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Ron DeSantis

Texas Republicans prefer Ron DeSantis to Donald Trump for 2024, new GOP poll finds

Republican voters in Texas support Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis as the Republican nominee for the 2024 presidential election over former President Donald Trump by more than 10 percentage points, according to a new poll commissioned by the Republican Party of Texas.

The survey asked voters who are likely to participate in the 2024 Texas Republican primary election who they would vote for out of six Republican candidates including DeSantis and Trump. DeSantis was the top choice, with 43% of respondents saying they would vote for him if the primary election were held today. Trump came in second place with 32%. DeSantis’ support among the surveyed voters surged to 66% when they were asked about a situation in which Trump would decline to run in 2024.

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DOJ asked to investigate Trump's claims he sent FBI to help Ron DeSantis win in 2018

U.S. Attorney Merrick Garland was asked to investigate former President Donald Trump's claim that he sent the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) agents to ensure that Ron DeSantis (R) won his race for governor in 2018.

In messages posted to social media last week, Trump labeled the Florida governor as "DeSanctimonious." And he also claimed that he had sent the FBI to assist DeSantis during the 2018 campaign against Democrat Andrew Gillum.

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Are FL Republicans ready for a Trump-DeSantis clash for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination?

Gov. Ron DeSantis’ decisive reelection victory last week carried significant GOP coattails throughout the state, ending a debate for now about whether Florida is truly a red state.

But it also changed the narrative about the 2024 presidential race amongst the conservative intelligentsia – with DeSantis being hailed as the savior they have been yearning for and the vehicle to dump former President Donald Trump once and for all going into the next national election cycle.

“Trump is the Republican Party’s Biggest Loser,” a Wall Street Journal lead editorial published the day after the Nov. 8 election.

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Mary Trump calls out the most 'debilitating narcissistic injury' her uncle Donald has ever experienced

The worst thing that Donald Trump can be called in his mind is a "loser," but after Tuesday's election losses, the former president is being called the "biggest loser."

Speaking to Mehdi Hasan on Sunday, his niece Dr. Mary Trump said that the losses that her uncle experienced are by far the worst thing that could happen to him.

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As DeSantis considers presidential campaign, super PAC emerges to help him

Gov. Ron DeSantis may be playing coy about his presidential intentions, but a new super PAC has been formed to give oxygen to the idea and serve as his surrogate campaign until the Florida governor makes it official. “Ron to the Rescue,” is the name of the independent political action committee being organized by California political strategist John Thomas, a Trump supporter who is shifting his backing to DeSantis because he says he is “the future of the party.” “As much as people in the party still like Trump, they like winning more,’’ said Thomas, the founder and president of the political a...

Even if DeSantis beats Trump half of the GOP will hate him: George Conway

Lawyer and Lincoln Project co-founder George Conway spoke to MSNBC's Katie Phang on Sunday and explained that he doesn't believe Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) will run for president in 2024 and that Donald Trump will have the path cleared before him.

For all of the people that Trump supported in the election, DeSantis did support many of those Republican candidates too. Running for governor in Kansas, Derrick Schmidt lost his attempt to take out Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly, despite DeSantis coming to Kansas City for an event in support of Schmidt.

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Donald Trump can't stand being called a 'loser' and now has 'nowhere to go': biographer

According to Donald Trump biographer Tim O'Brien, the failure of the former president's handpicked candidates to win on Tuesday in the midterm election has stuck a label on Trump as a "loser" which he will find intolerable.

Appearing on MSNBC's "The Sunday Show" the Bloomberg editor also warned viewers to expect Trump to "burn things down" rather than go away quietly.

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'I’m tired of losing': Trump's 2024 rivals are ramping up their attacks and courting his donors

With the so-called Republican "Red Wave" failing to materialize -- in large part because of Donald Trump -- his rivals for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination are becoming more emboldened and openly attacking him while also courting his donors who are also looking to move on.

According to a report from the Washington Post, the former president is now considered damaged goods after a massive number of the candidates he endorsed in the 2020 midterms went down to defeat.

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Ron DeSantis' 'sent-by-God schtick' won't play well outside of Florida: analyst

In a column for NBC, author Jill Lawrence suggested that Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) is trying on Donald Trump's "messiah" crown with direct appeals to Christians as the chosen one, and will quickly find out he can't pull it off like the former president.

According to Lawrence, author of "The Art of the Political Deal: How Congress Beat the Odds and Broke Through Gridlock," Trump and the Florida governor both have a "Messiah complex" as evidenced by the former president's claims "I alone can fix it" and a recent DeSantis ad that claimed that, on the 8th day, God created him as a "protector" of the faithful.

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'That never happened': Anonymous Trump officials say his claim about saving DeSantis in 2018 is BS

The National Review is out with new reporting challenging a Truth Social post by Donald Trump in which he claims to have saved the campaigns of Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Rick Scott in Florida’s 2018 election.

Citing anonymous sources – “top Department of Justice officials and a former prosecutor” under Trump – the Review called out as “fake news” the post by Trump in which he said made unfounded allegations that the election was being stolen in Broward County.

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Black-pilled on elections, some on the far right move from 'Stop the Steal' to violent rejection of democracy

Two years after the weeks of post-election turmoil that culminated in the Jan. 6 insurrection, the far right has displayed a much more muted response to the outcome, which again hinges on closely contested results still being tallied days after Election Day in Arizona.

The tone was set by Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, who has taken a combative stance against election officials, while stopping short of directly accusing them of fraud in an election that she stands a chance of winning, after all, once all the ballots are counted.

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As Senate control teeters, Trump readies new presidential bid

Former US president Donald Trump speaks to the media after voting in the US midterm elections in Palm Beach, Florida on November 8, 2022

Washington (AFP) - President Joe Biden's Democrats edged closer to retaining control of the US Senate on Friday, as Donald Trump prepared to declare his bid for the White House in 2024.

Democratic Senator Mark Kelly won re-election in Arizona, three television networks announced. His victory gives Democrats 49 Senate seats, one short of securing a majority, with Nevada still counting votes and Georgia's contest headed to a December 6 runoff.

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Nomadic Latino migrant labor aids Florida hurricane recovery

Construction workers toil to restore services on Fort Myers Beach, Florida, on November 2, 2022

Fort Myers (United States) (AFP) - Hour by hour, day by day, hurricane-devastated southwest Florida is starting to get back on its feet -- and the workers doing the hard labor are largely undocumented migrants.

They have names like Jael, Juan and Francisco Antonio, and they flooded into Florida from other Gulf Coast states, and even from Mexico, to take on work.

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