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“It’s Quite A Fall”

A little bit of sunshine on a cloudy

The Republican Party of Florida is imploding. Marc Caputo writes:

Not that long ago, Ron DeSantis looked like the future of MAGA, the iron-fisted ruler of Florida politics who was set up for a White House run. Now the Republican governor faces potential political obscurity, unable to control legislators in his own party who are calling for a federal investigation of his wife’s charity.

Nothing exemplifies DeSantis’ striking loss of mojo in Tallahassee like the scandal surrounding Hope Florida, the state-backed charity of First Lady Casey DeSantis, who’s been eyeing a bid to succeed her husband as governor. The charity received $10 million in secret settlement money from a Medicaid provider just days before the charity sent that same amount to two political groups favored by the DeSantises.

House Republicans and independent observers allege that the arrangement amounted to an illegal siphoning of Medicaid funds. The governor has denied wrongdoing and accused fellow Republicans of a “bogus” political smear.

This has very much hurt Casey Desantis’ nascent bit for the job as well as the budding political career of DeSantis’ Chief of staff.

This is all happening because DeSantis is such a total assholoe:

Ron DeSantis’ stumble began with his failed presidential primary bid against Donald Trump last year. DeSantis’ vindictive and pugilistic style of politics left him further isolated in the Florida Capitol.

Be careful how you treat people on the way up because you may encounter the same people on the way down,” said Curt Anderson, veteran consultant and top adviser to DeSantis’ predecessor, Rick Scott, who’s now a U.S. senator and has had a strained relationship with the governor. “This is an amazing story,” Anderson said. “… You see falls in politics, but not like this. It’s stark. It’s fast. It’s a made-for-TV movie. Let’s not forget: He was ahead of Trump in polling in 2022 and would’ve run against [President Biden or Vice President Harris] and won.”

Whether DeSantis would have won the White House in 2024 is a question for the ages. Trump aside, the campaign exposed one of DeSantis’s biggest weaknesses: his reluctance to build alliances and establish personal connections. “There was a time when every Republican in the nation wanted to have a beer with Ron DeSantis,” said one Republican who still likes him. “The problem is that the governor didn’t act like he wanted to have a beer with them, and it showed.”

DeSantis had risen to Republican stardom with his laissez-faire approach to COVID restrictions in 2020 and 2021. Florida’s Legislature kowtowed to him repeatedly. That came to a screeching halt this year, when DeSantis dragged lawmakers into a special session on immigration that many felt was needless political peacocking by the governor.

DeSantis didn’t get his way, thwarted largely by new House Speaker Daniel Perez, whose chamber has led the way in investigating Hope Florida. The multiple special sessions and acrimony in the state Capitol played a role in the Legislature’s regular 60-day session not ending on time last Friday, despite Republicans holding super majorities in both the House and Senate.

The piece de resistance:

Political observers and insiders aren’t sure about DeSantis’ future as he heads into his lame-duck year without the clear prospect of an appointment in Trump’s administration that some allies have hoped for. “Ron DeSantis went from Rupert Murdoch and every Republican billionaire telling him he could be president to sniping at hecklers at a fish shack in Destin,” said former Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz, a one-time DeSantis ally turned critic who now hosts a talk show on One America News Network.

“It’s quite a fall.”

He should know.

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