BY Steven TerwilligerMay 2, 2026
7 days ago
BY 
 | May 2, 2026
7 days ago

Trump says he would consider Ron DeSantis for a cabinet post next year

President Trump told reporters Friday he would consider appointing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to a cabinet position after DeSantis leaves office next year, a striking signal of reconciliation between two men who spent much of 2024 trading sharp elbows on the presidential primary trail.

Asked about the possibility of DeSantis serving in the administration, Trump offered a simple answer, as Newsmax reported:

"Nobody's asked me that. I like him a lot."

No specific role was named. But the remark lands at a moment when Trump has been actively reshuffling his cabinet and still has two senior vacancies to fill, attorney general and labor secretary. DeSantis, whose second term as governor expires in January 2027, has previously expressed interest in the defense secretary and attorney general positions, the Wall Street Journal and Axios have reported.

From primary rivals to close allies

The trajectory from rival to potential cabinet pick has been one of the more dramatic political arcs in recent memory. DeSantis entered the 2024 Republican primary as Trump's most formidable challenger. He came in a distant second in the Iowa caucuses. His campaign fizzled out shortly after.

During that primary season, Trump leveled personal attacks against the Florida governor, including the nickname "Ron DeSanctimonious." DeSantis eventually endorsed Trump, and the two have worked closely since, a pattern that says more about shared priorities than personal grudges.

By July, the relationship had warmed considerably. Trump toured DeSantis's "Alligator Alcatraz" detention facility for illegal immigrants in the Everglades, shaking hands with the governor at Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport in Ochopee, Florida. Trump's assessment of DeSantis at the time was characteristically direct, as the New York Post reported:

"10 out of 10, maybe 9.9."

That visit to a state-run detention center in the middle of the Everglades was itself a statement. DeSantis built the facility as part of Florida's aggressive posture on illegal immigration, a priority that aligns squarely with the administration's enforcement agenda. The two men weren't just burying the hatchet. They were standing on common ground.

DeSantis has delivered for the Trump agenda

Whatever friction existed during the primary, DeSantis has spent the months since acting less like a defeated rival and more like a governing partner. The list of tangible deliverables is hard to ignore.

DeSantis signed Florida legislation renaming roads and the airport near Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate after the president, symbolic gestures, perhaps, but ones that carry political weight in a state Trump calls home.

Earlier this month, DeSantis praised a Trump executive action aimed at what the governor described as "restoring order, fairness, and stability" in college athletics. That action would allow student athletes to transfer to a different school once without being forced to sit out a season.

Most recently, DeSantis pushed new congressional maps in Florida that could net Republicans four additional House seats in the 2026 midterms, a direct contribution to the president's fight to keep Congress under GOP control. That kind of redistricting muscle matters far more than any airport renaming ceremony.

The broader pattern is clear. DeSantis has aligned himself with the administration's second-term priorities on immigration enforcement, redistricting, and cultural issues. He has done it with executive action, signed legislation, and political capital spent in service of a shared agenda.

A cabinet in motion

Trump's Friday comments come against the backdrop of significant personnel turnover. In recent months, the president ousted Kristi Noem as homeland security secretary, Pam Bondi as attorney general, and Lori Chavez-DeRemer as labor secretary.

The attorney general and labor secretary posts remain without permanent nominees. That's two open chairs at a table where DeSantis has already expressed interest in sitting. The departure of Bondi from the Justice Department left a particularly high-profile vacancy, one that a former governor with legal credentials and a record on law enforcement could plausibly fill.

Trump has shown a willingness to move decisively on personnel. He named JD Vance to a prominent fraud enforcement role earlier this year, and the cabinet reshuffling has been among the most aggressive of any modern presidency. The question now is whether DeSantis fits into the next round of appointments or whether Friday's remark was simply a warm nod to a political ally.

A representative for the governor did not respond to the New York Post's request for comment.

The political math

DeSantis is term-limited. His governorship ends in January 2027. That makes the timing natural, a sitting governor wrapping up his final term, with a president who has open cabinet seats and a track record of rewarding loyalty and results.

For DeSantis, a cabinet post would represent a path back to national relevance after a primary campaign that ended in disappointment. For Trump, it would mean adding a proven executive with a record on immigration, filling out a cabinet that has seen more turnover than most, and keeping a popular Republican governor firmly inside the tent.

The open questions are real. Which position? When? And does "I would consider it" become "I'm nominating him"? Trump didn't specify. He rarely tips his hand further than he wants to.

But the direction of travel is unmistakable. Two years ago, these men were opponents. A year ago, they were allies of convenience. Today, the president is publicly floating the idea of handing his former rival a seat at the cabinet table.

In Washington, grudges are common. Results are rarer. DeSantis chose to deliver results, and the president noticed.

Written by: Steven Terwilliger

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