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Ron DeSantis

DeSantis' refusal to 'act normal' cost him a key billionaire donor: insider

In a deep dive into a growing rift between conservative tech billionaires and the Republican party's 2024 presidential nomination aspirants, the Washington Post is reporting that top candidates Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) have alienated the wealthy donors due to their extremist antics.

According to the report, key Silicon Valley tech executives don't care about social issues and are desperately looking for someone who will do their bidding when it comes to deregulation.

However, when it comes to Trump and DeSantis, their obsession with red meat cultural issues favored by their fans has alienated key donors.

The Post is reporting, "Although the tech elite often have criticized the left and 'wokeness,' some now say the GOP has overemphasized divisive social issues such as transgender rights and abortion at the expense of the tech titans’ primary political goal: radical deregulation."

Case in point, the report notes, is billionaire David Sacks who moderated the DeSantis campaign launch along with Elon Musk back when "X" was still called Twitter.

Since that time, along with X's fortunes, that relationship has gone downhill.

"The right-wing venture capitalist David Sacks was a major DeSantis backer, hosting the launch of DeSantis’s presidential campaign on X, formerly Twitter, in the spring," the Post is reporting. "But in recent months, Sacks has soured on DeSantis, according to two people familiar with his thinking, and has thrown fundraisers for rivals Vivek Ramaswamy and Robert F. Kennedy Jr, then running as a Democrat."

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According to one insider, Sacks has parted ways with DeSantis because of the direction his struggling campaign has taken.

“Most Silicon Valley people are politically but not socially conservative,” asserted a Sacks associate. “All DeSantis needed to be was normal. Now he’s gone nuts on this woke thing.”

As for Trump, an associate of billionaire Peter Thiel explained his departure from the former president's camp, "The problem was Trump was very undisciplined, and his own character traits sabotaged the policy changes. Instead of just executing relentlessly, he would cause turmoil and chaos, and that would interfere with his agenda.”

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Political insiders get high pay, big contracts from DeSantis’ Disney district

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Trump's mental stability increasingly an issue in 2024 presidential campaign: report

Donald Trump's mental stability is being used against him more and more in the run-up to the 2024 election, including by his own fellow Republican rivals, according to a report.

Trump, who appeared to confuse Barack Obama for Joe Biden at a rally on Saturday in New Hampshire, is taking fire from all angles on the issue of whether he's mentally fit to take the president's office again. President Joe Biden has already been hammering Trump on this issue, despite Biden himself getting his own criticisms for purported age-related decline.

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Rep. Joaquin Castro warns of GOP’s adversarial rhetoric around Latino immigrants

WASHINGTON — As Republican candidates made their pitches for the White House on the debate stage Wednesday night, almost all supported responding to the situation on the border with a military response.

Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said she would send special operations into Mexico to “take out the cartels.” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said “we’re going to shoot them stone-cold dead.” Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy said he would be “smoking the terrorists on our southern border.”

To U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, it’s a culmination of years of adversarial stances against Latinos and Latin American migrants, from “build the wall” to “invade Mexico”.

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RNC warns 2024 contenders to steer clear of far-right evangelical forum in Iowa

The Republican National Committee has warned 2024 presidential candidates that speaking at the Family Leader’s Thanksgiving forum will prevent them from participating in future Republican presidential debates. But the Family Leader plans to move forward with the event, staff said Thursday, with at least three candidates who have confirmed they will attend.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, U.S. Sen. Tim Scott and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy have all told the Family Leader that they plan to be at the Des Moines event Nov. 17, which advertises itself as a space for presidential candidates to “gather around the table to have a moderated, friendly and open discussion about the issues that are most important to evangelical Americans today.”

Though it is not a debate, the Family Leader has set polling thresholds for participation, requiring candidates to have a Real Clear Politics polling average of 4% or more in national or Iowa polls by Nov. 1. Along with the three candidates planning to attend, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and former President Donald Trump are eligible to participate, and have been invited, Drew Zahn, director of communications for the organization, said.

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Bill would empower DeSantis to ax local officials who take down Confederate monuments

A bill that would give Gov. Ron DeSantis powers to prevent local municipalities from removing existing monuments and murals has been formally introduced in Florida.

The bill comes three years after a mayor in the state drew controversy when he ordered a bronze statue of a Confederate soldier banished from a park.

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Ron DeSantis' own higher education appointee says he lied in debate

Among the claims made in Wednesday's debate came from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), who touted his quick action in defense of Israel.

"I already acted in Florida," DeSantis claimed. "We deactivated them. We're not going to use state tax dollars to fund jihad. No way. And what is Biden doing?"

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Looked 'like he’s having a colonoscopy': Ex-GOP gov. gives DeSantis debate brutal review

Former Republican Party presidential candidate and ambassador Jon Huntsman swiped at Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) after watching his performance in the Republican debates on Wednesday.

The Deseret News watched the debate with Huntsman and his wife, who made their own little side comments as the debate unfolded.

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'0 winners, 5 losers': GOP debate given brutal review

Wednesday night's Republican presidential debate was given a brutal review by Vox writer Andrew Prokop, who summed up the whole ordeal by declaring that there were "0 winners and 5 losers."

In his takedown of the debate, Prokop argued that the most interesting thing about the debate was that each candidate failed in unique ways that helped viewers get a firm grasp of their shortcomings.

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Trump super PAC downplays an Iowa endorsement that hasn’t happened yet

A top Iowa evangelical leader, Bob Vander Plaats, has not yet endorsed a candidate for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, but the super PAC supporting former President Donald Trump is already downplaying the effect of his choice.

Vander Plaats, president and CEO of the Christian conservation organization The Family Leader, has made it clear in interviews and social-media posts that Trump is not his choice for president. A pollster for the Make America Great Again PAC asserting this week that Vander Plaats’ influence would not be enough to curb Trump’s lead in the Iowa GOP caucuses.

The memo from Tony Fabrizio, first published by the Des Moines Register, was sent to donors and supporters Monday as popular Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds officially announced her endorsement of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. The backing of Reynolds is an important win for DeSantis, who trailed Trump by 27 percentage points in the most recent Des Moines Register/NBC News/Mediacom Iowa Poll, and tied with former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley for second place.

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At Miami debate, DeSantis promises GOP big wins after recent disappointments

Miami Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis used the third Republican presidential debate on Wednesday to remind voters that he has the kind of winning record that the GOP and its supporters crave following a series of disappointing electoral defeats for the party a night earlier. With just two months to go before the Iowa caucuses and lagging badly behind former President Donald Trump in the polls, DeSantis made a direct appeal to voters. The Republican Party, he said, had faced year after year of disappointing election results under former President Donald Trump’s leadership and desperately needed to re...

Ramaswamy back on attack against Haley: 3 takeaways from the third Republican debate

The third Republican primary debate in Miami on Wednesday included the slimmest field of contenders to date, with three central candidates jousting among the five left on stage for primacy to become the last standing contender against Donald Trump. But the anticipated showdown between Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley was usurped by a series of bitter exchanges between entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and the former South Carolina governor, with an exasperated Haley at one point calling Ramaswamy “scum.” With wars in Israel and Ukraine and a chasm over U.S. aid dividing the party, foreign policy sat at...

Trump's rivals clash at debate but do little to dent his lead in US race

By James Oliphant and Joseph Ax MIAMI (Reuters) -For the third time, Donald Trump's rivals for the Republican presidential nomination took to the debate stage on Wednesday night in his absence, seeking a way to dislodge the former president from his commanding lead in opinion polls. While contenders such as Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley briefly criticized Trump, the latest episode did not appear any likelier to alter the dynamics of a race that Trump has dominated for months. The candidates spent much of the two-hour event assailing one another as they st...