Des Moines: Nominating Donald Trump would make the 2024 election about his legal troubles rather than the nation's ills under President Joe Biden, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said on Tuesday, hours after Trump appeared in court to argue he's immune from prosecution. DeSantis appealed directly to undecided Iowa Republicans, particularly those who like Trump but are seeking an alternative, less than a week before they cast the first votes of the 2024 election season, portraying a Biden-Trump rematch as a risky bet for Republicans.
It raises the issue for Republicans: What do we want the 2024 election to be about?' DeSantis said in a Fox News town hall in Des Moines. If Donald Trump is the nominee, the election is going to be about legal issues, criminal trials, January 6. It'll be a referendum on him." DeSantis has for months been trying to peel away Trump supporters, presenting himself as an able alternative for Republicans who still like the former president. And as the clock ticks down to the first votes, he's leaning in further, warning them that Trump is a dangerous choice if the GOP wants to win.
DeSantis said he can deliver for the base where Trump has fallen short, pointing to his own record leading Florida, where he signed a restrictive abortion law and resisted pressure to close schools and businesses as COVID-19 raged in 2020. He went after Trump's signature issue, the southern border, arguing the former president failed to end illegal immigration and didn't fully build a border wall.
With a vote for DeSantis, Iowans can upend the dynamics of the race and show that Trump is beatable, he said. He repeatedly touted the considerable time he's spent in the state, contrasting his own visits to all 99 counties with the lesser time spent in the state by Trump and Nikki Haley, the former United Nations ambassador who is DeSantis' biggest rival for second place behind Trump.
For months, DeSantis has toiled at trying to appeal to Republicans who have a favorable impression of Trump, but are open to an alternative. Advisers have said he risks alienating such voters by attacking Trump, though DeSantis has increasingly critiqued the former president, notably for goals he says Trump had not met. But DeSantis said Tuesday he was not concerned about alienating such voters, and pointed to the 2022 midterm elections when Republicans underperformed expectations as a sign of what a Trump-focused 2024 would mean.