Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Ron DeSantis

'Wonder how the donor class feels about this': DeSantis skewered for over-the-top anti-LGBTQ video

A new video shared by the DeSantis War Room on Twitter is being criticized by people across the political spectrum for its comparisons of Ron DeSantis to psychopaths and its anti-LGBTQ message.

The DeSantis War Room, which purports to provide "rapid response" for DeSantis, posted the video on the eve of the end of Pride Month. The premise of the clip is to show that former president Donald Trump has at times made pro-LGBTQ comments, while DeSantis has not.

Keep reading... Show less

Fact check: The inaccuracies in Trump, DeSantis and Haley’s speeches at the Moms for Liberty convention

PHILADELPHIA — Top GOP presidential candidates spoke at the Moms for Liberty convention in Philadelphia this weekend, making their 2024 pitch while also focusing on the culture war issues the controversial political group has railed against. Three candidates spoke Friday — former President Donald Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley. Their speeches included inaccuracies or statements lacking relevant context. We’ve excerpted some of those and added relevant background here: Former President Donald Trump Trump repeatedly accused President Joe Biden and the...

DeSantis’ net worth nearly quadruples with book deal

ORLANDO, Fla. — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is now a millionaire thanks to a book deal that nearly quadrupled his net worth, according to a financial disclosure statement released late Friday. DeSantis, 44, put his net worth at $1.17 million as of Dec. 31, up from about $319,000 the previous year, the filing shows. The GOP presidential contender listed $1.25 million in income from HarperCollins Publishers, along with his $141,400 annual salary as governor. DeSantis went on a nationwide tour to promote his book “The Courage to Be Free: Florida’s Blueprint for America’s Revival,” which preceded hi...

'Democrats hate God': Trump goes all in on culture wars in fiery 'Moms for Liberty' speech

Donald Trump on Friday went all in on culture wars in a fiery speech he delivered to a right-wing “parental rights” group.

The former president claimed that Democrats “hate God” at the Moms for Liberty “Joyful Warrior” event in Philadelphia on Friday.

Keep reading... Show less

Moms for Liberty blasted as 'Klanned Karenhood' by protesters in Philadelphia

Moms for Liberty, the far-right group seeking to control school boards and school curricula across the country, gathered in Philadelphia on Friday for a convention featuring former President Donald Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, and a number of other Republican candidates and officials effusing praise for their mission.

But outside the Philadelphia Marriott, it was a different story, as protesters raged against their presence, reported The Daily Beast.

Keep reading... Show less

Nikki Haley: 'Count me as a mom for liberty'

At the very end of her appearance on stage in Philadelphia at a convention held by the far-right, radical group Moms for Liberty, GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley said, “When they mentioned that this was a terrorist organization, I said, ‘Well, then count me as a Mom for Liberty, because that’s what I am,’” The Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

Near the very beginning of her 40-minute remarks, Haley told her story of growing up as a minority, and how her mother told her that her job was to be like every one else – then suggested America needed more people doing that.

Keep reading... Show less

Black engineers, 'Game of Thrones' fans cancel Orlando events over political concerns

ORLANDO, Fla. — Black engineers and “Game of Thrones” fans are the latest groups canceling Orlando events and attributing their decisions to Gov. Ron DeSantis and Florida’s political climate. The National Society of Black Engineers’ 50th conference would have brought up to 15,000 visitors to the Orange County Convention Center in 2024 and generated millions of dollars in economic impact, the group’s CEO Janeen Uzzell said Friday. Instead, it’ll be held in a different city that will be announced next week, she said. The Con of Thrones, which typically draws 3,000 to 4,000 fans of the “Game of T...

Ron DeSantis mercilessly mocked for mimicking Winston Churchill's 'Fight them on the beaches' speech

Florida Governor and 2024 GOP presidential candidate Ron DeSantis' speech this Friday at a Philadelphia summit for Moms for Liberty, a conservative group known for fighting with school boards over racial and gender-related materials in schools, is the subject of mockery on Twitter, with some saying he's trying to emulate Winston Churchill's famous wartime speech against the Nazis.

“As president, I will fight the woke in the corporations, I will fight the woke in the schools, I will fight the woke in the halls of Congress. We will never, ever surrender to the woke mob,” DeSantis said at the Moms for Liberty summit in Philadelphia.

Keep reading... Show less

'Panic among never-Trump Republicans' that GOP voters will pick 2020 loser again: MSNBC's Lemire

The conservative Koch network is raising tens of millions of dollars to help sink Donald Trump's re-election campaign, and MSNBC's Jonathan Lemire said that betrayed a sense of "panic" amongst the former president's Republican opponents.

Right-wing billionaire Charles Koch has collected more than $70 million to fund GOP races in next year's election cycle, and his Americans for Prosperity Action has pledged to back a single candidate in the GOP presidential primary for the first time ever, and while the group has not yet chosen a contender it has already launched digital ads warning that Trump cannot be the nominee.

Keep reading... Show less

DeSantis has 'no game': Trump rival's campaign floundering as GOP lawmakers keep their distance

Adding to Gov. Ron DeSantis' problems in making inroads into knocking off Donald Trump as the leading candidate for the Republican Party's 2024 presidential nomination is his inability to round up more than a smattering of endorsements from members of the GOP-controlled House.

According to a report from the Daily Beast's Jake Lahut, the Florida governor refuses to use the personal touch and call up lawmakers seeking their support, leaving it instead to aides, and not only is that flopping, he's alienating the very lawmakers whose backing he needs.

Days after an NBC poll showed DeSantis taking a stunning drop of 9 points against Trump from April to June, GOP strategists who had suggested he would start lining up endorsements after he announced his presidential bid are complaining about how he is floundering.

According to the report, the Florida Republican has only managed to round up five House members to publicly support him while Trump has 62 in his pocket.

READ MORE: Judge blasts disgraced Ohio GOP House speaker as a 'bully' — and sends him straight to jail

As The Beast report notes, DeSantis' personal awkwardness is coming into play with Republicans in the House where he once served.

Prior to officially announcing, "stories circulated not just of his interpersonal awkwardness but his operation’s apparent lack of interest in cultivating influential GOP supporter," Lahut wrote.

“There’s really no game that DeSantis has, and members have said this: When you’re having staffers reach out to members of Congress—who have bloated egos as it is—they don’t want to have a staffer tell you, ‘Oh we really need your endorsement.' No. They wanna hear it from the f--king candidate,” Lahut added.

You can read more here.

Positive polling, past successes don’t guarantee victory for abortion rights at the ballot box

Polls show that most Americans, even in red states, oppose the strict abortion bans Republican state lawmakers have enacted in the year since the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade.

Emboldened by that fact, abortion rights advocates in multiple states might propose ballot initiatives for voters to consider in next year’s election, if not before. Last year, voters in six states — including conservative Kansas, Kentucky and Montana — endorsed abortion rights when presented with abortion-related ballot questions.

But in several states, Republicans have scrambled the political calculus by making it more difficult to place initiatives on the ballot or by requiring a supermajority of voters to approve them. GOP lawmakers had mixed success with such efforts this year, but they are likely to continue to push them in hopes of raising the barriers before the 2024 election.

Keep reading... Show less

DeSantis was just endorsed by a lawmaker on the Oath Keepers roster — but will Republican voters care?

The presidential campaign of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has demonstrated a knack for lining up support from state legislators, including some who see his chief rival Donald Trump as a drag on the Republican ticket.

Out of the 113 state lawmakers in DeSantis’ home state of Florida, 99 pledged support. In New Hampshire: 51. In Iowa: 37. In Michigan: 19.

And that was all before DeSantis announced his candidacy.

Keep reading... Show less

DeSantis, Trump seek to rewrite history on COVID response

ORLANDO, Fla. — In January 2021, Gov. Ron DeSantis was proud to announce the one-millionth COVID-19 vaccine given out in Florida. “We did it live on TV,” DeSantis told a Newsmax town hall four months later. “And I had a 100-year-old WWII veteran, they showed [his] shot, we were all clapping. They were interviewing him, and he just unilaterally said, ‘I want to say one more thing … Florida has the best doggone governor in this country.’ And I was like, ‘Hey, I’ll take that.’” Back then, DeSantis often praised the state’s coordination with the Trump administration, which was partly responsible f...