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Ron DeSantis

Trump criticizes DeSantis without pushback at Iowa event, even after new criminal charges

By Tim Reid and Alexandra Ulmer (Reuters) - Republican presidential rivals Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis appeared at the same event in the 2024 White House race for the first time on Friday, but even a day after Trump faced fresh criminal charges, it was the former president talking down DeSantis rather than the other way around. Trump, who has all year relentlessly attacked DeSantis, his nearest rival for the Republican nomination, told a crowd of Iowa Republicans "not to take a chance" on the Florida governor he mockingly calls "DeSanctus", among other nicknames. DeSantis was seen as a major...

DeSantis’ campaign ‘reset’ sounds like familiar pitch at high-profile Iowa GOP dinner

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis stuck to familiar talking points during a speech to a prominent gathering of Iowa Republicans on Friday, even as his presidential campaign embarks on a widely touted reboot intended to reverse the governor’s flagging prospects in the race for the 2024 GOP nomination. Speaking at the Iowa GOP’s annual Lincoln Dinner in Des Moines, DeSantis painted a picture of a country in decline before turning to his record as Florida governor. He was quick to remind a generally friendly audience that he signed a six-week abortion ban in his home state, “protected Second Amendment ri...

DeSantis backtracks on appointing RFK Jr. to lead public health agency

Just two days after saying that if elected president he’d consider appointing conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead a federal public health agency, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis walked those comments back on Friday.

The Republican presidential candidate on Wednesday told OutKick’s Clay Travis that Kennedy’s views on COVID protocols and vaccines would fit his vision in forming in a new administration, and suggested selecting Kennedy to lead the CDC or FDA after Travis asked him if he’d consider the longshot Democratic presidential candidate as a running mate.

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'What politician doesn't insult children?': Ex-GOP rep. roasts 'uniquely unlikable' DeSantis

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was once hailed as the GOP's best alternative to former President Donald Trump in 2024 — but so far it hasn't worked out that way, with DeSantis lagging the former president by 30 points and trying to fend off self-inflicted controversies like defending a state curriculum that teaches kids Black people learned valuable skills from slavery.

And even on top of that, DeSantis has had problems simply interacting with voters as he stumps in Iowa. He has come under mockery after an awkward conversation with a young girl at the state fair, where he asked her what she was eating and when she said ice cream or an "ICEE," he replied, "There's probably a lot of sugar, huh?"

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Black conservatives 'livid' after DeSantis attacks Tim Scott for opposing slavery curriculum

Just as his presidential campaign was “rebooting,” Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis decided to repeatedly attack two Black Republicans who had gently pushed back against his education curriculum on slavery.

Black conservatives are “livid.”

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'House of cards is coming down' for Trump as henchmen reveal election lies: columnist

Rudy Giuliani has admitted that he lied about two Georgia poll workers committing election fraud, and a columnist thinks that could send Donald Trump's Jan. 6 defense crashing to the ground.

The former New York City mayor conceded that his claims about Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss were "false" and "defamatory," which he admitted as part of a legal gambit in the lawsuit they filed against him.

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'Free falling to the dumps': Ex-GOP strategist lays out reasons why DeSantis’ campaign is imploding

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' cheerleaders had high hopes for his presidential campaign, touting him as the GOP's best chance to move on from former President Donald Trump in 2024. But in poll after poll, Trump has had considerable leads among Republican primary voters. Polls released in late July have found the Florida governor trailing Trump by 43 percent (Morning Consult), 36 percent (The Economist/YouGov), 44 percent (Rasmussen) or 40 percent (Harvard University/HarrisX).

That isn't to say that a Trump nomination is written in stone or that DeSantis doesn't have plenty of time to turn things around. In late 2019 and early 2020, some pundits were writing obituaries for Joe Biden's campaign; now, he's president of the United States.

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New law shields DeSantis’ use of state vehicles to campaign

TALLAHASSEE — If it hadn’t been for a fender bender on Interstate 75 near Chattanooga, Tennessee, Tuesday morning, most folks wouldn’t know that Gov. Ron DeSantis was using state government vehicles for his 2024 run for president. Tuesday’s four-vehicle collision on the way to a campaign fundraiser draws a curtain back on the campaign’s use of state resources. But finding out who’s paying for it is nearly impossible thanks to a new law passed by the Legislature to protect the governor’s travel records from public view. “The legislature has enabled him to hide his travel records so we don’t kno...

'Absurd': DeSantis car crash reveals he's using state vehicles for presidential campaign

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was involved in a car crash in Tennessee this week as he traveled for his campaign. He was unhurt in the incident.

However, according to the South Florida Sun Sentinel, it's only thanks to that crash that the public found out DeSantis is using state government vehicles to travel for his presidential campaign. And even with that knowledge, there's no way to know who is paying for them.

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PAC supporting flailing DeSantis plots a 'baffling strategic move': report

Faced with a 2024 presidential nomination bid that is collapsing, a PAC closely allied with Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) is making a curious move to allocate precious resources to Texas despite the fact the state won't hold its primary until Super Tuesday -- long after Donald Trump is likely to have the nomination sewn up.

According to internal communications obtained by the Daily Beast's Jake Lahut and Roger Sollenberger, on-the-ground staffers working for the Never Back Down PAC are being given the choice between working in the early primary state Iowa or Texas.

Calling the move, "a baffling strategic move," the report continued, "Never Back Down has told new hires that if they do not want to be dispatched to knock doors and canvass voters in Iowa, their only other choice is Texas, according to the communications, which were shared by a Republican source with direct knowledge of the situation."

The report notes that Never Back Down is taking a more prominent role in selling DeSantis to voters at a time when he is shedding campaign staff due to money problems and profligate spending as he seeks a "reset" as his poll numbers plummet.

IN OTHER NEWS: 'That timeline is devastating': CNN legal analyst says Trump's legal problems just got much worse

According to one GOP campaign strategist with no horse in the race, the Texas move is a sign of desperation.

“Trump is obviously pummeling DeSantis, but putting it all on Texas is an interesting strategy because they’re burning cash and falling in the polls,” they explained. “So to focus on a later state like Texas when your campaign is on life support and you’ve had to reboot it twice, that’s not a good place to be.”

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Tim Scott calls for end of DOJ 'weaponization' and criticizes Florida Black history curriculum

U.S. Sen. Tim Scott, campaigning in Iowa, said if elected president, he would take on the “weaponization” of the Department of Justice.

Scott focused on law enforcement Thursday after a federal grand jury added three new felony charges against former President Donald Trump.

At a campaign event in Ankeny, Scott was asked how the charges should factor into Republican primary voters’ and caucusgoers’ decision on the 2024 nomination.

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Ron DeSantis' campaign manager has a history of running dark money operations: report

Despite pushing the bounds of campaign finance laws in an effort to pump millions of dollars into his presidential campaign, Ron DeSantis' team is still struggling with funding. A lot of that blame is being thrust on his campaign manager, who has extensive experience with "dark money" campaigns, The Daily Beast reported.

"Immediately after DeSantis officially declared his inevitable candidacy, he was challenging fundraising laws," The Beast's report stated. "That’s when his state-level PAC pledged to transfer more than $80 million to a pro-DeSantis super PAC, just weeks after DeSantis officially cut ties with the old group—a move Florida lawmakers changed the rules to accommodate and which quickly drew a federal complaint."

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DeSantis’ tourism district wants to cut $8 million for extra Disney deputies

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Gov. Ron DeSantis’ tourism oversight district wants to end a program that provides more than $8 million to hire off-duty law enforcement to bolster security at Disney World and surrounding properties. But two Disney-controlled cities are saying no to that request, setting up another clash between the entertainment giant and the governor-appointed Central Florida Tourism Oversight District. “Tax dollars should not be used to pay for private security use for any corporation,” Alexei Woltornist, a spokesman for the tourism district, said in an email. In 2022, the Disney-c...