Tag: DeSantis

  • DeSantis is in a rut. His trek to D.C. didn’t help.

    DeSantis is in a rut. His trek to D.C. didn’t help.

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    “[DeSantis] is in a much weaker position now than he was a few months ago. Trump is in a much stronger position,” said Sarah Longwell, a moderate Republican strategist. DeSantis, she said, has “had a tough few weeks.”

    While DeSantis stays out of the race — he’s planning an entrance after Florida’s legislative session ends in the coming weeks — Trump has begun to consolidate support. The former president and a PAC boosting him are using the time to hammer away at the Florida governor.

    Three Florida Republicans joined four of their colleagues in endorsing Trump this week: Rep. Greg Steube announced his backing of the former president Monday night on Newsmax, Rep. John Rutherford tweeted his support Tuesday afternoon and Rep. Brian Mast told CNN he would be with Trump. He later confirmed his support to POLITICO, adding he might chair a committee of veterans backing the ex-president.

    In yet another slight, Republican Texas Rep. Lance Gooden issued a statement Tuesday noting he had a “positive meeting” with DeSantis but is still backing Trump.

    At the same time, a PAC backing Trump took to the airwaves with an ad claiming DeSantis will cut Social Security and Medicaid — while mocking him for reportedly once eating chocolate pudding with his fingers. (DeSantis laughed off the jab in an interview with Piers Morgan last month, saying he had no recollection and calling it nonsense.)

    A DeSantis spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment, but his allies have begun pushing back.

    A PAC supporting him has released an ad of its own, showing a clip of him promising to keep the entitlement programs intact and contrasting it with another video of Trump indicating he would consider reducing them.

    The Never Back Down PAC sought to compete with Trump for Florida endorsements on Tuesday, announcing the support of Rep. Laurel Lee (R-Fla.), who had worked as his secretary of state. In her statement, Lee cited his “character” and “commitment to core conservative principles” before focusing on what is expected to be DeSantis’ main contrast with Trump: “Ron DeSantis fights for what matters, and he wins when it matters most.”

    In Washington, DeSantis spoke to a jam-packed room at The Heritage Foundation, where congressional staff and family attended with members.

    Many lawmakers weren’t ready to endorse DeSantis, but expressed curiosity about his platform and record. DeSantis drew a solid turnout, even as protesters chanted outside.

    “I want to see a really robust primary. I think it would be healthy for the Republican Party to have a really robust debate on issues,” Rep. John Curtis (R-Utah) said. “And I’d love to see whether it’s Nikki Haley or Ron DeSantis or some of the others that may run that haven’t announced … There’s some very sharp potential Republican presidential candidates. I would go see any of them.”

    Still, several Republican strategists who have been critical of Trump are voicing concern about DeSantis’ prospects. FiveThirtyEight’s polling average shows him trailing Trump by 23 points but still far outpacing anyone else in the field.

    “In many ways he was the frontrunner even ahead of Trump. He struggled a little bit with how best to handle that,” said Wisconsin Republican operative Mark Graul, who believes DeSantis remains “a very strong contender.”

    “DeSantis is in D.C. to try locking up some endorsements for himself because every time Trump picks up another endorsement, he gets a whole news cycle out of it,” added Longwell, who runs focus groups and publishes The Bulwark. “DeSantis is on the precipice of Trump seeming inevitable.”

    Some donors and supporters are starting to worry about DeSantis’ viability. They’re worried about Trump’s apparent strength, bolstered by backlash to the Manhattan district attorney’s indictment. And in one unusual instance, top GOP donor Thomas Peterffy told the Financial Times he is withholding monetary support for DeSantis’ bid, due to “his stance on abortion and book banning.”

    The move is not just a financial blow; it undercuts DeSantis’ argument that only “woke” Democrats are troubled by his support for legislation that removes flagged books from school library shelves until the book is either banned or deemed appropriate.

    If DeSantis was struggling to get the star treatment in Washington, it wasn’t exactly smooth for him in his home state, either. His long running fight with Disney attracted new criticism from other Republicans — including New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu and former New Jersey. Gov. Chris Christie.

    “He looks like a governor. He peaked months ago,” said one Republican ex-politician from New York who is backing Trump but likes DeSantis and was granted anonymity to speak freely about the dynamics of the race. “I don’t think the party moves forward until we get through [Trump’s] comeback chances. The road to DeSantis 2028 goes through Trump 2024.”

    The person added, “Redemption today, DeSantis tomorrow.”

    Gary Fineout and Ally Mutnick contributed to this report.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • DeSantis confronts Hill GOP skepticism he can beat Trump

    DeSantis confronts Hill GOP skepticism he can beat Trump

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    Another two of the nine lawmakers listed as co-hosts of the event harmonized with Lee: “I’m not endorsing anybody. I just think it’s always good to see who’s out there,” Rep. Randy Feenstra (R-Iowa) said, adding that he participated because of his home state’s first-in-the-nation GOP primary slot. “I support any person who wants to throw their hat in the ring.”

    “I’m not co-hosting — I’m a special guest,” quipped Rep. Darin LaHood (R-Ill.) when asked Tuesday about his involvement. He has also not endorsed in the 2024 primary.

    The DeSantis-Hill GOP meeting marks the start of a charged battle for the attention of congressional Republicans between the party’s two presumed presidential frontrunners. The favor of GOP lawmakers won’t determine the nominee, but it remains critical to campaign-trail buzz and earned media: The open distaste Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) drew from most of his Senate colleagues, for example, hurt him in the 2016 primary fight with Trump.

    And institutional support still acts as a crucial validator, particularly for a nascent candidate like DeSantis, who has faced nagging questions about his viability after recent stumbles. Just three House Republicans — and no senators — have endorsed DeSantis, compared to dozens for Trump, although Tuesday’s event is the first signal that the Florida governor is looking to change that.

    “Trump’s a known quantity. He’s not. I think he would probably benefit from sitting down and talking to people,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) of DeSantis. “Trump’s in a good spot. I think DeSantis brings a lot to the table and it would be a serious challenge for President Trump.”

    Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.) said in an interview on Tuesday afternoon she would attend the event as well, making her the second senator to meet with DeSantis. Asked if her appearance equaled an endorsement, she replied: “Not yet.”

    “Tim Scott is forming an exploratory committee. And … Ron DeSantis and I were very good friends in the House,” Lummis said. “We’re still in the kind of stay-tuned phase.”

    Despite the desire for new blood at the top of the ticket, Hill Republicans still prioritize avoiding Trump’s anger. And the general hesitancy to back DeSantis, who still has not officially declared his intent to run, underscores a persistent reality in GOP politics that he will have to confront: Crossing the former president remains a risky endeavor. Trump and his team are paying close attention to which members have — or have not — backed his campaign, and have been strategically rolling out endorsements from inside the Capitol in recent weeks.

    There was at least one exception, though: First-term Rep. Laurel Lee (R-Fla.), who served as DeSantis’ secretary of state until she was elected last November, endorsed DeSantis just hours before the event was set to begin Tuesday.

    “His leadership and his vision made Florida a shining beacon of freedom,” Lee said in a statement, becoming the first in the Florida delegation to back him.

    Trump’s team, though, had an answer for that. His campaign had already rolled out his endorsement from Rep. John Rutherford of Florida hours earlier, the second from the state’s delegation within 24 hours. (Rep. Greg Steube endorsed Trump on Monday night).

    Across the Capitol, Trump has nearly doubled his Senate endorsements over the past month, with nine senators now endorsing him — roughly 20 percent of the conference. That support includes Graham, Tennessee Sens. Bill Hagerty and Marsha Blackburn, as well as Sens. Ted Budd of North Carolina, Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, Cindy Hyde-Smith of Mississippi, Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma, J.D. Vance of Ohio and Eric Schmitt of Missouri.

    And there may be more on the way.

    “I think Trump will clean them up. I think the polls are pretty indicative of where most would be. Despite Trump’s challenges, he was the original,” said Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.), who hasn’t endorsed a presidential candidate.

    And Trump started wooing members months ago. He recently held a 3.5-hour dinner with GOP lawmakers over the weekend while he was in Nashville for the RNC retreat, where he ate with Hagerty, Blackburn and Tennessee GOP Reps. Chuck Fleischmann, John Rose and Diana Harshbarger, according to Fleischmann.

    “I don’t know many people going to the DeSantis event,” Fleischmann said on Tuesday afternoon, a day after he formally endorsed the former president. “I think he and the other candidates who might seek to challenge President Trump for the nomination are going to realize very, very quickly that it’s Trump’s nomination.”

    Several House Republicans, when asked on Tuesday if they planned to attend the DeSantis meet-and-greet, cited vague scheduling conflicts.

    Another early Trump endorser, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), called the gathering “a meeting for supporters of the governor’s 2024 presidential aspirations” but declined to comment further beyond saying: “I wish the governor well.”

    It’s not yet clear exactly how many members will attend the DeSantis event: People familiar with the planning offered a variety of numbers when asked about attendance. Some GOP lawmakers on Tuesday said they hadn’t yet decided whether to go, given the busy week in D.C.

    The “special guests” listed on the invitation include Feenstra, LaHood, Reps. Ken Buck (R-Colo.), Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) and Bob Good (R-Va.) as well as Sens. Lee and Lummis — in addition to Reps. Lee, Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Chip Roy (R-Texas), all of whom have formally endorsed the Florida governor.

    In a brief interview, Massie suggested that some members might fear their Trump-supporting voters would turn on them if they endorsed the former president’s potential opponent. He also appeared to suggest that some lawmakers might be looking for a quid-pro-quo as they try to get through their own elections.

    “I think when somebody comes out for DeSantis, it’s meaningful to DeSantis,” said Massie, who once fought for his own Trump endorsement back home. ‘When somebody comes out for Trump, it’s meaningful for the person who’s endorsing Trump, not necessarily Trump.”

    At least one Republican who doesn’t plan to attend, though, said he’s happy the Florida governor is here — and happy he’s apparently looking to enter the race.

    “I met him, great guy … But I’ve already got my candidate,” said Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), who has endorsed former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley. “We got a good stable to pick from … This will be competitive. We gotta win in 2024. We gotta change course.”

    Olivia Beavers contributed.

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    #DeSantis #confronts #Hill #GOP #skepticism #beat #Trump
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Christie, Trump take aim at DeSantis over Disney rift

    Christie, Trump take aim at DeSantis over Disney rift

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    “I don’t think Ron DeSantis is a conservative, based on his actions towards Disney,” Christie said.

    Former President Donald Trump also criticized DeSantis’ feud with Disney on Tuesday, writing in a Truth Social post that DeSantis is being “absolutely destroyed by Disney.”

    “Disney’s next move will be the announcement that no more money will be invested in Florida because of the Governor — In fact, they could even announce a slow withdrawal or sale of certain properties, or the whole thing. Watch! That would be a killer. In the meantime, this is all so unnecessary, a political STUNT! Ron should work on the squatter MESS!” Trump said.

    Christie told Semafor Editor-at-Large Steve Clemons that he’ll make a decision in the next couple of weeks on whether he’ll run for president in 2024.

    DeSantis has not yet announced a bid for president.

    “If you’re going to be serious about this, you probably have to make a decision by May,” Christie said.

    Christie was seen speaking to more than three dozen of his former staffers and advisors about a possible 2024 presidential run Monday night in Washington.

    “If we go forward, we want all of you to be with us,” Christie told the room Monday. “Thank you to all of you for everything you’ve already done for us. It’s been really, really an amazing ride. And you know what? It might not just be over yet.”

    Christie said Tuesday the field for 2024 looks “vacant compared to what I dealt with in 2016.”

    “In 2016, none of us took Trump seriously,” Christie said about the primary field of his last presidential campaign.

    Christie ran for the 2016 GOP presidential nomination but dropped out in late February of that year. He went on to become one of the first high-profile endorsers of Trump, though the two aren’t close anymore following the Jan. 6 insurrection.

    “You have someone who has had an affair with a porn star, paid her off $130,000 to cover it up, to keep that information from the American people … That’s not the character of somebody who I think should be president of the United States.”

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    #Christie #Trump #aim #DeSantis #Disney #rift
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • DeSantis leans on GOP-controlled Legislature to thwart Disney

    DeSantis leans on GOP-controlled Legislature to thwart Disney

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    florida legislature disney 09052

    The threat came after Disney in February quietly, through a bureaucratic vote, wrestled back control of the Orlando-area park — though state officials didn’t learn of it until March. Disney’s maneuvering left DeSantis administration officials scrambling to respond and the governor ordered an investigation into the California-based corporation.

    During Monday’s press conference, DeSantis also suggested a newly-created state board that owns property in and around Disney World may convert that land into a state park, a rival amusement park or even a state prison. He also floated the idea that the board could look at whether to raise its tax rates, a move that would result in more costs for Disney.

    The governor said that other ideas — such as imposing tolls on roads serving the park — would not be considered. But the recommendations, taken in whole, are meant to push back on the criticism directed at DeSantis by former President Donald Trump and others that he had been outfoxed by Disney.

    During his remarks, DeSantis touted his decisive reelection victory as proof that Floridians backed his push to strip Disney — which is one of the state’s largest employers — of its long-held control over a special district that was initially created in the late ‘60s to spur the development of Walt Disney World.

    DeSantis also added in a statement that “their cheerleaders in the media thought that Disney ‘outsmarted’ the state, but the new control board uncovered their sloppy scheme, and the agreements will be nullified by new legislation that I intend to execute. Disney will operate on a level playing field with every other business in Florida.”

    Disney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The confrontation with Disney started over a year ago when the company opposed Florida’s parental rights in education bill, known by opponents as “Don’t Say Gay,” that banned classroom instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity in lower grades.

    After the company vowed to fight for the law’s repeal, DeSantis countered by having legislators pass a bill to dissolve Disney’s special district known as the Reedy Creek Improvement District. The governor and lawmakers followed that up during a February special Legislative session, however, by passing another measure that kept the district intact but with a new board appointed by the governor.

    However, before that new law took effect, Disney negotiated a deal with the old board during the winter that transferred control to the company. DeSantis and his board of appointees questioned the legality of this deal, though Disney has maintained in statements that it was perfectly legal and was approved in a public meeting.

    Florida currently exempts large theme parks from state inspections, which carves out not just Disney but competitors such as Universal. GOP Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson, whose agency oversees ride safety, said the legislative proposal would allow state inspectors to go in if there had been an accident. DeSantis, in clarifying remarks to reporters, added however this requirement would only apply to parks in special districts, which would mean the new requirement would apply to just Disney.

    State Rep. Anna Eskamani, a Democrat from central Florida, blasted DeSantis over his latest confrontation with Disney.

    “Gov. DeSantis once again demonstrates his latest attempt to target Walt Disney World that this has nothing to do with corporate accountability and everything to do with his own ego and attempt to get a ‘win” for his GOP base,” Eskamani said. “He needs to let go and move on.”

    State Sen. Linda Stewart, another Democrat from Central Florida, said DeSantis was interested in “retaliation, not good government. Turning corporations and properties over to government-control, as DeSantis proposes, just because the governor doesn’t like a position they’ve taken on gay rights, belongs in the playbooks of banana republics, not the state of Florida.”

    DeSantis had hinted at his latest actions earlier this month, but when asked about potential legislation, GOP Senate President Kathleen Passidomo said last Wednesday that if “somebody is working on it they haven’t shared it with me.”

    Katie Betta, a spokesperson for Passidomo, said in email that DeSantis’ staff began speaking to Passidomo’s late last week and over the weekend ahead of his Monday announcement. She also added: “As you are aware, issues can develop throughout the course of session.”

    The Disney legislation adds to a long line of priorities that DeSantis is pushing through in the weeks ahead of an expected presidential campaign. The Legislature has already passed measures on the death penalty, a ban on abortion after six weeks of pregnancy, and easing gun restrictions that had the backing of the governor.

    Legislators who joined DeSantis on Monday said they fully backed his latest efforts to go after Disney, including one whose district includes the theme park and railed at what she called Disney’s embrace of “radical gender ideologies.”

    “Here in the free state of Florida it is we the people not woke corporations,” said Rep. Carolina Amesty (R-Windermere). “We love Disney however you cannot indoctrinate our children.”

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    #DeSantis #leans #GOPcontrolled #Legislature #thwart #Disney
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • DeSantis super PAC claps back at Trump

    DeSantis super PAC claps back at Trump

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    Never Back Down, the super PAC supporting DeSantis, came out swinging with two new videos that take direct aim at Trump. One that came out the same day that Trump addressed the National Rifle Association said he sided with Democrats on some gun regulations.

    “Trump the gun-grabber doesn’t deserve a second chance,” the video maintains.

    Then came a second one on Sunday that, after mentioning the recent indictment against the former president, claims that DeSantis would not cut Social Security — an attempt to neutralize criticism pushed by Trump world that relies on positions DeSantis took while serving in Congress. “Trump should fight Democrats, not lie about Governor DeSantis. What happened to Donald Trump?” states the ad, which aired on Fox News and was first reported by Axios.

    DeSantis hasn’t announced his 2024 presidential bid yet but is widely expected to jump into the race in May or June.

    Never Back Down’s activity came while a Trump-aligned group launched its own withering broadside against DeSantis. Make America Great Again Inc. put out an ad on Friday labeled “Pudding Fingers” that linked together an alleged anecdote about DeSantis eating pudding with his fingers and an assertion that DeSantis will go after Social Security and Medicare if elected president.

    Never Back Down also has started spending on television ad buys in early states for an introductory positive ad about DeSantis as well.

    The bottom line is that at least one part of the DeSantis orbit has decided that the persistent attacks from Trump needed to be responded to before DeSantis officially jumps into the presidential race in the next few weeks. The question is whether the governor himself and those who worked on his reelection campaign, and remain on the payroll now, also begin to respond to Trump.

    There will be those who question the value of taking on Trump directly or whether it’s already too late. But for now, it’s on.

    This post originally appeared in Florida Playbook.



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    #DeSantis #super #PAC #claps #Trump
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • DeSantis wants to make it easier to execute criminals — with an eye toward SCOTUS

    DeSantis wants to make it easier to execute criminals — with an eye toward SCOTUS

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    The two death penalty measures are just a part of a series criminal justice bills that DeSantis called for ahead of this year’s session. He sharply criticized the Parkland jury decision that resulted in Cruz getting a life sentence, but in a running series of appearances to promote his book ahead of an expected presidential run, he also lashed out at blue states and “soft-on-crime” prosecutors operating in other parts of the country.

    “We are holding people accountable,” DeSantis told Republicans gathered Thursday morning at a Lincoln Day breakfast held in Akron, Ohio. “We reject soft-on-crime polices like eliminating cash bail or jailbreak legislation that lets dangerous criminals out of jail before they have finished their sentence. We see the plague across the country of left-wing district attorneys getting elected.”

    Republicans with an eye toward running for president see fighting crime as a good issue for them, after the message resonated with voters in the midterms. Former Vice President Mike Pence on Friday, for example, called for mass shooters to be executed within months.

    DeSantis’ record on criminal justice is something that allies of former President Donald Trump have already hit the governor on. They criticized him for signing a bill in 2019 that raised the amount that must be stolen for someone to be charged with a felony. The Make America Great Again PAC last month claimed that “while President Trump is the only presidential candidate calling for the death penalty for drug dealers, DeSantis is giving a pass to thieves.”

    DeSantis’ criticism of prosecutors and crime policies isn’t new. Last August, he suspended Hillsborough County State Attorney Andrew Warren from office after Warren signed a pledge where he stated he would not enforce the state’s abortion laws, among other things. Warren, who was elected to office, is challenging his suspension in both federal and state court, contending that he was removed for political reasons.

    After carrying out two executions in his first term, DeSantis has now signed three death warrants so far this year. The execution of Louis Gaskin, who had been dubbed the “ninja killer” and was convicted of killing a couple in 1989, went ahead this past week. Darryl Barwick, who was convicted of murdering a Panhandle woman in 1986, is scheduled to be executed May 3.

    The death penalty legislation, however, would likely place Florida into a high-stakes legal debate over criminal punishment in the nation and could eventually wind up before the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Currently, Alabama is the only state that actively imposes the death penalty and doesn’t require a unanimous jury recommendation. But Alabama requires at least 10 out of 12 jurors to agree to the death penalty, while the proposal Florida lawmakers passed on Thursday would allow the death penalty to be imposed by a vote of 8-to-4 or greater.

    Supporters of the measure have repeatedly cited the example of Cruz — who gunned down 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2018 — as a reason to make the change. Three jurors in his case voted against recommending the death penalty nearly five years after the tragedy.

    “If a monster like that who commits heinous crimes does not deserve and get the death penalty than what do we have a death penalty for?” said Sen. Blaise Ingoglia, the GOP sponsor of the measure.

    Ingoglia’s bill is on its way to the governor’s desk after the Florida House voted 80-30 on Thursday in favor of the legislation. The Senate approved the bill last month by a 29-10 vote.

    The Florida House this week also approved another death penalty measure that would allow eight of 12 jurors to recommend the death penalty for someone who rapes a child under the age of 12. The legislation includes a clause that says state and federal court decisions that barred the death penalty in these types cases was “wrongly decided and an egregious infringement of the states’ power to punish the most heinous of crimes.”

    “If you commit a serious crime, you’re going to face the consequences of your actions,” House Speaker Paul Renner said. “While diversion and rehabilitation are important to providing individuals who come in contact with the justice system an opportunity to correct their behavior, people must be held accountable.”

    Both death penalty measures have drawn support from many Democrats, including Senate Democratic Leader Lauren Book. Book’s district includes Parkland, and she was a member of the school safety commission created in the aftermath of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas.

    Book called the Cruz decision a “gross injustice.” She acknowledged that the legislation could help DeSantis during a presidential run, but added that his national ambitions have been the overarching theme of this year’s legislative session.

    “Everything coming out is to help him to do something he wants to do and further his agenda,” Book said.

    Some Democrats, however, questioned pushing bills that appear at odds with current state and federal court rulings.

    “It’s a dangerous, slippery slope,” argued state Rep. Mike Gottlieb, a South Florida Democrat and criminal defense attorney, about child rape bill.

    Republicans contend that changing from a unanimous jury to a supermajority should pass constitutional scrutiny, but Renner and other GOP legislators concede that the law regarding rapists could likely wind up before the nation’s high court.

    But they pointed out that the previous Supreme Court decision striking down the death penalty for child rapists was handed down by a 5-4 majority, including from liberal justices who are no longer on the panel. The 2008 decision at the time was criticized by both Barack Obama and John McCain as they campaigned for president.

    “This is not murder — it’s worse,” said state Rep. Danny Alvarez, an attorney and Republican, during debate on the bill. “When you rape a child, you kill that child’s spirit. That rape lasts with every moment that child closes their eyes. And you tell me ‘oh it doesn’t meet the standard.’…If you will not rise with a child you will fall with the rapist … there should be no debate.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • DeSantis bucks his robot reputation in New Hampshire

    DeSantis bucks his robot reputation in New Hampshire

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    DeSantis was swarmed for photos after his speech, despite officials pleading with people to stay in their seats so the governor could move about the room. He worked the 500-person crowd at the Amos Tuck dinner in downtown Manchester for over an hour, a flurry of handshakes and photos that the state party chair said was unplanned and that defies the notion that he lacks retail skills.

    DeSantis might have a big enough reputation that he can skip over the small rooms other presidential contenders have to work. But he’s trying to walk the walk in this small state that prides itself on putting politicians through the retail-politics wringer, and is expected to follow up his star turn in Manchester with some smaller stops on Saturday.

    And that could spell trouble for his would-be rivals in the polling single-digits, who’ve been betting big on early state retail politicking to set themselves apart from their big-name competitors — DeSantis and former President Donald Trump, who is still No. 1 in the polls.

    “If you’re in New Hampshire and you’re running a sustained grassroots campaign, town hall-style meetings — I know Nikki Haley has several coming up — then you’re able to slowly build up a presence with the right message. And that’s the way to penetrate the Trump-DeSantis narrative and get yourself into the top level of the presidential race,” veteran New Hampshire GOP strategist Mike Dennehy said.

    But “I don’t think you can come once a month for a couple of days, and have a couple of town hall meetings, and stop by a couple of diners, and have that be enough of an effort to make a difference,” he said.

    Haley has stuck to that cadence since her launch, coming through New Hampshire once a month for a series of town halls that she argues are her key to beating Trump.

    “I am not going to focus on doing big rallies,” Haley told a small crowd at the Derry-Salem Elks Lodge last month when asked how she planned to defeat Trump in the primary. “We’re going to touch hands over and over and over again. … You have to go face to face. You can’t just fly in and out.”

    While Haley plots her return to New Hampshire, Vivek Ramaswamy is in the midst of a 10-county bus tour through the state that’s taking him from breweries to civic-engagement centers.

    And the first stop Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) made in New Hampshire since declaring his presidential exploratory committee was to work the counter at the cramped Red Arrow Diner in Manchester.

    As DeSantis inches closer to a presidential bid, he’s going to need to find a way to keep the single-digit candidates at bay while competing against the party’s other rock star: Trump.

    “Only Donald Trump can come and campaign with tens of thousands of people in an arena. Most candidates in New Hampshire are going to have to commit to going to living rooms and backyard barbecues — and that includes Ron DeSantis,” former New Hampshire GOP Chair Wayne MacDonald, who chaired former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s 2016 campaign in New Hampshire, said in an interview. “If he’s not prepared to do that, then he’s going to have a problem in New Hampshire.”

    DeSantis not only sold out the state GOP’s major fundraising dinner on Friday, but he helped the party raise a record $382,000 — in part by asking his own donors to pitch in.

    And the governor’s impromptu glad-handing sent the already star-struck crowd of party activists into a tizzy. They mobbed him as he shuffled from table to table, chattering about the unseasonably warm weather — “I’m taking credit for it” — and clasping hands.

    But Friday was just DeSantis’ introduction to a state known for weeding out politicians who can’t hoof it on the trail.

    “My advice to [DeSantis] is to accept the invitation to the Belknap County Republican Committee cruise on June 2,” Belknap County Republican Chair Gregg Hough said. “There will be 300 to 500 of the state’s most important Republicans, and if he wants to have a crack at this place, he’s going to have to do that.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • DeSantis skipped talking about his 6-week abortion ban to an anti-abortion audience

    DeSantis skipped talking about his 6-week abortion ban to an anti-abortion audience

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    Abortion was given only a passing reference, underscoring how uncomfortable the topic makes leading Republicans, even as Republican-dominated legislatures aggressively pursue more restrictive laws. The night before, DeSantis marked the bill signing with an 11 p.m. tweet, not a press event that often accompanies a signature policy achievement.

    During DeSantis’ 20-minute speech at the evangelical university he only had this to say about abortion: “We have elevated the importance of family and promoted the culture of life.”

    The politics surrounding abortion have become a major issue recently after a federal judge in Texas suspended the FDA’s approval of the abortion drug mifepristone. A federal appeals court ruled this week that it can remain on the market but with availability restricted.

    As a further sign of the difficult spot Republicans are in, Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), who announced a presidential exploratory committee on Wednesday, avoided questions on whether he’d support a federal abortion ban but later clarified that he’d support some sort of federal restriction and would sign a 20-week abortion ban if he were president.

    Polling shows that many Americans don’t support strict abortion bans, including 62 percent who oppose outlawing abortion when a fetal heartbeat is detected — usually around six weeks of pregnancy.

    Florida’s GOP-controlled Legislature on Thursday passed a six-week ban on abortion that provides exceptions for victims of rape and incest up to 15 weeks if they can show some proof such as a police report. But almost 10 Florida Republican lawmakers rejected the ban, many of them representing Democratic areas like Miami or Tallahassee.

    DeSantis’ signing of the bill late Thursday night also marked a stark difference from 2022, when he also approved Florida’s 15-week ban on abortion. DeSantis approved the 2022 law during a public event at a church with dozens of people and a large video screen showing the message “Florida is Pro Life.”

    On Friday at Liberty University during DeSantis’ event, the most explicit mention of Florida’s six-week ban came from campus pastor Jonathan Falwell, who praised the governor while introducing him to the audience.

    “Last night, after the legislature there in Florida passed the bill, [DeSantis] signed the heartbeat Protection Act,” Falwell said to cheers. “And as he signed that into the law at a state of Florida, it will protect all unborn babies because he recognizes that life is a gift.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Pence commends DeSantis for Florida’s 6-week abortion ban

    Pence commends DeSantis for Florida’s 6-week abortion ban

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    “The progress in Florida and the progress in nearly 20 other states is part of a new beginning for life,” Pence said. “I’m going to continue to be a voice for advancing the cause of the unborn on principle and compassion.”

    Pence added that he trusts Republicans to choose a different leader other than former President Donald Trump for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination. Pence has not declared a 2024 presidential bid yet but is expected to do so in the coming weeks.

    “With the challenges we’re facing at home and abroad, I have a sense the American people are looking for different leadership to take us back to the conservative agenda,” Pence said. “I believe different times call for different leadership, and I trust Republican voters to bring us to victory in 2024.”

    The dig comes hours before Pence and Trump are both slated to speak at the National Rifle Association’s annual leadership summit in Indianapolis Friday afternoon.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • DeSantis could be walking into a general election trap on abortion

    DeSantis could be walking into a general election trap on abortion

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    But a six-week ban pushes the outer boundary of anti-abortion rights proposals. And it could spell trouble for DeSantis among independents and suburban voters in a general election, if he makes it that far.

    “We’re going to make him own this, and his agenda, everywhere he goes,” said a national Democratic operative granted anonymity to discuss party strategy. “Goes to Michigan? Abortion ban. Goes to Ohio next week? Abortion ban. And that will take different forms but we’ll hang this incredibly toxic abortion ban and his agenda around his neck with different tactics.”

    The operative added that this is one of many points on which to attack DeSantis who has taken several stances on social issues that Democrats believe won’t sit well with swing voters.

    A spokesman for DeSantis declined to comment for this story. But Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, told POLITICO that a six-week ban isn’t the millstone Democrats believe.

    “Consensus is building across the country that once there’s a heartbeat, it’s a human being,” he said. “So the governor isn’t out of step at all. … In fact, it bolsters his standing.”

    Though DeSantis has not formally entered the presidential race, the campaign to tie him to a six-week ban is already beginning, according to interviews with more than a dozen people from several battleground states.

    Nascent plans include attack ads, knocking on doors in swing states where polling shows abortion has become a more prominent election issue since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, and registering voters throughout the country.

    “Planned Parenthood advocacy and political organizations will make sure everyone knows his dangerous and radical record on abortion rights,” Jenny Lawson, vice president of the Planned Parenthood Action Fund said in a statement. The organization is considering door-to-door canvassing, digital ads and direct mail, Olivia Cappello, a spokesperson said in a recent interview.

    The Planned Parenthood network has poured millions of dollars into voter outreach in response to the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade last year. In the leadup to the decision, arms of the organization announced a $16 million ad campaign, and spent more than $50 million on the 2022 midterms a few months later.

    The head of the much smaller Women’s Voices of Southwest Florida organization, who rallied against the ban in the state capital this week, has also promised an aggressive voter outreach effort.

    “We have all vowed to go knock on doors and go to other states to let people know what DeSantis has done to Florida,” Sarah Parker of the organization said in an interview. “We don’t have a lot of money, but we’ll mobilize.”

    DeSantis does not share that problem. A PAC supporting his likely candidacy boasted of raising $30 million several weeks ago, and he’s proven himself a prodigious fundraiser in the past — a benefit that’s helped him cement himself as the leading Republican alternative to Trump.

    And for many on the right, particularly those miffed at Trump, DeSantis’ support of a six-week ban is proof that he is a more reliable ally in their fight to end the procedure nationwide.

    “I’ve known him since he hit the ground in Congress,” Perkins said. “He, from the start, has been making very solid decisions on a host of policy issues, from religious freedom to economic issues.”

    Florida’s six-week abortion ban received final legislative approval as the issue of abortion access once again dominates the headlines. The U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday agreed to allow the abortion pill mifepristone to remain on the market but with restrictions that will hamper access to millions of people unless the Supreme Court intervenes.

    Florida now joins at least 12 other states — including Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky and Louisiana — that have approved bans on abortions after six weeks, a point at which many people don’t yet know they’re pregnant.

    “This bill is atrocious,” said Ryan Stitzlein, NARAL’s senior national political director. “This issue may ignite a small part of their primary base but it’s deeply unpopular with voters in this country. … We’re activating our more than 4 million members across the country. They’ll be making calls, writing, knocking on doors.”

    Democrats’ confidence is rooted in both public polling that demonstrates little bipartisan appetite for such strict abortion bans as well as recent case studies. Five months after Republicans failed to deliver widespread victories in the midterm elections, a Democratic candidate for the Wisconsin Supreme Court defeated her opponent by 11 points in a race centered around abortion. Even moderate Republicans crossed the aisle to donate to her winning campaign.

    “You should ignore national polls because that’s not how people win a presidential nomination. They win by winning each state and if you look at the bellwether states that Trump or DeSantis need to win, they have major, major problems on the issue of abortion,” political fundraiser Patrick Guarasci — who worked on the winning campaign of Wisconsin Supreme Court candidate Janet Protasiewicz — said in an interview this week. “They’re being held hostage by their donors and their far-right-wing extremists.”

    Guarasci said abortion ranked as the top issue in the recent election.

    “Trump or DeSantis will have a hard time winning a presidential elections without some kind of answer to that question,” he added.

    Several dozen opponents have been staging demonstrations in Tallahassee, even getting arrested in acts of civil disobedience. Though they knew they stood no chance of changing the course of the bill, they continued to gather as recently as Wednesday night to denounce it. State Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried warned DeSantis will “will not stop with Florida.”

    DeSantis isn’t the only Republican who will face pressure for his stance on abortion. Democrats are certain to note that Trump appointed the justices who overturned Roe. Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), on his second day of campaigning since announcing a presidential exploratory committee, pivoted, deflected and avoided specifics when repeatedly pressed on where he stood on federal abortion restrictions.

    But unlike Trump or Scott, DeSantis will have signed legislation limiting access. Democrats don’t intend to let voters forget.

    “This man is clearly wrong for Michigan,” Michigan Lieutenant Gov. Garlin Gilchrist, a Democrat, said on a conference call ahead of DeSantis’ recent visit to the state. “But he is also wrong for America. He will be burdened by his anti-choice, anti-woman, anti-reproductive freedom stances.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )