Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said the Republican Party should not nominate Donald Trump as its 2024 presidential candidate if the former President is convicted in one of the four politically motivated prosecutions against him. Speaking with MSNBC’s Morning Joe co-host Willie Geist, DeSantis said he believes a Trump conviction “…would be fatal in a general election. I don’t think the party should should nominate in that situation.”
DeSantis said he does not think someone convicted of attempting to ‘overturn’ the 2020 presidential election or ‘mishandling’ classified documents can win the 2024 presidential election against President Joe Biden, the Democrat incumbent. The Florida Governor’s comments add credibility to accusations he is only staying in the primary contest in the hopes that Democrat law-fare forces Trump to drop out.
.@WillieGeist: If Donald Trump's convicted, "do you actually still believe [he] should be president?"@GovRonDeSantis: "No, that will not happen…it would be fatal in a general election. I don't think the party should should nominate in that situation." pic.twitter.com/trWsm4l7oo
— Morning Joe (@Morning_Joe) November 2, 2023
The DeSantis campaign and its allies have a history trying to leverage the Democrat-driven political prosecutions of Trump against the former Republican President. Social media trolls closely aligned with DeSantis’s rapid response director, Christina Pushaw, celebrated the indictment of Donald Trump in Georgia and insinuated those they perceived to support the former President would be indicted next. Jeff Roe, chief strategist for pro-DeSantis SuperPAC Never Back Down, made light of the partisan witch-hunt against Trump while deflecting concerns over his candidate’s own struggling campaign, saying: “Well, I guess we’ll have as many restarts as they have indictments…”
Former President Trump currently faces 91 felony counts in four separate federal and state prosecutions. Department of Justice special counsel Jack Smith has secured indictments against Trump in Washington, D.C. for his alleged role in the January 6th riots and in Florida for allegedly mishandling classified documents. The former President also faces state prosecutions in Georgia and New York.