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2024 Elections

One diner stop at a time: DeSantis tests revamped 2024 strategy to beat Trump

By Gram Slattery RYE, New Hampshire (Reuters) - Sunday afternoon for Ron DeSantis began at a restaurant. The Florida governor sidled into a booth to chat up a pair of newlyweds. Next he took questions at a barbecue outside a small red barn where onlookers munched on hot dogs. His day of campaigning for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination ended at a lobster restaurant overlooking a marsh where onlookers snapped photos of him holding one of the excitable crustaceans in his hand. Such was the first day of DeSantis' "reboot" of his campaign in New Hampshire, the No. 2 state in the Republic...

Ron DeSantis’ book earned him at least $1.1 million — but he remains landless and saddled with student loan debt: disclosure

Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis earned at least $1.1 million from his new book, more than tripling his personal wealth from last year, according to a new federal disclosure filing.

DeSantis’s book, “The Courage to Be Free: Florida's Blueprint for America's Revival,” earned him between $1.1 million and $6 million in combined royalties and advances, according to the public financial disclosure report released Monday, which confirmed DeSantis’s income boost that Insider reported from his separate Florida Commission on Ethics filing last month.

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Bikers for Trump is running out of gas

Donald Trump may be cruising in all 2024 Republican presidential polls.

But Bikers for Trump — long lauded by the former president for its engine-revving, leather-appointed MAGA support — is in a ditch.

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‘Cult’: Poll finds Trump-supporting GOPers who believe he committed crimes outnumbers all DeSantis 2024 voters

A new New York Times/Siena College poll finds that even after two criminal indictments and ahead of possibly two more, Donald Trump is "dominating" the entire GOP presidential primary field, including Florida Governor Ron DeSantis "by a landslide 37 percentage points." Trump, the poll shows, currently has the majority of likely Republican primary voters. Some experts point to "racial anxiety" and "GOP hostility to changing gender roles," some to "the loss of white straight male privilege," and some are calling it a "cult."

"Mr. Trump held decisive advantages across almost every demographic group and region and in every ideological wing of the party, the survey found, as Republican voters waved away concerns about his escalating legal jeopardy," The Times' Shane Goldmacher reports. "He led by wide margins among men and women, younger and older voters, moderates and conservatives, those who went to college and those who didn’t, and in cities, suburbs and rural areas."

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'Violence, malice and menace': Columnist warns Trump's threats must be taken seriously as walls close in on him

With two criminal indictments already on the books – one in a federal courtroom in Florida, the other brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg – and two more reportedly imminent, one political analyst suggested people keep an eye on Donald Trump's increasingly violent rhetoric as his legal problems overwhelm him.

In his column for Salon, Chauncey DeVega noted that the former president had no problem whipping up his supporters when he merely lost the 2020 presidential election and now, with jail time possibly on the horizon, there is more at stake for him.

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Fox News' GOP debate is an 'obvious' trap set for Trump by Murdoch: ex-president's spokesperson

Donald Trump spokesperson Liz Harrington on Monday called an upcoming Fox News debate for contenders in the GOP presidential race an "obvious" trap for the former president.

During a Monday interview with podcast host Steve Bannon, Harrington argued Trump was ahead in the Republican primaries because he gave powerful speeches.

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Trump taunts GOP rivals by calling upcoming presidential debate an audition for his VP

Taking time out from raging at special counsel Jack Smith for conducting multiple investigations into him, Donald Trump taunted his rivals for the 2024 Republican party presidential nomination.

On Monday morning, after writing "the 2024 Presidential Election [is] arguably the most important Election in the history of the USA," the former president all but claimed the GOP nomination for himself four weeks before the first Republican Party debate, which he reportedly will boycott based upon an assortment of reasons.

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Top DeSantis donor complains candidate 'is the problem' as campaign continues to collapse

Republican Party donors who placed their bets on Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) to supplant Donald Trump as the 2024 GOP presidential nominee are expressing buyer's remorse as his campaign continues a downward spiral the more he hits the road to meet with voters.

With a new poll showing the Florida conservative falling even farther behind the twice-indicted former president, questions are being raised among some of his financial backers who wonder if the blame should be placed on his campaign strategists or if DeSantis is just an irretrievably bad candidate who can't stand up to scrutiny outside of his state.

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Wealthy GOP donors are sitting on their wallets because they want 'anybody other than Trump'

With the first Republican Party 2024 presidential debate less the four weeks away, big-money GOP donors are holding onto their cash in the hope that another candidate breaks from the pack and gives them an alternative to the embattled Donald Trump.

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," longtime political journalist David Drucker claimed that doubts about whether the indicted former president can be successful in the 2024 general election has dampened enthusiasm for donating early as donors watch for a breakout star who is not named Trump and one who will take the ex-president on.

Speaking with host Jonathan Lemire, Drucker of "The Dispatch" reported, "I spoke to three Republican donors last week who jumped in early for [former Gov.] Nikki Haley but when I checked with them about their colleagues, other wealthy Republican donors, the kind that write big checks to super PACs and I said, where are they right now?"

"And where they are is different than donors were in 2016, the last open primary," he continued. "In the last open primary, you had donors picking their favorite candidate, knowing even if it wasn't their horse that won in the end, they were going to be able to get behind the eventual nominee and be happy about it. This time the broad consensus among Republican donors is that they want anybody other than Trump, and a lot of them are going to wait to see if one emerges."

RELATED: 'We can see the Republican train derailing' as they head for a 'political disaster': analyst

"They don't want to contribute to a split field, even though there is a split field without them," he elaborated. "But they don't want to give anybody false hope and financial life in this race, keeping them around so the field continues to stay split. What they're hoping is that over time a sort of consensus alternative emerges."

"Again, they don't care so much necessarily whether they like the Republican that emerges in that position, they just want someone to emerge, then they'd get behind him and hope they can do some damage," he added.

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DeSantis faces 'full-blown tail spin' if he flops at debates: GOP operative

With a new poll on Monday showing Donald Trump building upon his lead as the top choice of conservative voters to be the Republican Party's 2024 presidential nominee, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' window to stop his slide into irrelevancy hinges on the first GOP debate where he needs to make a splash.

According to a report from NBC, with Donald Trump reportedly expected to be a no-show, the focus will be on the Florida governor who has been his closest pursuer despite fading fast with voters.

DeSantis donor Dan Eberhart was blunt in his assessment of what his favorite candidate needs to do.

“The debate is of vital importance for Gov. DeSantis. He urgently needs to change the story arc and regain momentum,” he warned.

IN OTHER NEWS: 'We can see the Republican train derailing' as they head for a 'political disaster': analyst

With the report noting the DeSantis campaign has gone through a recent "bloodletting" as staffers were laid off and money has become tighter, one GOP strategist made the point that his candidacy could come to end quickly.

Gregg Keller, who has worked on GOP campaigns dating back to 2004, explained, "If he bombs, it’s full-blown tail spin at that point," before elaborating, "You do this long enough and you don’t believe any early narrative. Yet I personally have become convinced that DeSantis has some very, very substantial problems.”

Ken Cuccinelli, the founder of the pro-DeSantis Never Back Down PAC agreed, stating, “Obviously, debates are milestones in a campaign. Oftentimes, they are make or break in both directions for various campaigns."

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'We can see the Republican train derailing' as they head for a 'political disaster': analyst

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," a member of the New York Times editorial board predicted an internal battle within the Republican Party over impeaching President Joe Biden will tear the party apart and that Donald Trump will only make matters worse.

Speaking with host Jonathan Lemire, Mara Gay claimed the GOP is headed for a "political disaster" that will manifest itself in the 2024 election.

With host Lemire suggesting that Trump is calling the tune after he threatened any Republican with being primaried if they don't follow his lead, Gay claimed the former president will paint them into a corner by pushing for a Biden impeachment that is grossly unpopular with the voting public.

"We saw Speaker [Kevin] McCarthy (R-CA) try to tap the brakes last week about the impeachment inquiry. But if Donald Trump is going to call for it, the pressure will be on, " Lemire prompted.

RELATED: Trump is setting up a 'total nightmare' for Kevin McCarthy: CNN's Phil Mattingly

"It is pretty stunning because you can see the Republican train derailing as we speak," Gay replied. "Because we know that Trump has been a loser in elections at this point. And yet there's really nothing, it seems, that the rest of his party can do to stop him from losing seats for Republicans, which is what Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) is warning of -- but this one lonely voice, I mean, there's no way you can stop this Trump train like that."

"Also it shows you the extent to which the party is really -- I mean, Donald Trump is about protecting himself, he's not about winning Republican seats," she continued. "So, you know, most Americans don't want to hear about this; this is a giant distraction among other things. 'Hey, look over here, everybody, they're persecuting me, they're prosecuting me,' when, really, there's a really serious process underway across the country in which he is being held to account for potential crimes he may have committed."

"So I think this is a political disaster in the making for Republicans, we'll see how it plays out," she added.

Watch below or at the link.

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Doug Mastriano sure seems to be campaigning for something, and Republicans are worried

QUARKERTOWN — It was a sweltering Sunday in July with one storm having just passed and plenty of dark clouds looming on the horizon. Still, more than 70 people shelled out $10 and hauled beach chairs to a wet concrete slab in front of a covered stage in a public park for the event’s big draw: State Sen. Doug Mastriano. The crowd — predominantly white and older than 50 — looked as if it had been recruited from the 2022 campaign trail, when Mastriano, a Franklin County Republican, waged his losing battle for governor. And Mastriano’s 25-minute speech, delivered as usual in tandem with his wife, ...

'He's betrayed Trump': Report shows DeSantis has a big problem in Florida

It’s not just across the nation that Ron DeSantis’ lackluster campaign has forced a reset – the Florida governor is tanking in his home state too, the Washington Post reported Sunday.

The Post cited an event earlier this month at which DeSantis spoke. It should have been the local GOP’s biggest annual fundraiser, but ticket sales dropped by two-thirds on the previous year and the venue’s ballroom was like a cavern for the just 380 attendees who turned up.

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