The 2024 Republican presidential primary has begun, and One America News Network’s longstanding hesitancy to get involved in the coming fight between former President Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis appears to be crumbling. Although DeSantis still enjoys positive coverage from the right-wing network, it is now mostly for his role as governor — for DeSantis’ prospects as a presidential candidate, OAN is beginning to raise the specter of the swamp.
While a rivalry between the two men brewed for months, OAN strove to play both sides, transparently supporting Trump while also lavishing praise on DeSantis as governor. OAN even attempted to cast the growing feud as an establishment plot to fracture the so-called America First movement, essentially telling DeSantis to wait his turn for a run at the presidency. OAN’s general attitude can perhaps best be summed up by founder Robert Herring’s 2022 comment that “we support DeSantis as a vice president.”
However, recent events have seemingly heralded the end for any hopes of OAN’s neutrality in the GOP primary. On February 7, DeSantis hosted an event about “the damaging impacts of defamation from the legacy media,” featuring attorney Elizabeth “Libby” Locke, who the governor called “an extraordinaire when it comes to First Amendment defamation.” Locke’s firm also represents Dominion Voting Systems in its various defamation suits against right-wing media — including OAN — for spreading pro-Trump election lies that falsely implicate the company in the nonexistent plot to steal the 2020 election. These lies were spread by multiple network personalities and guests, and OAN has already recanted other false election fraud allegations after settling a different defamation suit.
On February 14, Real America host Dan Ball advanced the network’s unofficial position of Trump now, DeSantis later into more confrontational territory, showcasing a Trumpian sense of grievance and disloyalty.
Referring to DeSantis’ 2018 campaign for governor, Ball asked the audience, “Would DeSantis have been the powerhouse he was at that time and became, if it were not for Trump’s help? I don’t think so. And so is it a slap in the face to the man who helped build you up — who you’ve kind of emulated the last four years in office — to then run against him?”
Hinting at a sense of disappointment, Ball conceded that “it’s America, it’s a capitalist society. You do what you want.”