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Florida’s GOP candidate for governor wants nothing to do with Trump’s Puerto Rico conspiracy

Ron DeSantis “doesn’t believe any loss of life has been inflated.”

Ron DeSantis onstage with President Donald Trump.
Ron DeSantis onstage with President Donald Trump.
Ron DeSantis onstage with President Donald Trump.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Dylan Scott
Dylan Scott covers health for Vox, guiding readers through the emerging opportunities and challenges in improving our health. He has reported on health policy for more than 10 years, writing for Governing magazine, Talking Points Memo, and STAT before joining Vox in 2017.

Ron DeSantis, the Republican nominee for governor in Florida, has embraced Donald Trump as forcefully as he can during the campaign. But there is one road down which DeSantis won’t follow the president: questioning the death count in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria.

The president cast doubt on the official death count from last year’s hurricane in a series of tweets on Thursday morning. Though the estimate of 3,000 deaths comes from official government sources, Trump suggested that Democrats had manufactured the numbers to make him look bad because the initial death toll from the hurricane was much lower. But experts and independent analysis had long said the death toll was much higher than the original official estimate of 16.

DeSantis, who is running to be governor of a state where many Puerto Ricans have relocated after Maria, said in a statement Thursday that he “doesn’t believe any loss of life has been inflated.”

It was a remarkable rebuke, as it goes, from one of the most pro-Trump candidates in the country. In the Republican primary, DeSantis aired ads that showed him building Trump’s wall with his daughter and his son wearing a Make America Great Again onesie. DeSantis even called Trump to ask for his endorsement.

Trump’s decision to politicize and duck any responsibility the deaths of 3,000 Americans was apparently a bridge too far for DeSantis. Florida’s current governor, and the Republican nominee for US Senate, Rick Scott felt the same way.

The Hispanic vote will be crucial in Florida’s November elections, including DeSantis’s contest against Democrat Andrew Gillum. And Puerto Rican voters in Florida in particular have been the focus of a lot of interest and speculation: Will the estimated 135,000 Puerto Ricans who relocated to Florida register and vote for Democrats? Would those votes be enough to put Democratic candidates over the top in a swing state that otherwise leans toward Trump?

DeSantis’s decision to speak out against the president suggests he’s not willing to take any chances.

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