Before launching his ill-fated campaign for the White House, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was a star. Again and again, Republican voters said they saw him as the future of the party — a potential vice president who, after serving four years alongside Donald Trump, could become the party's standard-bearer and run for two terms.
But after a scorched-earth Primary in which Trump pounded DeSantis viciously for the better part of a year, interviews with voters across early-voting states suggest the Florida Governor may have an uphill battle if he chooses to run for President again in 2028. Many Trump supporters not only dislike DeSantis, but echo Trump's assertions that DeSantis betrayed him and say they would never consider him again.
"I think he stabbed Trump in the back," said Pamela Shinkwin, 73, who lives in Massachusetts and traveled to New Hampshire for one of the former President's final rallies before his double-digit victory in the Primary. DeSantis' campaign against Trump had soured her on the Governor, she said.
Mary Sullivan, 76, a retired registered nurse from Manchester, slammed both DeSantis and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley for daring to run in the first place.
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