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Ron DeSantis

'All Arabs are Semites': CBS host schools DeSantis for calling Palestinians anti-Semitic

CBS host Margaret Brennan grilled Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis after he suggested 2.3 million Palestinians were all anti-Semitic.

During a Sunday interview on Face the Nation, Brennan noted that DeSantis had recently announced Florida, where he is governor, would not accept refugees from Israel's war on Gaza.

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DeSantis in Iowa: I won’t let Gaza refugees into the U.S.

CRESTON — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis emphasized his national security policies on the campaign trail in Iowa Saturday while ramping up investments in the first-in-the-nation caucus state.

DeSantis started off his first of six stops Saturday in Creston, where he told Iowans that the U.S. needs to do more to protect Americans and Israelis as violence escalates between the Middle Eastern state and Hamas, the Palestinian group currently in control of Gaza.

DeSantis said media and international organizations like the United Nations will start to criticize Israel for its actions in Gaza. Israel ordered the evacuation for the northern half of Gaza, where roughly 1 million people live.

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'A bigger deal than the usual screw up': Trump put on notice over his Israel blunder

Donald Trump has recently been in damage-control mode over his comments in opposition to Israeli's leader following the devastating terrorist attacks on our Middle-East ally, and now a Republican consultant has used the former president's blunder as evidence that he is not America First - but Trump first.

Trump lashed out at a rally last week against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, essentially accusing him of chickening out at the last minute on the mission to take out Iranian general Qassim Suleimani. Netanyahu was a close political ally of Trump while he was in office, but Trump reportedly felt spurned when Netanyahu acknowledged Joe Biden's victory in 2020.

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'Get in the game': Trump rivals pleading with rich donors to derail his re-election bid

With Republican Party primaries just months away, GOP rivals hoping to derail Donald Trump's bid to be the 2024 presidential nominee are begging wealthy donors to give them financial help or risk losing a shot at regaining the White House.

According to a report from the New York Times, potential nominees like former Gov. Nikki Haley (SC) and current Gov Ron DeSantis (FL) are beating the bushes for help making a run at the former president who continues to hold a massive lead in the polls.

The Times is reporting that Haley, who has seen her fortunes rise is urging wealthy conservatives to "get in the game" before it is too late.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"Given Mr. Trump’s durable lead, some political financiers are considering staying on the sidelines. For those donors who aren’t, the choice has increasingly narrowed to Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida and Ms. Haley, whose fortunes have been lifted by her performance in the first two debates," the Times is reporting, before adding, "On Friday, teams of advisers to Mr. DeSantis, Ms. Haley and Mr. [Tim] Scott descended on Dallas for separate presentations to an exclusive gathering of some of the most influential Republican donors in the nation, a group known as the American Opportunity Alliance."

Part of Haley's pitch is that she is surpassing her Florida rival, with the Times reporting, "Ms. Haley’s advisers, Betsy Ankeny and Jon Lerner, showed their own internal surveys, which placed Ms. Haley ahead of Mr. DeSantis in New Hampshire and South Carolina and had the two of them tied in Iowa. Mr. DeSantis had stalled, they argued, and she was rising."

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'They’ve rigged it': Trump insiders accused of backroom deals to ensure his nomination

Months before the first primary ballot is cast, Donald Trump and his surrogates are using a combination of flattery, bullying and threats to make sure state parties put their thumb on the scale and ensure he will be the Republican Party's 2024 presidential nominee.

According to a report from the New York Times, the former president has been working the phones, calling key state Republicans in an effort to get a leg up on the competition for the nomination and that has led one former high-profile member of the Trump administration to claim the fix is in.

As the Times is reporting, "Mr. Trump and his political team have spent months working behind the scenes to build alliances and contingency plans with key party officials, seeking to twist the primary and delegate rules in their favor. "

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

Put another way, Ken Cuccinelli, who served under Trump but now backs Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL), explained, "They’ve rigged it anywhere they thought they could pull it off.”

As the report notes, most of the maneuvering seems to be aimed at undercutting DeSantis who was once seen as the former president's chief competition.

According to Scott Golden, the chairman of the Tennessee Republican Party, "This is the kind of stuff that’s not talked about in the news. This is important stuff. It is ultimately about making sure your person is the nominee.”

The Times is reporting that Trump's people are menacing state Republican Party officials with legal threats.

"Mr. Trump’s campaign warned state parties nationwide about the legal risks of working with super PACs. In the past, super PACs have generally been allowed to organize and advertise in both primaries and caucuses. But in Nevada, a new rule was enacted that barred super PACs from sending speakers, or even literature, to caucus sites, or getting data from the state party," the report states before adding that this maneuver appears primarily aimed at shutting out the Never Back Down PAC allied with DeSantis.

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'Clownish politics': Conservative slams GOP for failing to meet the moment

Conservative columnist George Will penned a scathing opinion for The Washington Post, taking the Republican Party to the shed for its "moronic, clownish politics" in the face of a new crop of global threats that require steady leadership.

"There is turmoil in the party that controls only one congressional chamber and cannot control itself," wrote Will, referring to the inability of the GOP to elect a new House speaker after ousting their original one. "The unfolding presidential campaign is doing nothing to elucidate intelligent responses to two regional wars abroad and fiscal incontinence at home."

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Twice as many students drop out of Florida college after DeSantis takeover

About twice as many students have dropped out of a Florida college this year after Gov. Ron DeSantis installed a new president and board of trustees.

As the 2023-4 school year started up, Interim Provost Brad Thiessen at the New College in Florida said that 27% of the student body had decided not to return—or about 186 students, according to the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. In the last two years, the student body had only gone down by about 90 students per year. A third of faculty members also left following the DeSantis takeover. In addition, the board of trustees denied tenure to five professors who had already been approved to receive it.

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Trump blasted for wanting Israel to spurn Biden for 'private citizen' with 'legal trouble'

Donald Trump's recent speech in the wake of Hamas' terror attack against Israel – in which where he praised Hezbollah as "very smart" – has riled both Republicans and Democrats alike.

According to The Atlantic's David A. Graham, Trump's comments have prompted some to ask if he's pro-Israel or anti-Israel -- but he wrote, that question misses the point.

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Trump remains GOP’s only 'durable' leader amid party’s 'disarray': reports

To Never Trump conservatives, the best thing the Republican Party and the conservative movement could do is distance themselves from former President Donald Trump. But that isn't happening.

Despite facing four criminal indictments and a variety of civil lawsuits, Trump is the clear frontrunner in the GOP presidential primary. A CNN poll released on October 12 finds Trump leading the primary's second-place candidate, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, by 41 percent. And according to a Fox News poll released a day earlier, Trump leads DeSantis by 46 percent.

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Watch: Voter walks out on DeSantis in anger during argument over Israel

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis got into an argument with a voter on the campaign trail at a restaurant in Littleton, New Hampshire, over the escalating Israeli clashes with Hamas in Gaza this week, with the frustrated voter finally storming out and proclaiming DeSantis had lost his vote.

"Ron, what do you think about the annihilation and the decapitation of all the Palestinians in Gaza right now?" asked the voter. "They're basically bulldozing the whole — I worked in the Gaza Strip, in Palestinian refugee camps."

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Ron DeSantis orders Florida to rescue American citizens stuck in Israel

The state of Florida will begin evacuating American citizens from Israel on charter flights, following an executive order signed Thursday by Gov. Ron DeSantis. “We will not leave our residents behind,” DeSantis tweeted. “To the many Floridians who are stuck in Israel, trying to get home — help is on the way.” Tens of thousands of American citizens live in Israel, and DeSantis claimed an estimated 20,000 are attempting to get home amid the ongoing conflict with Hamas. The Biden administration announced a similar plan on Thursday, saying it was organizing charter flights for Americans in Israel ...

Highest drop out rate in Florida college's history fueled by DeSantis: report

A Florida college reported this week it has seen "27 percent of its student body drop out" since Florida governor and 2024 Republican presidential candidate Ron Desantis' recent takeover, marking "the lowest retention rate of first year students in" the University of South Florida's Sarasota campus' history, The New Republic (TNR) reports.

Per the news outlet, "What DeSantis once described as a culture of 'woke indoctrination' has been replaced by one of censorship: Student murals have been painted over, and student orientation leaders were forbidden from wearing pins expressing support for Black Lives Matter or the LGBTQ+ community, reported The New York Times."

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'Most pro-Israel governor' declares state of emergency because of Israel-Hamas

Gov. Ron DeSantis has declared a state of emergency in Florida — some 6,500 miles from the Israeli-Hamas war that’s broken out in the Middle East — to cope with any violence that might break out over here.

The declaration will mean activation of the Florida National Guard and the Florida State Guard, the latter of which answers to DeSantis alone. Jeremy Redfern, press secretary to the governor, confirmed that the state will send aircraft to Israel to evacuate Americans and deliver supplies.

DeSantis’ seven-page emergency order doesn’t say directly what this means for average Floridians, except for plans to boost security around pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian demonstrations, including on campuses.

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