Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis hasnât even declared whether heâll run for president in 2024, and Donald Trump has tried to restrain himself from going after his top GOP rival, but the former presidentâs allies are already mounting an offensiveâwith South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem now leading the charge.
Noem may be interested in running for president herself, and therefore would have good reason to go after DeSantis, but she also may be angling for a different role: Trumpâs vice president.
Earlier this month, Noemâs press secretary, Ian Fury, took a shot at DeSantis seemingly from out of nowhere. Fury sent a follow-up email to the National Review for an article ostensibly about âthe transgender lobbyâs outsized influence in South Dakota.â Fury went on a tiradeâagainst DeSantis.
âGovernor Noem was the only Governor in America on national television defending the Dobbs decision,â Fury said, referring to the Supreme Court decision overturning federal abortion protections. âWhere was Governor DeSantis? Hiding behind a 15-week ban. Does he believe that 14-week-old babies donât have a right to live?â
After cruising to re-election by almost 20 points without facing a primary challenge or having to do a single interview with a non-friendly conservative media outlet, DeSantis is now facing his first real test from the rightâthis largely one-way feud with Noem.
âI think what Noem gets out of this is currying favor with Trump and raising her stock as a potential VP pick,â a Republican strategist told The Daily Beast, adding that Trump advisers see Noem as âthe ideal person for themâ to carry out the MAGA black ops mission against Floridaâs governor.
DeSantis has consistently polled in the top two spots among GOP presidential primary voters, trading spots back and forth with Trump. The Sunshine State governor recently drew comparisons to John F. Kennedyânot for the first timeâafter Florida first lady Casey DeSantis wore a mint-green dress at his Jan. 3 inauguration, an eerily similar look to one of Jackie Kennedyâs outfits from the Camelot era.
And so, as DeSantisâ star burns brighter, Trumpworld is looking for someone to dampen the lightâwhich is where Noem comes in.
According to three GOP sources with behind-the-scenes knowledge of the quarrel, Noem has Trumpâs blessing to take some shots across the DeSantis bow. And Noemâs efforts havenât been going unnoticed as Trump continues filling out his VP shortlist.
When asked for their thoughts on the DeSantis-Noem dustup, one source close to Trump responded simply with a popcorn emoji before later elaborating.
âAny experienced primary campaign operative will tell you arguments between potential opponents are best left to roil, fester, and spread,â the longtime friend of Trumpâs told The Daily Beast.
âThis is where you head to Costco to buy cases of microwave popcorn and distribute them to staff with instructions to pop, butter, and enjoy quietly.â
The seemingly randomâand gratuitousâshot from Noemâs camp is understood in Republican circles to be about more than just a rogue spokesperson whose surname may be even a little over the top for Nathaniel Hawthorne. (Fury, who cut his political teeth as a spokesman for Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), did not return a request for comment.)
Beefing with other governors became something of a specialty for DeSantis during the height of the pandemic. But in this case, heâs facing incoming attacks from within the GOP in an effort to âwedgeâ his supporter base over abortion and âchip away at the governor from the right,â according to a Republican operative familiar with the tussle who requested anonymity to discuss sensitive internal conversations.
Itâs also testing the DeSantis campâs theory of the case on running an extremely online communications operation predicated on owning the libs and severing any access non-conservative outlets have come to expect from a Florida governor.
âThis is a 2024 move, I think youâve gotta see it through that lens,â the strategist said. âI think sheâs showing here that DeSantis is flimsier than people think he is. Heâs never been tested on the national stage, really. Heâs had all controlled environments with conservative press.â
For Noem, the swipe at DeSantis offers âa VP play at max, at minimum currying favor with Trump.â
The strategist added there are worries around the DeSantis communications shop being âway too onlineâ and more focused on Twitter fights than a more comprehensive messaging strategy.
Brad Coker, a longtime Florida pollster with Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategy, told The Daily Beast that while DeSantis hasnât faced this kind of an affront from his right beforeâwith the only comparable example being Roger Stone having a go at him ahead of the 2022 midtermsâitâs something heâll have to learn to cope with.
âLocally, it seems like ignoring Kristi Noem is the smart thing to do at this point. Sheâs not a Tier 1 candidate,â Coker said. âIf I were advising DeSantis, I would just go back to trying to get Disneyâs land from them and pay it no attention.â
Coker added that DeSantis still mixes it up with the Tallahassee press corps from time to time, but will eventually have to start facing the heat from major national outlets.
The abortion issue, however, could be a lingering sore spot for DeSantis, the veteran pollster said.
âThe problem that Republicans have on the abortion issue is there are sort of mixed messages out there on what is the quote unquote âcorrect position,ââ Coker said. âItâs a circular firing squad right now on abortion.â
One GOP source close with DeSantis said his reputation remains strong among party brass, and he couldnât think of another conservative stepping out against the Florida governor in the way Noem has.
âWhen I travel with RNC folks from other states, Iâve never heard one negative thing about Mr. DeSantis ever,â the Florida operative said. âItâs incredible, Iâve never seen anything like this.â
The Noem salvo also came with another warning sign, the first GOP strategist said.
âPoliticians are terrified to answer the question on DeSantis and Trumpâand a lot of them might be inclined to support DeSantis, but they're not gonna cross Trump. But people will attack DeSantis publicly,â this strategist said, adding that Trump has vanquished, in their opinion, more talented foes such as Sen. Marco Rubio and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.
âDeSantis is gonna realize very quickly, the closer you get to the waters, you have to realize Trump is still the king of this party,â the strategist continued. âAnd he might be tucked away in Tallahassee with his Twitter trolls who pump him and breathe his praise. But youâve gotta remember, people will line up for Trump and do things for Trump. DeSantis does not have that same type of following that Trump does.â
While there may be upside for Noem in raising her profile by going after DeSantis, Coker said Trump will have to pick a better proxy fighter to escalate things with the former president beyond his âscoreboardâ comments post-midterms.
Representatives for Noem and DeSantis did not return a request for comment, but their feud may also be more genuine and less calculated.
DeSantis and Noem both served in the U.S. House of Representatives together. And while Noem was an ally to GOP leadership, DeSantis helped found the Freedom Caucusâthe conservative group thatâs been a thorn in the side of the last Republican speakers. Despite being elected governor in the same election, the two have never been close.
Still, where Noem clearly has something to gain from going after DeSantisâTrumpâs favorâthere doesnât seem to be much advantage for DeSantis to get in a back-and-forth with Noem.
âHeâs kind of sitting in the catbirdâs seat, at least for the moment,â Coker said. âFor now, Trumpâs gonna try to bait him and he wonât take the bait. So if you wonât take the bait from Trump, why would you take the bait from Noem?â