Politics

Rick Scott endorses Trump, snubs DeSantis as Republicans prepare to gather in Florida

U.S. Sen. Rick Scott talks to a crowd at a Donald Trump rally in Opa-locka on Nov. 1, 2020.
U.S. Sen. Rick Scott talks to a crowd at a Donald Trump rally in Opa-locka on Nov. 1, 2020. dvarela@miamiherald.com

U.S. Sen. Rick Scott endorsed former President Donald Trump on Thursday for the GOP’s 2024 presidential nod, coming out against his home state governor, Ron DeSantis, and reversing his personal policy of not picking sides in Florida Republican primary fights.

In an op-ed published in Newsweek, Scott explained that although he respected the field of Republicans vying for the party’s presidential nomination, GOP voters have made it increasingly clear that “they want to return to the leadership of Donald Trump.”

He called on Republicans to coalesce around the former president’s bid in preparation to take on President Joe Biden next year.

“It’s time for the Republican Party to come together, behind one candidate, and declare with one voice that we are united in our efforts to defeat Joe Biden and rescue America,” Scott wrote.

The endorsement comes just two days before Trump and DeSantis are expected to speak at the Florida Republican Party’s Freedom Summit in Kissimmee, an event that will kick off a whirlwind week in the Sunshine State. The third Republican presidential debate will take place next Wednesday in Miami, while Trump will hold a competing rally the same evening in Hialeah and then host Florida Republican Party members the following evening at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach.

Scott’s decision to come out in support of Trump also marks a shift for Florida’s junior U.S. senator, who notably avoided taking a side ahead of Florida’s 2016 Republican presidential primary, back when he was governor and both Trump and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio were on the ballot.

Scott is the latest in a growing list of Florida Republicans who have come out in support of Trump’s 2024 comeback campaign. More than half of the state’s Republican congressional delegation has already endorsed the former president, and just last week, state Rep. Randy Fine announced that he would switch his support from DeSantis to Trump.

In some ways, Scott’s decision is a reflection of the political realities of the moment. Trump is leading DeSantis and his other Republican rivals by wide, double-digit margins, both in Florida and nationally. Many Republicans see the former president’s renomination an inevitability at this point.

Scott, a former two-term Florida governor, has also had a fraught relationship with DeSantis for years.

In one notable slight going back to the beginning of DeSantis’ first term as governor, Scott abruptly left his DeSantis’ inauguration ceremony. Leading up to that, Scott angered some members of DeSantis’ team when he made dozens of appointments in the days before DeSantis’ swearing-in ceremony without consulting his successor.

In contrast, Scott and Trump have carried on a longstanding friendship and political alliance.

MG
Max Greenwood
Miami Herald
Max Greenwood is the Miami Herald’s senior political correspondent. A Florida native, he covered campaigns at The Hill from both Washington, D.C. and Florida for six years before joining the Herald in 2023.
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER