It Looks Like No One Wants To Be Ron DeSantis' Guest At Republican Debate

Although the Florida governor has 2.1 million followers, less than 50 liked his post offering a chance to be his guest at the August 23 debate in Milwaukee.
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Florida Governor Ron DeSantis could theoretically win the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, but that doesn’t mean voters actually want to hang out with him.

RealClearPolitics.com shows DeSantis in second place with Republicans, with slightly less than 15%, trailing Donald Trump, who leads in the polls with about 55%.

Trump’s massive lead may not be enough to humiliate DeSantis, but a tweet the governor posted three days ago suggests that voters aren’t really into him.

On Monday, the governor tweeted about a contest in which one person would win a chance to fly to Milwaukee on August 23 to be DeSantis’ guest at the first GOP presidential debate, which Trump is probably ditching:

Yes, this is really happening. I’m flying out one LUCKY winner for a VIP Experience they’ll never forget at this year’s first GOP Presidential debate. Sound interesting? Enter now for a chance to win!

Although DeSantis has 2.1 million followers on Twitter, er, X, the vast vast majority don’t seem that excited about being his debate guest.

As of Thursday evening, the contest post had been viewed more than 274,000 times but had only been liked 48 times, with just 15 reposts and 41 quote tweets, an astonishingly low amount of engagement considering the governor’s massive social media following.

Twitter users couldn’t help but notice. Oh, and pile on.

HuffPost reached out to the DeSantis campaign for comment but no one immediately responded.

Still, the lack of engagement is just another snafu plaguing the DeSantis campaign at a time when he could use a boost.

Earlier on Thursday, the governor was mocked after it was revealed that he plans to “defend Trump” at the Republican debate even though he can’t win the nomination without attacking the former president.

In addition, he canned campaign manager Generra Peck as part of a shake-up aimed at reinvigorating his faltering White House bid.

Earlier this month, he stirred up some controversy when he vowed to “start slitting throats” on his first day as president.

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