Florida Governor Ron DeSantis' odds to win in 2024 shortened last night after his fierce debate performance against California's Democrat leader Gavin Newsom.
DeSantis, 45 and Newsom, 56, took the stage and went head-to-head in Alpharetta, Georgia to defend their states on Thursday night, moderated by Fox News' Sean Hannity.
The two men have spent months going at each other's throats on airwaves and finally got the chance to meet-up face-to-face to battle out some of the most contentious issues plaguing America in recent years.
The battle of the governors not only offered the ultimate red versus blue showdown, but also previewed a future presidential race – if not in this cycle, during a later one.
At 6pm EST, before the debate began, DeSantis' odds to win the presidential election in 2024 sat at 53/1, while Newsom was at 10/1.
But following the fierce fight, DeSantis' odds improved to 48/1, while Newsom's dipped to 12/1, according to oddschecker.com.
At 6pm EST, before the debate began, DeSantis' odds to win the presidential election in 2024 sat at 53/1, while Newsom was at 10/1. But following the fierce fight, DeSantis' odds improved to 48/1, while Newsom's dipped to 12/1, according to oddschecker.com
Despite neither governors sitting at the forefront of their respective parties' presidential candidate ticket, the scores nonetheless show that gamblers were seemingly more impressed with DeSantis compared to Newsom.
Throughout the tense showdown, the two state leaders took personal jabs and fought to speak over each other.
DeSantis slammed his California counterpart by pointing to his hypocrisy during COVID-19 by going out to fine-dining restaurant The French Laundry and sending his children to in-person private schools while his residents were still under lockdown.
He said California ran out of UHauls because so many people were moving out to head to red states – including Florida. He said among the new residents in Florida is Newsom's wife's father.
Newsom didn't back down in the one-on-one debate, taking a dig at DeSantis by saying they both won't be presidential nominees in 2024.
'You almost have to try to mess California up,' DeSantis said during feisty opening remarks. 'That is what Gavin Newsom has done since he has been governor'
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (pictured) said Thursday night that 'ten 9/11s' worth of Californias would have died of COVID-19 had he followed the same policies as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis
'You almost have to try to mess California up,' DeSantis said during feisty opening remarks explaining why his state is superior. 'That is what Gavin Newsom has done since he has been governor.'
'He has imposed restrictions on his own people while exempting himself from those restrictions and going to the French Laundry while his people were suffering,' the Florida governor said. 'He led the country in school closures, blocking kids out of school while he had his own kids in private school in-person.'
Newsom has repeatedly said he has no plans to run for president in 2024 and has served as a surrogate for President Joe Biden since he launched his reelection campaign this year.
On the other hand, DeSantis is engaged in a heated primary election where he comes in distant second to former President Donald Trump.
'I'll give Gavin credit — he did at least admit in his first answer, he's joined at the hip with Biden and Harris,' DeSantis said at Thursday's debate.
'He thinks Biden and Harris have done a great job. He thinks the economy is working because of their policies for Americans, and they are not.
The governor added: 'What California represents is the Biden-Harris agenda on steroids.'
He noted that Newsom is the first California leader to see the state lose population rather than gain.
Despite neither governors sitting at the forefront of their respective parties' presidential candidate ticket, the scores nonetheless show that gamblers were seemingly more impressed with DeSantis compared to Newsom
'They actually at one point, ran out of U-Hauls in the state of California because so many people were leaving,' DeSantis said at the start of a debate filled with a lot of tension and cross-talk.
Newsom acknowledged: 'There are profound differences tonight, and I look forward to engaging.'
'But there's one thing in closing that we have in common is neither of us will be the nominee for our party in 2024,' he jabbed.
The governors took stage Thursday evening to prove once and for all which of their states are superior and which of their governing styles works better for their residents.
The highly anticipated match-up was expected to get heated – and did not disappoint right out the gate.
Following the debate, DeSantis said in a press conference that he decided to do the debate because it was 'good exposure' for him since Trump is sucking up most of the media attention in the GOP primary.
'Part of the reason I did it is Sean's a friend,' Desantis said of the Fox host, adding that he was hesitant to participate at first since Newsom isn't an official 2024 candidate.
'But then I thought about it,' he explained in a post-debate press conference. 'I'm in a race where one candidate gets a disproportionate amount of media coverage. And so I have to be able to get my message out.'
DeSantis slammed his California counterpart by pointing to his hypocrisy during COVID-19 by going out to fine-dining restaurant The French Laundry and sending his children to in-person private schools while his residents were still under lockdown .
'So to have 90 minutes on national TV, where I'm able to go and box somebody who is on the far left – that is good exposure for me,' he said.
DeSantis is currently running in the 2024 Republican presidential race, consistently polling second, but far behind Trump.
He has already participated in three Republican presidential primary debates against his GOP competitors without Trump ahead of the battle with Newsom.
Meanwhile, Newsom is not in the 2024 race – and insists he has no intentions of entering the running and instead is serving as a surrogate to Biden.
'As Democrats ramp up their efforts to replace the historically unpopular and failed Joe Biden as their nominee, Ron DeSantis' showdown with Gavin Newsom is even more timely,' DeSantis campaign manager James Uthmeier said in a statement provided to DailyMail.com
He added: 'A Newsom presidency would accelerate America's decline, and November 30th will be the first chance to expose to a national audience just how dangerous his radical ideology would be for the country.'
'Ron DeSantis will take this responsibility seriously and looks forward to sharing the stark contrast between his vision to revive our nation and Newsom's blueprint for failure.'
Newsom spokesman Nathan Click told DailyMail.com the day before the debate that the California governor is participating because he 'has long believed that Democrats have to go on offense in enemy territory, and that's exactly what he intends to do.'
Hannity helped brokered the terms of the debate, including at least one of the candidates preferring not to have an in-studio audience.
The Fox News host told DailyMail.com in an interview Tuesday: 'I took on the crazy position of personally handling this myself. I thought it was too important.'
Newsom initially challenged DeSantis to a debate in September 2022. At the time, DeSantis was not yet running in the 2024 Republican presidential primary.
In an interview with Hannity in June, Newsom, a liberal, again said he would debate DeSantis, a conservative, with the Fox host moderating.
DeSantis officially agreed in August, telling Hannity during an interview: 'I'm game. Let's get it done. Just tell me when and where.'
'We were shocked when he accepted,' Click said to DailyMail.com
'Newsom had been challenging Desantis (sic) for months to debate, and the fact that he finally accepted as his campaign was circling the drain shows just how bad Desantis (sic) needs to distract from his disaster of candidacy,' he added.