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Ron DeSantis

DeSantis calls Trump supporters ‘listless vessels,’ drawing rebuke

ORLANDO, Fla. — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis suggested that supporters of Donald Trump’s reelection are “listless vessels,” a comment that drew a quick demand for an apology by the former president’s camp. “If all we are is listless vessels that are just supposed to follow, you know, whatever happens to come down the pike on Truth Social every morning, that’s not going to be a durable movement,” DeSantis said in a taped interview with the conservative website The Florida Standard. “Ultimately, a movement can’t be about the personality of one individual,” DeSantis continued. “The movement has got ...

Former Trump-supporting Iowans don’t think he stands a chance: report

A recently published New York Times/Siena College poll, according to The Bulwark's Tim Miller, "shows zero evidence of the Republican Party distancing itself from [ex-President Donald] Trump.

However, Spectrum News 13 reports the same poll "in Iowa shows candidates other than Trump have room to grow," as "Close to half of potential Republican caucus voters backing Trump say they're open to other candidates, while only about 3 in 10 of those who don't choose Trump say they would consider supporting him."

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'Dead man walking' DeSantis could end his political career with a GOP debate flop: conservative

With Donald Trump likely to not be in attendance at next week's Republican Party presidential debate, political observers will be focusing on Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) who has the most to lose among the debate participants.

That is the opinion of conservative columnist Matt Lewis in a piece for the Daily Beast where he claims the faltering Florida lawmaker who desperately needs to get out from under the cloud of being regarded as a "dead man walking."

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Trump is already 'ineligible to serve as president ever again': top legal scholars

According to a renowned Harvard law professor and a distinguished retired conservative judge, regardless of how Donald Trump's Washington D.C. trial plays out over an alleged plot to overturn the voters' will in the 2020 presidential election, he is already ineligible to hold office again based upon provisions contained within the U.S. Constitution.

In a comprehensive column for The Atlantic, Laurence H. Tribe, a professor of constitutional law emeritus at Harvard Law School, and retired conservative Judge Michael Luttig who served on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, maintained that the former president has already disqualified himself based upon his actions with regard to the Jan. 6 insurrection and a guilty verdict in Judge Tanya Chutkan's courtroom isn't even needed to put congressional action in motion.

According to the two legal scholars, based upon their research of the Fourteenth Amendment ratified in 1868, Trump's Jan. 6 complicity and election interference plots should bar him from office -- but Congress and the country need the will to enforce it.


Writing that the "often-overlooked Section 3, automatically excludes from future office and position of power in the United States government ...any person who has taken an oath to support and defend our Constitution and thereafter rebels against that sacred charter, either through overt insurrection or by giving aid or comfort to the Constitution’s enemies," the two legal experts made the case that former president went well beyond that.

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‘Slitting throats’ and ‘stone-cold dead’: DeSantis ramps up violent rhetoric

Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis, on the presidential campaign trail in New Hampshire in late July pledged to supporters he would root out the deep state from the federal government: “we are going to start slitting throats on Day One.”

Responding to DeSantis' throat-slitting remarks, Professor of Political Science & Public Affairs Mark Copelovitch on August 4 observed, "In an actual serious country, using language like this in re: government employees would result in the man's immediate resignation as governor & the end of national media covering him as a viable presidential candidate."

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Christie slams DeSantis in Florida speech for not representing 'what conservatives have stood for'

Former New Jersey Republican Governor Chris Christie criticized fellow 2024 GOP candidates — including Florida Governor Ron DeSantis — Friday during an appearance in the Sunshine State, Miami Herald reports.

Per Miami Herald, although Christie is "not a leading candidate, one recent poll found that he has managed to catch DeSantis for the second-place spot in New Hampshire."

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DeSantis seizing on Trump weakness in Georgia via private Kemp meeting: report

Ron DeSantis held a private meeting on Friday with Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp in the Florida governor’s apparent effort to build ties with Republicans who have broken with Donald Trump, Politico reports.

The Republican governors met at a Buckhead, Georgia hotel ahead of DeSantis’ scheduled appearance at a presidential candidate forum hosted by conservative talk radio host and Trump critic Erick Erickson, the report said.

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Rupert Murdoch pushes a new champion to fight Trump: report

In his determination to choose a 2024 GOP nominee other than ex-President Donald Trump, right-wing media magnate Rupert Murdoch is interested in selecting Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin, The Washington Post reports.

According to a November 2022 report from The Guardian, "Rupert Murdoch has reportedly warned Donald Trump his media empire will not back any attempt to return to the White House, as former supporters turn to the youthful Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. After the Republican Party's disappointing performance in the U.S. midterm elections, in particular the poor showing by candidates backed by Trump, Murdoch's right-wing media empire appears to be seeking a clean break from the former president's damaged reputation and perceived waning political power."

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Disney fires back that it should be declared winner in Florida lawsuit

Disney asked a judge Friday to declare it the winner in the ongoing legal battle with the tourism oversight board handpicked by Gov. Ron DeSantis to run the company’s development interests in Central Florida. Disney filed a motion in Orange County Circuit Court on Friday objecting to Tuesday’s motion by the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District seeking to declare it the victor in the lawsuit. In the suit, the state wants development agreements limiting the board’s authority over Disney’s future development to be made null and void. But Disney argued that doing that would violate its First...

Disney hits back at DeSantis with latest filing in bitter legal feud

Disney filed a new countersuit against Ron DeSantis in an ongoing legal feud that started after the company criticized the Florida governor's so-called "Don't Say Gay" law.

The company accused the Republican of wrongfully removing members Disney had selected for the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District Board – the body that oversees the district that governs the theme park – which the suit alleges had violated the board's contract with the Magic Kingdom, reported The Messenger.

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'Stone cold dead': Ron DeSantis calls for summary executions of drug suspects at the border

Ron DeSantis called for the summary execution of suspected drug dealers crossing the U.S.-Mexico border.

The Florida governor spoke Friday at The Gathering, a conservative conference organized by pundit Erick Erickson, and reiterated his call for deadly force against drug traffickers at the border.

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These Iowa Republicans say they'll support 'perfect' Trump no matter what — 'until he dies'

Although Iowa isn't deep red like its neighbor to the west, Nebraska, the state has been a frequent source of frustration to Democrats. President Barack Obama won Iowa in both 2008 and 2012, but the state went to Donald Trump in 2016 and 2020. And Iowa is home to Religious Right-friendly Republicans such as Gov. Kim Reynolds and Sen. Joni Ernst.

With the 2024 Iowa Caucuses less than half a year away, The Bulwark's Joe Perticone visited the Iowa State Fair and surveyed the political landscape —which he describes in an article published on August 17. Perticone encountered some diehard Trump supporters as well as some conservative voters who were open to supporting other GOP presidential candidates.

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Why Trump indictments haven’t triggered another Jan. 6 — and why the worst may be yet to come

A grand jury handed up a 41-count indictment against Donald Trump and 18 alleged co-conspirators late Monday night inside a courthouse in Atlanta. Outside, law enforcement prepared for a Jan. 6-esque riot.

But as Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis announced her case against Trump, no right-wing MAGA supporters, equipped with tactical gear and assault rifles, descended on the courthouse.

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