Fiz,
This is the other side of your split personality responding to your last post.
Yes, DeSantis may not be the fighter Trump is, but maybe he is in a better strategic position? Consider that after two elections, Trump's base is pretty well known. Consider that this is a fight for Electoral votes, more than simply for popular votes.
Consider that Trump's election is likely to hinge, again, on his taking approximately the same states he took in 2016. Then consider that this means states where the Democratic operatives demonstrated even better corrupt control of the voting apparatus in 2022 than in 2016: Arizona, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Georgia, in particular.
What can change for Trump in 2024 if the vote COUNT process in those four states is more under control of the Democrats now than it was in 2016? Is it possible DeSantis might be able to take states which Trump wasn't able to take in 2022...possibly because DeSantis is Hispanic and might appeal directly to that huge base?
http://www.pewresearch.org › science › 2022 › 06 › 14 › a-brief-statistical-portrait-of-u-s-hispanics
1. A brief statistical portrait of U.S. Hispanics - Pew Research Center ...
Jun 14, 2022The U.S. Hispanic population reached 62.1 million in 2020, accounting for 19% of all Americans and making it the nation's second largest racial or ethnic group, behind White Americans and ahead of Black Americans, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. It is also one of the fastest growing groups in the U.S.
I don't know. But it seems unlikely Trump has a plan to recruit votes other than in the states he has already recruited.
Doesn't that make the unknown a more likely to win bet than the overly well known?