Ron DeSantis

Ron DeSantis forgets Vivek Ramaswamy's name during Iowa campaign stop

Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) was floored to see Donald Trump throw fellow GOP candidate Vivek Ramaswamy "under the bus" as the Iowa Caucus looms.

Ramaswamy has spent the majority of his time in the GOP primary deferring to the former president.

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Iowa caucuses: What to know as Trump looks for big win in first Republican contest

Iowa is bundled up and ready to kick off the 2024 presidential campaign with its famed quirky caucus.

With bone-chilling cold gripping the state, former President Trump is aiming for a landslide win over rivals Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis.

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'Go home to mommy': Trump pouts as protester interrupts him for 'taking millions'

A protester interrupted former President Donald Trump's campaign event just a day before the Iowa caucus.

During a speech in Indianola on Sunday, Trump was speaking about Ron DeSantis when a protester accused him of wrongly "taking millions" as president.

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Haley overtakes DeSantis as Trump continues to hold lead in latest Iowa poll

Former President Donald Trump continues to lead the pack in the Des Moines Register/NBC News/Mediacom Iowa Poll released Saturday, but his lead has dropped by a few percentage points since December.

The poll also showed former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley has moved into second place, ahead of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for the first time in the Iowa Poll. The survey of likely Iowa Republican caucusgoers found 48% pick Trump as their first choice candidate, followed by Haley at 20% and DeSantis at 16%.

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Koch network ramping up political activity ahead of 2024 election

This article originally appeared in OpenSecrets. Sign up for their weekly newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Americans for Prosperity Action, the flagship political group at the center of an influential network founded by the billionaire owners of Koch Industries, is gearing up for the 2024 presidential election.

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'We're going to do well': Ron DeSantis flails when grilled on finishing third in Iowa

Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis refused to say that he would muster a second-place finish in Iowa's primary caucuses on Monday.

During an interview on Fox News, host Shannon Bream pressed DeSantis on his prospects in Iowa.

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'Trump has lost his mojo': Ex-president ridiculed for small crowd at telerally event

Donald Trump on Saturday opted to do a "telerally" Iowa event because of bad weather, but some have pointed out the event's rather lackluster appearance.

Trump, who has said he believes the bad weather will work to his benefit because of his fans' rabid disposition, appeared at the event alongside Iowa's attorney general, Brenna Bird. Here is the description of the event from the New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman:

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Ladapo’s escalating vaccine war is a DeSantis campaign strategy, critics argue

ORLANDO, Fla. — Florida Surgeon General Joe Ladapo’s campaign against COVID-19 vaccines has intensified in the past few weeks before Gov. Ron DeSantis’ crucial tests in the Iowa presidential caucuses and New Hampshire primary. And experts say that’s not a coincidence. “It’s one thing for a large state’s leading health officer to be an advocate for shared values,” said Kenneth Goodman, the director of the University of Miami Institute for Bioethics and Health Policy. “It’s another to weaponize medical misinformation to trick citizens into voting for his boss.” Ladapo called for a complete halt ...

What DeSantis volunteers in Iowa said when asked if they’d vote for Trump in November

Just days before the "First in the Nation" Iowa Republican Caucuses, two volunteers for the struggling DeSantis campaign were asked if they would vote for Donald Trump in the general election if he becomes the GOP's presidential nominee.

"Absolutely not," one volunteer who voted for Trump twice told CBS News (video below). "In 2020 I was very enthusiastic because of the choice we were facing, but I will not be voting for Donald Trump."

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'Intense' U.S. blizzard derails final leg of Republican caucus campaigning in Iowa

Plunging temperatures, whipping wind and buckets of snow derailed the final stretch of caucus campaigning in the US state of Iowa Friday as Republican presidential hopefuls delivered their last pitches to voters.

Forecasters warned of "fairly intense blizzard conditions" throughout much of the Midwestern state, as the National Weather Service (NWS) said gusts of 50 to 55 miles (80 to 89 kilometers) per hour, paired with blowing snow, could reduce visibility down to a quarter of a mile.

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'Intense' blizzard blows Iowa caucus campaigning off course

Des Moines (United States) (AFP) - Plunging temperatures, whipping wind and buckets of snow derailed the final stretch of caucus campaigning in the US state of Iowa Friday as Republican presidential hopefuls delivered their last pitches to voters. Forecasters warned of "fairly intense blizzard conditions" throughout much of the Midwestern state, as the National Weather Service (NWS) said gusts of 50 to 55 miles (80 to 89 kilometers) per hour, paired with blowing snow, could reduce visibility down to a quarter of a mile.  The extreme weather was making life difficult for White House hopefuls Ro...

Trump among those forced to cancel campaign events due to massive Iowa winter storm

As a brutal winter storm bears down on Iowa, former President Donald Trump is one of many candidates forced to cancel campaign events ahead of the caucuses next week, reported NBC News on Friday evening.

"Former President Donald Trump, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson were all forced to cancel campaign events," said the report. However, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy is attempting to move forward with campaign events regardless.

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Capitol offense: King of GOP Never Trumpers just hurt a lot of big Republican feelings

WASHINGTON – Most Senate Republicans didn’t tune in to watch Chris Christie formally exit the Republican Party presidential primary this week, but the former New Jersey governor landed a verbal blow that’s left many of the Capitol’s top GOPers smarting.

On his way out the door, Christie tripled down on his losing anti-Trump campaign theme when he accused Republican elected officials of “cowardice and hypocrisy.”

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