Globe Life Inc. (NYSE: GL) Making Surprising Moves in Tuesday Session
- Why annuities are gaining traction with younger investors
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- City council approves 2 percent raise for employees in budget
- Maryland health insurers want to raise premiums an average 13.7% for individual plans in 2027
- Maryland health insurance rates could rise 13.7% in 2027 under proposal
- Millions drop Obamacare health coverage after subsidies expire and costs rise
- Improving how we deliver healthcare in Idaho
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- AM Best Affirms Credit Ratings of Misr Insurance Company
- State Farm’s agency overhaul: What distribution can learn
- They Allegedly Enrolled People In Life Insurance Without Consent. Then Death Claims Paid Out
- How much do state residents need to retire comfortably?
- How executive benefits impact an estate plan
More Life Insurance News