Ron DeSantis’s Victory is a Vindication of His Lockdown Scepticism

Governor DeSantis’s resounding victory in Florida is a victory for lockdown sceptics, according to Marshall Auerback in UnHerd. Here’s his article in full:

To paraphrase a famous Sun headline, it was Covid Wot Won It for the Republicans in at least one of last night’s midterm races, even if the widely predicted “red wave” turned out to be more of a dribble. It’s true, in the strict sense, that the immediate focus of voters featured concerns about the rising cost of living, spiralling crime (especially in many blue cities), immigration, and abortion. But all of this must be seen in the context of a pandemic response that ultimately created the conditions for these issues to take root and spread.

The lockdowns precipitated huge economic dislocations, notably supply-chain gaps that in turn created significant inflationary pressures. The stimulus package succeeded beyond policymakers’ wildest dreams, but those same policymakers, from Biden to the Democratic-controlled Congress downward, ignored the changing economic context as the country came out of the pandemic. Instead, the White House and Fed fuelled inflation further by spending nearly $5 trillion in Covid relief.

It’s therefore easy to see why Joe Biden focused on the supposed threat to democracy posed by ‘MAGA’ Republicans rather than inflation during campaigning. That charge might have had more force had Democrats not engaged in a cynical game of intervening in Republican primaries, using party funds to promote some of those same far-Right candidates in GOP primaries.

The strategy has worked better than expected, but the economy has not improved. In fact, it has steadily deteriorated, particularly after the Federal Reserve (which had long dismissed price pressures as “transitory”) belatedly responded by aggressively raising rates. This move created havoc in the housing market and added additional stress to American consumers, who in 2021 increased their personal debt by $1 trillion, the biggest annual increase since 2007.

No wonder, then, that the economy was a top concern for a majority of US voters. But Covid also exposed something else to Americans: the policies pushed by social justice advocates during the pandemic. Being at home with their children, parents were able to see in a way they never had before the hyper-liberal curriculum being foisted on their children: Seattle public schools using K-5 gender lessons to teach kindergarten-age children about transitioning and pronouns being one prominent example. As difficult a time as it was for adults, a plethora of studies showed that young children and adolescents were clearly among the people most negatively impacted, in various ways, by the pandemic lockdowns. These were key factors contributing to Republican Glenn Youngkin’s surprise defeat of the heavy favourite Terry McAuliffe in last year’s Virginia gubernatorial race. It was an early warning ignored by the Democrats.

That is why Republicans were so keen to beat the Covid drum on the eve of the election. Conservative columnist Ann Coulter sent her readers a succinct reminder by linking to a host of lockdown measures that created unprecedented disruptions to American lives for almost three years; likewise, South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem a possible Vice Presidential candidate for Donald Trump, made hay of this issue. Noted lockdown sceptic Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida, long treated as a punching bag by the media for eschewing “expert” advice, is likely to use Florida’s recovery as a signature policy to promote his own presidential run, especially after romping home in his gubernatorial re-election race.

If this wasn’t enough to remind Democrats that voters are sick and tired of being scolded about mask-wearing and incessant reminders that Covid is still very much with us, then consider that we are now a few months into the bivalent booster vaccination campaign, and uptake remains less enthusiastic than ever.

It may not be called a Covid election, but these midterms are a clear snapshot of how the pandemic has reoriented American politics. The Democrats may get away with it this time. They will not be so lucky in 2024.

Stop Press: The Wall St Journal agrees, declaring that DeSantis’s “huge re-election victory vindicates his pandemic policies”.

Stop Press 2: Watch an extract from DeSantis’s victory speech, in which he says Florida is where woke comes to die.

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Jonathan M
Jonathan M
3 years ago

The Republicans would be insane not to select De Santis as their candidate in 2024.

DJOS
DJOS
3 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan M

Yes indeed BUT they can’t select him if he doesn’t want to stand and the last I heard he definitely didn’t want to, not done with sorting Florida.

Chris P
Chris P
3 years ago
Reply to  DJOS

If he has said he doesn’t want to stand then he definitely will. I hope so anyway as I have put a bet on him winning. Rubbish odds so I don’t think I’m the only one.

TheGreenAcres
3 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan M

Sadly, as much as I thought Trump was what America needed in 2016/2020, I fear that he will sh*t all over the Republican party if he’s not selected for 2024.

transmissionofflame
3 years ago

Also worth noting another no-lockdown state – South Dakota – Governor Kristi Noem improved from 51-47 in 2018 to 62-35 in 2022.

huxleypiggles
3 years ago

Wow! That is some endorsement.

JayBee
3 years ago

A DeSantis/Noem ticket would entice me to apply for a green card.
16 years of sane, stable politics and freedom ensured.

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

They seem not too bad, for politicians, though they are kept honest by their citizens who have a bit more idea of the importance of the individual and of liberty and small government than most.

But you’d have to do something about all the people voting Democrat first – baffles me but then I am apparently from the Far Right (and the Dems are certainly from the Far Left).

NeilParkin
3 years ago

I suspect a lot of us have made the journey from ‘Centre-Left’ to ‘Far-right’ without changing anything much about our political views…

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Yes that’s generally true. What has changed is my level of trust in the state and the strength of feeling I have about small government. I was never that enthusiastic about the state but now I want it nowhere near me and realise how dangerous it can be when it gets too big.

NickR
3 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Meloni, Le Pen, sound very much like Harold Wilson did in 1970. Standard left of centre with an immigration policy.

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  NickR

But we’ve been told that Meloni is Literally Mussolini.
I’m still waiting for reports from Italian friends and relatives about Brownshirts marching through the streets but so far all quiet.

Matt Dalby
Matt Dalby
3 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Some people (I’m speaking for myself here, but very much doubt I’m alone) have made the journey from left/centre-left to moderate right by changing our views and becoming more sensible/realistic as our experience of the world has increased.

DJOS
DJOS
3 years ago
Reply to  Matt Dalby

but the centre has moved left so you become further right by just ‘becoming more sensible/realistic’. Just compare the current “Conservatives” (some even call then “Tory”) when not a single one would pass for a early 80s Conservative. They are further left than the Callaghan Labour government.

DJOS
DJOS
3 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

actually I’ve always been ‘on the right’, even since school, clearly no heart. But yes, I am now far faaaar right because I now simply believe the whole cancerous mush of our governing classes need pollarding, complete overhaul

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

A DeSantis/Noem ticket …

Can you imagine the tizzy from the BBC … what a spectacle to behold … it would almost be enough to make me regret not having licence anymore.

I’m not at all qualified to comment on US elections, but I do get the feeling that the US electorate has moved on from Trump. Or maybe that’s what I’m supposed to believe after yesterday.

I do get the feeling that a DeSantis-Noem ticket would inspire American voters. Contrast with here in Dear Old Blighty: there’s absolutely nothing in our established parties offering the faintest flicker of hope anywhere on the horizon. We’re in shit, deep shit.

Brett_McS
3 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

Yes, and they are both Governors, so have relevant experience. Senators not so much.

Lockdown Sceptic
3 years ago

Lockdown Sceptic Ron DeSantis wins big 

Yellow Freedom Boards – next event

Thursday 10th November 11am to 12pm 
Yellow Boards 
Junction B3408 London Rd &
John Nike Way, Binfield 
Bracknell RG42 4FZ  

Stand in the Park Sundays 10.30am to 11.30am – make friends & keep sane 

Wokingham 
Howard Palmer Gardens Sturges Rd RG40 2HD   

Bracknell  
South Hill Park, Rear Lawn, RG12 7PA

photo_2022-11-09_18-06-43.jpg
Judy Watson
Judy Watson
3 years ago

Don’t understand the down-ticks.

JohnK
3 years ago

A reasonable analysis re DeSantis’s result. It’s also worth noting that it’s not long since they had a lot of Hurricane damage recently, no doubt with a lot of outstanding work to recover from it.

skiff
skiff
3 years ago

I’m glad Desantis won, he should definitely be the 2024 nominee. The rest of the results are frankly horrifying. The BBC are crowing that the Dems did better than Trump or even Obama at this stage in their presidencies. This is despite a catastrophic economy, lockdown, vax mandates, a very real threat of actual nuclear war, and a president who is demonstrably mentally unfit to hold office. And they haven’t even finished fortifying… sorry, *counting* the results yet.

Jon Mors
Jon Mors
3 years ago
Reply to  skiff

My take away from the results is that the electorate is now so divided that there are very few votes in the middle to win. You’d expect a Republican landslide given the catastrophic governance of the Democrats over the two last years. Doesn’t augur well for the future cohesiveness of the US. Even if cheating was involved and it was removed, we’re probably only taking a 49 to 51 kind of swing to the Republicans, so doesn’t really say much about wider society.

sophie123
3 years ago
Reply to  Jon Mors

tend to agree. Most people are completely entrenched, regardless of policies or candidates. That leaves a few swing voters who drive the change.

Jon Mors
Jon Mors
3 years ago

Trump is embarrassing himself by threatening DeSantis. The correct conclusion for the Republicans to take from these results is that if they can’t do better than this without Trump, then they would almost certainly do worse with him on the ticket.

stewart
3 years ago

I’m a huge De Santis fan because he stood up for reason against corona insanity.

BUT

He won 59% of the vote.

Gavin Newsom in California, the most lockdown mad place in the US, got reelected with 57% of the vote.

The US is a very divided place and lockdown scepticism hasn’t been fully vindicated there by any stretch of the imagination.

DJOS
DJOS
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Newsom is part of the Pelosi dynasty, need an earthquake to shift away from ‘the four families’

godknowsimgood
godknowsimgood
3 years ago

Trump openly blackmailing DeSantis is crazy and typical of Trump. It will surely backfire: Suppose DeSantis decided not to run – everyone would think it was because he was scared of what Trump would reveal about him if he ran, and many people would imagine it was something so awful that it made DeSantis choose not to run.

So unless it truly is something awful (which is highly unlikely), DeSantis would be more motivated to run now, to show the world that whatever it is – if it’s anything at all – isn’t so bad as people might imagine.

And many people would not want to vote for a blackmailer.

marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago

Governor DeSantis is a trained attorney, understands the law, has the support of the police and many Floridians. But it is interesting some very smart people I know, one an accountant the other a former priest, and I am sure many others do not like Governor DeSantis. Florida has many cantankerous issues to do with farming methods polluting the lakes and creating a red tide along the west coast of the state. This is just one issue, there are many, like all states. But Governor DeSantis has made some very wise decisions since taking office and must be admired for his diligence in doing so.