Former President Donald Trump, who polls show is the Republican frontrunner for 2024, was arrested on Tuesday on federal charges in connection to whether he allegedly mishandled classified documents.
Vivek Ramaswamy and radio host Larry Elder publicly denounced Trump’s arrest on Tuesday. In a statement last week, after the federal indictment was unsealed, DeSantis condemned what he called the weaponization of federal agencies but didn’t mention the former president by name.
Ramaswamy, meanwhile, was the only Republican candidate to go to Miami to defend Trump, saying that the Department of Justice (DOJ) is engaging in “police state”-style tactics by arresting Trump.
The businessman-turned-candidate then alleged that the GOP “donor class” told “every Republican candidate and telling us to stay away from this ... I refuse to abide by being a disciple of the donor class.”
“I can tell you that it is deeply disturbing that Hillary Clinton was not charged for her blatant violation of the Espionage Act when she destroyed her private email server,” Elder continued in a statement. “And why is the special counsel investigation into [President] Biden’s mishandling of classified documents taking so much longer than the investigation of Trump?”
As for DeSantis, both the governor and his team have largely remained silent on Trump’s arrest. Over the past weekend, DeSantis suggested there is a double standard at play.
“I think there needs to be one standard of justice in this country. Let’s enforce it on everybody and make sure we all know the rules. You can’t have one faction of society weaponizing the power of the state against factions that it doesn’t like and that’s what you see,” he said during a speech in North Carolina on Saturday. He made similar comments on his Twitter account.
But DeSantis also said that if “I would have taken classified [documents] to my apartment, I would have been court-martialed in a New York minute” when he was a Naval officer.
Former Vice President Mike Pence, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, and Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) signaled they are now willing to criticize Trump after his arrest. For instance, Scott told reporters that the DOJ indictment against Trump is a “serious case with serious allegations,” Haley called Trump “reckless,” and Pence said that he “can’t defend” what the indictment alleged Trump did with classified documents.
Former Gov. Asa Hutchinson and former Gov. Chris Christie, both longtime critics of Trump, appeared to largely agree with the DOJ’s indictment.
“Whether you like Donald Trump or you don’t like Donald Trump, this conduct is inexcusable, in my opinion, for somebody who wants to be president of the United States,” Christie said during a recent town hall. Notably, Christie backed Trump during his 2016 campaign and helped head his transition team, but since then, he’s turned against the former president.