Tag Archives: Ron DeSantis

Trump Accuses DeSantis of Disloyalty, Says Florida Governor Trying to Rewrite History

Edited By: Shankhyaneel Sarkar

Last Updated: January 30, 2023, 17:44 IST

Washington, United States

Trump has accused Ron DeSantis, Florida governor, of changing his stance in a bid to woo voters away from the former president who has announced his 2024 bid for US president (Image: Reuters)

Donald Trump said Ron DeSantis would not have been elected as Florida governor if it was not for him and his endorsement in 2018

Former US president Donald Trump on Sunday criticised Florida governor Ron DeSantis as he began his campaign for 2024 US Presidential Elections. Ron DeSantis, the Florida governor, is being touted as a potential candidate from the Republican Party for the 2024 Presidential Elections.

Trump called the Florida governor ‘disloyal’ and said he was trying to ‘rewrite history’, criticising Florida governor’s management of Covid and claiming that DeSantis took the safe route and shut down beaches and other public facilities.

DeSantis popularised his brand of politics by cracking down on Covid mask mandates and other advisories like imposing restrictions on movement and social distancing when cases rose.

Many conservative American voters as well as the vast majority of Floridans who reelected him this November in the midterm elections also were in support of his moves.

His stance on LGBTQIA+ issues and race has also won him supporters who feel he should be the next president as he can take on the so-called ‘woke’ mob.

In a video shared by pro-Democrat Twitter account Acyn, Trump is heard saying: “They’re trying to rewrite history. Florida was closed for a long period of time. Remember he closed the beaches and everything else…”

Trump said he will consider it disloyal if DeSantis runs against him in the elections. “I got him elected. When I hear he might run, I consider that very disloyal,” Trump said, while dismissing polls which show DeSantis ahead of him.

Trump also said that several Republican governors kept their states open and DeSantis was not an outlier.

“If it wasn’t for me, Ron would not have been elected governor,” Trump said, according to a report by CNN. The real estate mogul backed the little-known congressman when he ran for Florida governor in 2018.

Trump also said that DeSantis has changed his tune on vaccines lately. In May 2021, DeSantis urged people to get vaccinated but recently he has shifted his stance after seeing that a large number of vaccine-sceptics are mostly far-right, right or conservative leaning Americans or those who support the Republican Party.

DeSantis imposed tough restrictions on movement in March 2020 but he was also the first to remove those restrictions by allowing Florida to reopen bars and restaurants in September 2020.

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DeSantis activates National Guard in response to hundreds of migrants arriving in Florida Keys

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) has activated the state National Guard to provide support to local officials in response to the arrival of hundreds of migrants in the Florida Keys.

He signed an executive order on Friday to mobilize the Guard and direct Florida law enforcement agencies and other agencies to supply resources to local governments as they respond to the migrant landings.

“As the negative impacts of [President] Biden’s lawless immigration policies continue unabated, the burden of the Biden administration’s failure falls on local law enforcement who lack the resources to deal with the crisis,” DeSantis said in a release. 

“That is why I am activating the National Guard and directing state resources to help alleviate the strain on local resources. When Biden continues to ignore his legal responsibilities, we will step in to support our communities,” he continued. 

The move comes nearly a week after local officials reported that at least 500 migrants arrived in the Florida Keys over New Year’s weekend. Roughly 300 of that number landed on islands within Dry Tortugas National Park, prompting its temporary closure. DeSantis’s office said in the release announcing the executive order that law enforcement has encountered more than 8,000 migrants off the Florida coast since August.

The release states that it has been “particularly burdensome” for the sheriff’s office in Monroe County, which is located in the Florida Keys, to provide the necessary resources to manage the hundreds of newly arrived migrants and ensure public safety. 

The state will deploy airplanes and helicopters from the Florida National Guard and reinforce marine patrols from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission to support efforts to intercept the migrants and ensure their safety. 

The release states that Florida has a “long history” of helping refugees, particularly Cubans and others fleeing communist regimes, find assistance in the United States but that it has always included support from the federal government. 

DeSantis has made national headlines and garnered criticism from Democrats for his handling of migrants coming into Florida, as he has sent a number of them on airplanes and buses to northern, Democratic-run “sanctuary” cities that limit their cooperation with federal immigration authorities. 

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) and former Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey (R) have taken similar steps. 

The governors have said they are sending the migrants to places with more resources to support them, but opponents have called their actions political stunts, saying they have not given the cities any advance notice of the migrants’ arrival. 

Biden announced new steps on Wednesday to address the situation at the U.S. southern border as a growing number of Venezuelan migrants make their way to the country through Mexico. He said migrants should not “just show up” at the border and should instead apply for entry from where they are.

Biden also said the U.S. will expand its parole program for those from Venezuela, Nicaragua and Haiti. 

Data from U.S. Customs and Border Patrol showed that 2.76 million migrants were encountered by authorities while crossing the border illegally last fiscal year, which is a record.

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Ron DeSantis takes a shot at ‘floundering’ DC in inauguration speech

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis previewed his second term as the Sunshine State’s governor in his inauguration speech Tuesday and pledged to continue the fight against “woke ideology.”

“Florida is where woke goes to die!” DeSantis said in speech that made have set the stage for a presidential run. “We will not allow reality, facts and truth to become optional. We will never surrender to the woke mob.”

He also promised to continue his incredible successes in Florida in spite of what he called the “floundering” federal bureaucracy.“Florida’s success has been made more difficult by the floundering federal establishment in Washington, DC,” DeSantis said. “It wields its authority through a sprawling, unaccountable and out-of-touch bureaucracy that does not act on behalf of us, but instead looms over us and imposes its will upon us.”

“This has caused many to be pessimistic about the country’s future,” DeSantis added. “Some even say that failure is inevitable. Florida is proof positive that we the people are not destined for failure.”

DeSantis, 44, called his state a “refuge of sanity” compared to DC.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is sworn in by Florida Supreme Court Chief Justice Carlos Muniz during an inauguration ceremony on Jan. 3, 2023.
AP/Lynne Sladky

“Florida has led the way in preserving what the . . . father of our country called the ‘sacred fire of liberty,’ ” he said.

“It is the fire that burned in Independence Hall when 56 men pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor to establish a new nation conceived in liberty.”

DeSantis was sworn in at about 11:15 a.m. He was joined by his wife, Casey, 42, and their children: Madison, 6; Mason, 4; and Mamie, 2. Casey was wearing a light-colored dress with long, flowing arms that drew comparisons to Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

Florida’s Governor Ron DeSantis, his wife, first lady Casey and their children Mason, Madison and Mamie are recognized before he takes the oath of office at his second term inauguration in Tallahassee, Florida.
REUTERS

The popular Florida leader defeated Democrat Charlie Crist in record-breaking fashion in November, winning reelection to the governor’s mansion by nearly 20 points.

His landslide victory contrasted with what was widely seen as disappointing 2022 midterm election results for Republicans across the country, who failed to take control of the US Senate and succeeded in winning the House majority only by a narrow margin.

DeSantis’ shot across the bow national leaders comes as Republican leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) failed to win the House speakership after not gaining the necessary number of votes in three consecutive ballots Tuesday, having been opposed by 20 members of his own party on the final ballot before the House adjourned.

DeSantis is presumed to be a likely 2024 presidential contender, with several polls placing him ahead of former President Donald Trump.

The 76-year-old former president is currently the only declared GOP presidential candidate for 2024. 

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DeSantis tacks further right amid 2024 speculation

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is tacking further to the right as he weighs a 2024 presidential bid, a strategy that could endear him to the GOP’s conservative base and help him outflank rivals — including former President Trump. 

DeSantis has already carved out a reputation as a conservative firebrand, but in recent days he’s ramped up his rhetoric.

This week alone, he called on the state Supreme Court to convene a grand jury to look into “any and all wrongdoing” with respect to the development and promotion of COVID-19 vaccines — getting into a public battle with Anthony Fauci, the White House adviser on COVID-19 and a target of the right, in the process.

He also came out against a recently signed federal law protecting same-sex and interracial marriages. 

The rightward march by DeSantis could help him with conservatives, but it also carries some risks — especially if DeSantis winds up as the party’s nominee in a 2024 general election. 

“He’s got to win the primary before he can run in the general, and the Republican constituency today is still very Trump-ish, so he has to be solid on those conservative issues in order to be a viable alternative to Trump,” Saul Anuzis, a Republican strategist, said. “It makes sense, but the trick is not to go too far.” 

As his political profile has swelled in recent years, DeSantis has emerged as the biggest threat to Trump’s hopes of recapturing the White House and maintaining his grip on the Republican Party.  

A poll from USA Today and Suffolk University released this week found that two-thirds of Republicans and GOP-leaning voters want DeSantis to launch a bid for the presidency in 2024. That same survey showed him overtaking the former president in a primary match-up; 56 percent said they prefer the Florida governor compared to 33 percent who favor Trump. 

DeSantis, who was reelected to a second term in the governor’s mansion last month by a landslide 19-point margin, hasn’t made a final decision on a presidential bid. And if he decides to run, a campaign announcement is likely months away. 

It might be a surprise to some that DeSantis needs to tack to the right at all.

The Florida governor has fostered a reputation as a conservative stalwart by staking out hard-line positions on everything from COVID-19 restrictions to immigration.

Still, some Republicans say he may still have some vulnerabilities when it comes to appealing to the GOP’s base. 

“I think first and foremost, he’s a populist,” one Republican strategist said. “And I think for some of the really hardcore conservatives, that can make him look a little squishy on things like abortion, on the sanctity of marriage. That’s not where you want to be in a Republican primary.” 

While DeSantis signed a bill earlier this year banning abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy in Florida, without exceptions for cases of rape or incest, that still fell short of the total abortion bans that several other Republican-controlled states have enacted since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark abortion rights case. 

Weighing in this week on the newly signed Respect for Marriage Act, which enshrines into law federal protections for same-sex and interracial couples, DeSantis said there was “certainly no need” for such a measure.

He also raised concerns about what the law could mean for religious institutions opposed to same-sex marriage. 

“They are using the power, I think, of the federal government in ways that will absolutely put religious institutions in difficult spots if you have people that are so inclined to be very aggressive against that,” DeSantis told Fox News’s Laura Ingraham on Tuesday. 

Anuzis said that while DeSantis is staking out hard-line positions, he’s managed to do so in a “more rational” manner that can appeal to a broader swath of voters. 

“The policy positions of Trump didn’t bother people. The style did,” Anuzis said. “I think DeSantis is able to present those positions in a more rational and calmer way.”  

“A lot of it depends on the rhetoric, the style, the way you say things,” he continued. “You can be rational and collected, or you can be sensational and try to excite the base, and that comes with a political price to pay in the general election.”  

Doug Heye, a Republican strategist, said that DeSantis has been careful to choose his battles. While DeSantis is “clearly trying to stake out a place should he decide to run” for president in 2024, he’s largely done so in a way that doesn’t step outside the boundaries of his role as Florida governor. 

“The guy wants to show that he’s an adult and can govern, and he did,” Heye said. “He can be the culture warrior to a lot of the conservative base and he can also demonstrate that he’s a good and competent governor.”  

One Florida Republican strategist also noted that DeSantis’s request that the state Supreme Court convene a grand jury to investigate COVID-19 vaccines is par for the course when it comes to the Florida governor’s agenda. DeSantis first rose to national prominence for his willingness to criticize federal public health officials and their advice in the midst of the pandemic. 

“The real question is: Did we need the mandates? Should we be giving these shots to children? There’s a lot of legitimate questions out there,” the strategist said. “He’s not a conspiracy theorist. He’s addressing issues that are populist — concerns that people have.”  

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The Memo: Democrats pine for Trump as GOP nominee

Former President Trump met a muted response from many Republicans when he launched his 2024 White House bid at Mar-A-Lago this month. 

But his campaign is stirring excitement, and even some glee, from Democrats. 

Members of President Biden’s party are openly pining for Trump to become the 2024 Republican nominee, believing he is just too flawed to win a general election.  

They argue that the situation today is markedly different from 2016, not least because voters now know what they get with Trump in office. And Democrats are eager to have such a beatable opponent in an election that is likely to be challenging for their party. 

“I am hoping for Trump’s nomination, ‘cause I think he’s the easiest candidate to beat,” former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean (D) told “The Briefing with Steve Scully” on SiriusXM this week. 

Dean, a presidential candidate in 2004 and subsequently the head of the Democratic National Committee, noted that he had warned his party in 2016 that Trump could win the presidency. 

Now, he insisted: “People are sick of this. They’re tired of the inflammatory stuff, they’re tired of the divisiveness, they’re tired of the lies. If Trump gets the nomination, I think we have got a pretty good chance of turning over some more states than we did the last time.” 

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) told The New York Times recently that even though he thought a Trump candidacy would be “an absolute horror show” for the health of American democracy, it would be “probably a good thing” for those who want Republicans to lose in 2024. 

Democratic strategist Mark Longabaugh told this column that Trump is “infinitely weaker than he was.”  

“You can always get burned by making some of these predictions, but I just think he seems a little bit of a spent force,” Longabaugh said. “There are a whole bunch of dynamics that are very different from 2016.” 

Even some on the right believe the Democrats have a point. 

An editorial from The Wall Street Journal the day before Trump’s campaign launch savaged his chances in 2024, lamenting that after the 2020 election, “the country showed it wants to move on but Mr. Trump refuses — perhaps because he can’t admit to himself that he was a loser.” 

The Journal’s editorial asserted that if Trump did press ahead with his campaign, “Republican voters will have to decide if they want to nominate the man most likely to produce a GOP loss and total power for the progressive left.” 

Democrats and Trump-skeptical Republicans believe that the GOP has other candidates who could either be more persuasive to center-ground voters in a general election — or at least bring less baggage into the race than Trump. 

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) is just as confrontational as Trump but not dogged by the same degree of indiscipline, nor by legal troubles — and he just won reelection in his usually competitive state by 19 points.    

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) was elected in a Democratic-leaning state in 2021, just a year after Biden had carried it by 10 points over Trump.  

Former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, the daughter of Indian immigrants and the leading female contender for the GOP in 2024, would offer a much more inclusive face of the party. 

Of course, Democrats — and pundits — have underestimated Trump before, most notably in 2016. 

His candidacy was treated as a self-promotional gambit or a joke in many places. The Huffington Post at one point ostentatiously announced it would move coverage of his bid to the “Entertainment” section of its website. Various Democrats pronounced that Trump had no chance of winning. 

Everyone knows how that turned out. 

Now, however, the argument that Trump is the weakest link has several new threads. 

Firstly, even though the former president retains the fervent support of his base, he is unpopular with the public at large.  

An Economist-YouGov poll conducted from Nov. 13-15 found that Trump was viewed favorably by 77 percent of Republican voters but by only 41 percent of the overall population. Fifty-two percent of all adults had an unfavorable view of him — notably higher than the other potential GOP contenders the poll tested. 

Secondly, the defeat of high-profile Trump-backed candidates in the midterms has strengthened the argument of those who believe the former president is an electoral liability. 

Senate and gubernatorial candidates endorsed by Trump, including Mehmet Oz and Doug Mastriano in Pennsylvania, Blake Masters and Kari Lake in Arizona and Don Bolduc in New Hampshire all lost. The fate of another prominent endorsee, former football star Herschel Walker, will be decided in Georgia’s December 6 Senate runoff.

Then there is Trump’s relationship to the festering legacy of Jan. 6, 2021, the darkest day in recent American history. Even the Journal’s reliably conservative editorial page acknowledged that “the deadly riot will forever stain his legacy.” 

The Capitol insurrection is just one of the factors contributing to Trump’s sea of legal woes. 

Attorney General Merrick Garland recently appointed a special counsel, Jack Smith, to take over the investigation into events surrounding Jan. 6, as well as the separate probe into sensitive documents found at Mar-a-Lago.  

Either of those investigations could result in a criminal indictment for Trump.  

A probe in Georgia looking into efforts by Trump and his allies to overturn the 2020 result in that state could also be damaging. Meanwhile, New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) is moving forward with a massive civil suit targeting the Trump Organization. 

Put it all together — and add in those voters who have simply grown weary of Trump-fueled chaos — and it’s easy to see why Democrats and some Republicans find it hard to see a path for the former president to win the White House back. 

“I think we would all like Donald Trump to run again,” former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) recently told Gray Television. 

“Trump has significant negatives that makes it very difficult for him to win a majority of the vote,” Republican pollster Glen Bolger told this column. 

For all that, however, Trump remains the leading candidate in polls of the potential GOP 2024 field. 

It looks like the Democrats might get their wish — and then they will find out if they should, again, have been careful what they wished for. 

The Memo is a reported column by Niall Stanage. 

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While DeSantis excites crowds on stage, he’s avoiding the gladhanding that wins over donors



CNN
 — 

Gov. Ron DeSantis has gotten a rock star’s reception at Republican Party functions since winning reelection this month, solidifying himself as a top-tier possible presidential contender. But the Florida Republican has left some influential members of the party wanting more.

He electrified the crowd at the Republican Jewish Coalition’s conference in Las Vegas last weekend, but arrived just before his speech and spent little time glad-handing with donors. Days earlier at the Republican Governors Association meeting in Orlando, DeSantis received a raucous standing ovation, yet he skipped a reception beforehand and the rest of the RGA’s events – despite the fact that, as the home state governor, he was the meeting’s unofficial host.

“When DeSantis came on, all of the young kids came up. It was like a celebrity showed up,” said one person at the RJC’s conference. “But he didn’t stick around to schmooze.”

The events could have been opportune moments for DeSantis. For big donors and operatives, the RGA meeting and the RJC conference were chances to scout out this potential rival to Donald Trump, just days after his resounding reelection win as governor made him the talk of the party. Instead, some were left wondering how DeSantis might compete at the national level, where so much depends on chatting up donors and fostering friendships among fellow Republicans.

“Does he need the RGA for funding? No. Does he need it to spread acceptability for him on a national scale? Yes,” one donor told CNN last week.

“I do think it matters,” said one GOP operative with ties to another potential presidential candidate. “Politics is a people business.”

From his early days in politics, DeSantis has intentionally kept his party at arm’s distance, choosing to align with outsider movements over establishment forces. He rode into Congress during the Tea Party era, joined the House Freedom Caucus and then allied with the Trump wing of the GOP amid his ascent to the Florida governorship. Now, as some Republicans search for a new face who can usher them into a post-Trump period, they are embracing someone who has never embraced them – and who has often gone it alone.

There are signs DeSantis is looking to break from his reputation as a loner. The governor, who avoided helping Republicans outside Florida during most of his first term, crisscrossed the country in the months before the midterms for GOP candidates in tough battlegrounds and cut endorsement messages for a handful of others.

DeSantis also held a summit this summer for his top donors and favored conservative media influencers to hobnob with some Republican governors and select candidates in Fort Lauderdale. Among the attendees were Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who’s now the governor-elect of Arkansas, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, former Maine Gov. Paul LePage and Nevada Senate candidate Adam Laxalt.

One RGA donor, Bobbie Kilberg, acknowledged that DeSantis had not always presented himself as a team player but told CNN that his speech in Orlando at the RGA meeting last week struck a much more “inclusive” tone that acknowledged the work of other parts of the party apparatus.

“I think that is a change to his prior approach to his relationship with other governors, where it’s mostly been ‘I’m the center of attention,’” Kilberg told CNN the day after his remarks. “I think last night was a welcome departure from that, and I think the governors took notice.”

And DeSantis allies dismissed the idea that GOP donors are unsure about the governor.

“He is all work, all the time, he is about getting things done and not glad-handing donors. But donors have flocked to him anyway, checkbooks open, just because of what he has done as governor,” said Nick Iarossi, a DeSantis fundraiser who attended the RGA conference. “No one seems to care whether he wants to stay at a reception and shake hands. They care more about what he does as governor to improve their lives on a day to day basis.”

But other would-be allies have instead noticed how DeSantis did little to stick up for some of his fellow Republican governors in their own reelection fights this year, including Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp – who had a primary challenger backed by Trump – and Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine.

“He doesn’t have great relationships with the other governors,” said a second GOP operative.

Multiple strategists point to his lack of participation with the RGA, a donor-driven organization that helps elect Republican chief executives across the country. Last week’s RGA meeting is just the second DeSantis has attended since being elected governor, after making a brief appearance at the 2019 meeting in Boca Raton, Florida.

“He came in for one speech and left,” said the first Republican operative. “Didn’t mingle, didn’t glad-hand, and a lot of people hadn’t met him at that point.”

Nor does he have particularly strong friendships with the GOP governors, an otherwise chummy bunch. During a panel in Orlando to discuss the party’s future, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu gloated about the collaboration between Republican governors and how they share policy ideas and expertise. But in a conversation later with CNN, Sununu acknowledged he didn’t have that kind of relationship with DeSantis.

Asked about DeSantis’ lack of participation at RGA functions, Sununu responded: “Everyone engages at their own level, in their own way.”

And former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who remains a fixture at RGA events, told the Ruthless podcast earlier this year that he does not know DeSantis well.

“I don’t think Ron hangs out with anybody, from what I can tell. You know, like, when I’m at the RGA meetings, Ron’s pretty much to himself with his entourage,” said Christie, who is also a potential 2024 presidential candidate. “I don’t see him hanging with the other governors.”

Former colleagues of DeSantis in the House of Representatives said the 44-year-old was never much for camaraderie.

“He kept to himself a bit in the House,” said Ryan Costello, the former Pennsylvania congressman who served alongside DeSantis. “He had friends, he had allies, but he was not the gregarious back-slapper that some politicians are always characterized as being.”

A decade ago, in a crowded Republican primary for a Jacksonville-area US House seat, DeSantis ran as a candidate offering “bold conservative colors, not pale establishment pastels.”

“Too many of them have been really co-opted by the establishment system in Washington,” DeSantis said of Republicans in an interview with a local television station. “I think I’m somebody who’s coming as an outsider. I’m looking to change the system.”

Once inside, DeSantis earned a reputation as “a bit of an odd duck,” said former Rep. David Jolly, an ex-Republican who served alongside DeSantis in the Florida delegation. DeSantis helped found the House Freedom Caucus, a group of conservatives who led the shutdown of the federal government over the funding of Obamacare and helped push House Speaker John Boehner into retirement.

In 2018, DeSantis took on the establishment favorite, then-state Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam, for the Republican nomination for governor. DeSantis characterized Putnam as a creature of the Tallahassee swamp and an “errand boy” for special interests. Boosted by a Trump endorsement, DeSantis easily vanquished Putnam and went on to win the general election.

Throughout his first term, DeSantis tried to strike a balance between competent administration of government in Florida and engaging in conservative culture war skirmishes that endeared him to base voters nationally. On issues ranging from the Covid-19 pandemic response to school curriculum to illegal immigration, DeSantis took on liberal pieties, carefully casting himself as a Trump-like culture warrior, only smarter and more effective.

Aided by a close relationship with Fox News, DeSantis began to assume the mantle of Trump successor in the wake of the president’s reelection defeat in 2020. Notably, DeSantis helped campaign for many of the troubled candidates selected by Trump in 2022 – Arizona GOP gubernatorial nominee Kari Lake and Senate nominee Blake Masters, Pennsylvania gubernatorial nominee Doug Mastriano and Ohio Senate nominee J.D. Vance – but not incumbent Republican governors like DeWine, Kemp and Sununu, all of whom found themselves crosswise with Trump at some point.

At a March gathering of 2020 election skeptics in Orlando, DeSantis bemoaned that “so many of these Republicans would not stand up and actually do anything” during the Obama administration. At a rally in Kansas this fall, he called out Republican governors who “have caved to corporate pressure.”

“Even some weak Republicans attacked me” during the pandemic, DeSantis told his supporters on the eve of his reelection.

But after DeSantis won reelection by 19 points, establishment Republicans began to signal their acceptance of him as a leading party figure who could depose Trump. Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor who lost to Trump in the 2016 primary, tweeted his congratulations to DeSantis, adding that he has “done a very fine job as Governor of the state I love.”

And former House Speaker Paul Ryan, speaking to a Wisconsin TV station following the election, made sure to name check DeSantis as he called for the party to move on from Trump.

“Ron got reelected,” Ryan said. “I’m very happy to see that.”

But if the GOP establishment seems to be warming up to DeSantis, it remains to be seen whether the Florida governor will need to reciprocate if he runs for president.

“I don’t think DeSantis has ever shown that he can be influenced,” Jolly said. “Part of his schtick is he does it his own way.”

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Republican Jewish Coalition: GOP elites weigh Trump — and the alternatives — at high-profile Vegas gathering



CNN
 — 

Former President Donald Trump is set to address the influential Republican Jewish Coalition on Saturday, days after becoming the first declared GOP candidate of the 2024 presidential campaign.

But the chandeliered ballroom at the opulent Venetian resort hotel in Las Vegas will teem with his rivals – including potential chief nemesis Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis – as some of the party’s most influential donors weigh alternatives to the divisive former president.

Trump still retains a “following” within the party, Mel Sembler, a Florida real-estate developer and GOP donor who sits on the coalition’s board, told CNN this week. But, he said, “I think people are getting tired of his controversies all the time.”

“What concerns me is if he wins the primary and loses the general,” added Sembler, who has not endorsed a 2024 candidate.

The annual leadership conference of prominent Jewish conservatives marks the first major gathering of GOP establishment forces since this month’s midterm letdown for the party, which saw Democrats retain their hold on the Senate and make inroads in state governments around the country.

Republicans did flip the House but will hold a slim majority in January after the “red wave” their party envisioned all year failed to materialize.

Leading Republican figures in Washington and elsewhere are casting blame on Trump for his role in boosting far-right Senate candidates who faltered in the general election – and for continuing to publicly nurse his own grievances about the 2020 election and his ongoing legal troubles. During his campaign kickoff Tuesday, he called himself a “victim” of a federal law enforcement system that he has spent years politicizing.

Trump’s legal difficulties appeared to deepen Friday when Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed a special counsel to oversee the criminal investigations into the retention of national defense information at his Mar-a-Lago resort and parts of the January 6, 2021, insurrection.

Rather than seeing the party unify behind his third presidential bid, Trump faced immediate blowback. Minutes after his announcement, daughter and former senior White House adviser Ivanka Trump distanced herself from her father’s campaign, saying she does “not plan to be involved in politics.”

His announcement also overlapped with a high-profile book tour by his own former vice president – and potential 2024 rival – Mike Pence, who has spent the past several days reminding Americans of Trump’s role in the violent US Capitol riot on January 6, 2021.

Perhaps the biggest blow to Trump’s campaign infrastructure was the swift and public defection of several billionaire GOP donors – including a close ally, Blackstone CEO Steve Schwarzman – who said the country needed leaders “rooted in today and tomorrow, not today and yesterday.”

Others are hedging their bets.

Among those playing the field is Miriam Adelson, the billionaire widow of Las Vegas casino magnate and RJC benefactor Sheldon Adelson. The Adelsons have donated nearly a half-billion dollars to Republican groups and candidates in the last four election cycles – including tens of millions to boost Trump’s presidential ambitions, federal records show.

Trump in 2018 bestowed the Presidential Medal of Freedom – the nation’s highest civilian honor – on Miriam Adelson, citing her philanthropy.

Despite that relationship, Adelson intends to remain neutral in the GOP presidential primaries, an aide confirmed to CNN this week. Adelson, whose political contributions have slowed some since her husband’s death in January 2021, has indicated that she will financially support the eventual GOP nominee, whether that be Trump or someone else.

RJC executive director Matt Brooks said Trump has won plaudits from coalition members for his stalwart support of Israel during his presidency and unilateral withdrawal from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.

Still, Brooks said, “people are window-shopping right now. There are people who are asking if we need a new direction and a new face.”

Even as Trump prepares to make his pitch to the RJC, his allies and aides have sought to position him as the outsider in the 2024 contest, despite his recent White House occupancy.

“President Trump is running a campaign that represents everyday Americans who love their country,” campaign spokesman Steven Cheung said in a statement to CNN. “There are others who will answer to the political establishment, be beholden to corporations, and drag the United States into more unnecessary wars.”

And his allies note that Trump’s fundraising operation largely relies on a small-dollar donor base, reducing his reliance on the party’s elite and giving him a potential edge over opponents who do not boast the same small-donation game.

He enters the 2024 campaign with more than $100 million in cash reserves across a sprawling network of political committees – although federal law could constrain his ability to fully tap those funds for his campaign.

“He has proven he can raise a lot of money on his own,” Michael Caputo, a former Trump administration official who remains close to the former president, recently told CNN.

Trump is not making the trek to Las Vegas but is scheduled to address the gathering live via satellite Saturday as part of a morning lineup that will feature several other potential rivals for the GOP nomination, including South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, newly reelected New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. Trump’s remote appearance was announced on Thursday, after it became clear that several of his potential 2024 rivals were scheduled to deliver their own remarks.

DeSantis – fresh off the momentum of his double-digit reelection victory in Florida – is slated to address the group Saturday night during its gala dinner.

Trump recently has stepped up attacks on DeSantis, and another potential 2024 challenger, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

Two sources familiar with Trump’s thinking said part of the reason he has lashed out is because he believes both governors are actively soliciting support from “his donors.” Trump has told aides and allies that DeSantis especially is trying to pitch himself to deep-pocketed Republicans who helped bankroll Trump’s reelection campaign.

A Republican fundraiser in Florida with knowledge of DeSantis’ political operation said, “Of course he’s talking to those people. They’re fair game and every Republican is going to go after those donors because that’s the smart thing to do, it’s not with the mindset, ‘Let’s screw Trump.’”

The conservative Club for Growth, one of the biggest outside spenders in politics, already has broken with Trump and earlier this week circulated internal polling that suggested DeSantis could mount a serious challenge to the former president in early voting states and Florida, where both reside. The group plowed $2 million into DeSantis’ reelection efforts this election cycle, according to Florida campaign filings.

David McIntosh, the former Indiana congressman who runs the group, declined a CNN interview request through a spokesman.

This week, as the contours of the new GOP majority in the House became clear – DeSantis won praise from national Republicans for injecting himself into congressional map-making this year. In a rare move for a governor, DeSantis pushed state lawmakers to adopt his map, which controversially eliminated two districts represented by Black Democrats and gave the GOP the advantage in as many as 20 of 28 districts.

“That map created four new Republican wins,” said a GOP consultant who has been close to Trump and asked not to be named to speak candidly about the 2024 race. “That’s the practical reality of a conservative governor standing up to his own party and saying. ‘We’re not going to cut deals and do things the old way.’”

DeSantis this week sought to sidestep questions about the growing rivalry with Trump, urging people “to chill out a little bit” – even as he touted his 19-point margin of victory in his reelection. CNN has previously reported that those close to DeSantis believe he does not intend to announce his plans before May.

“The smartest thing DeSantis could do is stay out of the fray for as long as possible,” said the Republican consultant. “Don’t stick your face in the frying pan too early.”

Many of Trump’s potential 2024 rivals spoke at the conference in Las Vegas, offering post-midterm assessments and making their pitch for how the party should move forward.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, an early ally of Trump, issued a long and passionate indictment of the former president on Saturday, casting Trump as a cancer on the Republican Party and the sole responsible figure for its recent election losses.

“We keep losing and losing and losing,” Christie said. “The reason we’re losing is because Donald Trump has put himself before everybody else.”

Christie slammed Trump for recruiting candidates under the singular qualification that they deny the results of the 2020 election.

“That’s not what this party stands for,” the former governor said. “It’s not what it should stand for in the future, and we’ve got to stop it now.”

Christie pointed to midterm GOP defeats in the battleground states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, and warned that without a resurgence in those states – especially in the suburbs – Republicans held no hope of winning back the White House in 2024.

Echoing those fears, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu said that “candidate quality matters,” while adding, “I got a great policy for the Republican Party: Let’s stop supporting crazy, unelectable candidates in our primaries and start getting behind winners that can close the deal in November.”

Sununu was initially courted to run for US Senate, but ultimately decided to run for reelection. The GOP nominee, retired Brig. Gen. Don Bolduc, who has pushed falsehoods about the 2020 election, went on to lose to Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan earlier this month.

Meanwhile, Florida Sen. Rick Scott, who headed the Senate GOP’s campaign arm this election cycle, said Republicans’ midterm hopes for a “red wave” did not materialize because the party focused too much on “how bad the Democrats are” and did not offer voters its own policy vision.

“The current strategy of most Republicans in Washington is to only be against the crazy Democrats – and they’re crazy – and never outline any plan what we are for and what we will do. That is a mistake,” the senator said.

Scott’s comments come days after his failed bid to oust Mitch McConnell as the party’s Senate leader.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who unsuccessfully ran for president against Trump in 2016, urged the GOP to try to broaden its appeal outside the party’s base.

“We spend far too much time preaching to the choir; talking to the same 2.6 million people watching Fox News every night,” Cruz said.

Cruz also said he had spoken at Senate Republicans’ leadership election this week to urge the party to take a harder line against Democratic policies.

“Republicans in the Senate don’t fight,” he said Saturday.

Cruz said he urged GOP leaders to “pick two or three or four things that matter and say, ‘We believe in it.’”

Outgoing Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan took a hard stance against the former president Friday night, saying in Las Vegas that the Republican Party was “desperately in need of a course correction.”

“Trump was saying that we’d be winning so much we get tired of winning. Well, I’m sick and tired of our party losing. And after this election last week, I’m even more sick and tired than I was before,” Hogan said.

“Look, this is the third election in a row that we lost and should have won. I say three strikes and you’re out. If you repeatedly lose to a really bad team, it’s time for new leadership,” he added.

This story has been updated with more information.

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Leading Republicans try to ignore Trump campaign launch

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Leading Republican officials on Wednesday sought to ignore Donald Trump’s formal step into the 2024 presidential contest, insisting there were more pressing priorities as GOP leaders grappled with the fallout of a major midterm disappointment.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said it was much too early for Republicans to focus on the next presidential election when asked about a brewing GOP divide during a news conference the morning after Trump’s announcement. Declining to say the former president’s name, DeSantis, a potential Trump rival in 2024, said he was focused instead on Georgia’s upcoming Senate runoff and his governing priorities in Florida.

“We just finished this election. People need to chill out a little bit on some of this stuff, I mean seriously,” DeSantis said. The 44-year-old Republican governor continued: “At the end of the day, it’s been a long election, we’ve got the Georgia runoff, but for me it’s like, OK, what more do we need to do to continue to make Florida lead the way? We’re going to be focusing on that.”

The sentiment was echoed by leading Republicans across Ohio, New Hampshire and Washington as the GOP grappled with rising internal tensions and questions about its future following a deeply disappointing midterm cycle. History suggested the Republicans should have celebrated massive gains last week, but the sweeping victory party leaders predicted did not materialize as Trump loyalists were defeated across several swing states.

Democrats held the Senate, while Republicans won a razor-thin House majority Wednesday.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine deflected a question about Trump’s announcement at the Republican Governors Association meeting in Orlando on Wednesday.

“It’s a little early to be commenting on the presidential race,” DeWine said as he walked into a forum on “The Future of the GOP.”

“We are still trying to analyze what happened a week ago,” said DeWine, who won his reelection by 25 points after refusing to embrace Trump’s lies about the 2020 election.

Trump won’t make it easy for his party to ignore 2024, however, even with the opening contests of the next presidential primary season likely more than a year away.

Trump launched his third presidential bid Tuesday night before an audience of several hundred supporters in a chandeliered ballroom at his Mar-a-Lago club. That’s even as the political parties have yet to set their primary voting calendars.

“America’s comeback starts right now,” Trump said.

The former president, who sparked a deadly insurrection after losing his 2020 reelection bid, hoped to launch his 2024 campaign in the glow of resounding GOP midterm victories. Instead, he entered the race in a moment of deep political vulnerability following a series of stringing losses that many party leaders blamed on him.

High-profile Republican candidates for the Senate and governor across Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin who parroted Trump’s baseless conspiracy theories about the 2020 election were defeated.

DeSantis, meanwhile, won his reelection by nearly 20 points in what has historically been a swing state. With party activists openly encouraging DeSantis to seek the presidency, Trump has been increasingly critical of the Florida governor in recent weeks — even unveiling a new nickname: Ron DeSanctimonious.

Asked about Trump’s barbs on Monday, DeSantis quipped, “Check out the scoreboard.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, increasingly a Trump critic, declined to weigh in on the early 2024 debate when asked, although he acknowledged that the GOP “turned off a lot of these centrist voters” in the 2022 midterms.

“The way I’m gonna go into this presidential primary season is to stay out of it. I don’t have a dog in that fight,” McConnell said.

On the other side of the Capitol, House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy, a Trump loyalist who hopes to become the House speaker should the GOP seize that chamber’s majority, walked away from reporters on Wednesday when asked whether he would support Trump’s 2024 bid.

Still, a handful of Republican elected officials have already endorsed Trump’s nascent campaign — House Republican Conference Chair, Rep. Elisa Stefanik, R-N.Y., and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., among them.

In New Hampshire, which is in line to host GOP’s opening presidential primary election in 2024, Gov. Chris Sununu predicted that few would pay attention to Trump’s announcement in the short term.

“He won’t clear the field,” Sununu told Fox News, declining to rule out a 2024 presidential run of his own.

Sununu, a Republican, won his reelection by more than 15 points after pushing back against Trump’s election lies. At the same time, New Hampshire Republican Senate candidate Don Bolduc, a Trump loyalist, lost by 9 points.

“You could make the argument he’s never been weaker politically,” Sununu said of Trump. “It’s really an announcement from a defensive position. Therefore, I think it’s going to make a little bit of news and we’re all going to move on. There’s still going to be a lot of folks that enter this race — probably not until late ’23.”

Conservative media has also been cool to Trump’s 2024 political ambitions.

The New York Post, one of Trump’s favorite hometown newspapers, marked Trump’s campaign launch with only this line on the very bottom of the front page: “Florida man makes announcement.”

___

Peoples reported from New York. AP writers Mike Schneider in Orlando, Farnoush Amiri and Lisa Mascaro in Washington contributed.

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Trump lashes out at DeSantis and Youngkin

Former U.S. President Donald Trump and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speak at midterm election rallies, in Dayton, Ohio, U.S. November 7, 2022 and Tampa, Florida, U.S., November 8, 2022 in a combination of file photos. 

Gaelen Morse | Reuters

WASHINGTON — As former President Donald Trump readies for the planned launch Tuesday of his 2024 presidential campaign, he issued fresh broadsides against two Republican governors who emerged as early favorites to challenge him for his party’s nomination: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

Trump’s attacks came as scores of Republican officials across the country placed the blame for their party’s disappointing results in Tuesday’s elections squarely on Trump’s doorstep.

“‘You’re fired!’ That’s the message Republicans must deliver to Donald Trump. ASAP!” said Republican New York Rep. Pete King, a longtime backer of Trump’s. “He held massive rallies where he ranted endlessly about himself, complained about the 2020 election and attacked other Republicans. It was Trump’s ego first, last and always,” King said in a tweet Thursday.

Arkansas Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Trump’s support for candidates didn’t help them in general elections. “Trump’s endorsement comes with a cost. The cost is that it minimizes your ability to attract independents and to win in November,” Hutchinson said Friday on PBS’ “Firing Line with Margaret Hoover.”

Trump even appeared to have lost the support of influential conservative blogger Mike Cernovich, who told his 1 million Twitter followers that Tuesday’s losses meant “at least no one has to suck up to Trump anymore.”

Trump and his team responded to the blame in part by showcasing his record of having endorsed hundreds of winning candidates.

“President Trump has racked up over 215 wins for his endorsements — a truly unprecedented accomplishment and something only possible because of President Trump’s ability to pick and elect winners,” Trump spokesman Taylor Budowich told CNBC.

Trump-backed candidates did indeed win hundreds of races in the midterms, although many of them were in districts that were not considered competitive, and by candidates who were endorsed by Republicans across the party spectrum.

“There’s no question this was a bad election for Donald Trump,” said Asher Hildebrand, an associate professor at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. “With the possible exception of [gubernatorial candidate] Kari Lake in Arizona and [Senate candidate] Herschel Walker in Georgia, every governor and Senate candidate he endorsed in five main battleground states appears to have lost.”

“That combined with DeSantis’ strong showing in the Florida governor’s race increases pressure among Republican elites to find another standard bearer in 2024,” he added.

DeSantis won reelection in a landslide, defeating former Florida Gov. Charlie Crist by 19 points and winning accolades from conservative media and Republican officials.

In a lengthy statement Thursday, Trump sought to take credit for elevating DeSantis out of relative obscurity in 2017, posting on his Truth Social site that DeSantis “came to me in desperate shape in 2017—he was politically dead … low approval, bad polls, and no money, but he said that if I would Endorse him, he could win.”

Trump also made a startling claim that he “sent in the FBI and the U.S. Attorneys” to Florida during the immediate aftermath of the 2018 election there, and “fixed” what he claimed was voter fraud in Broward County, which he said was costing DeSantis and now-Sen. Rick Scott tens of thousands of votes per day.

If the claim were true, it would amount to an extraordinary admission by Trump, who was president at the time, that he had personally intervened in a state election.

But as of late Friday, NBC News and other major outlets could find no indication that this ever happened. Sarah Isgur, who served as a spokeswoman for the Trump Justice Department in 2017, tweeted Friday that the alleged intervention “never happened.”

DeSantis, for his part, has remained focused this week on the damage and recovery effort from Hurricane Nicole, which struck his state on Wednesday.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks during a press conference to update information about the on ongoing efforts to help people after hurricane Ian passed through the area on October 4, 2022 in Cape Coral, Florida.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images

In addition to DeSantis, Trump took aim at Virginia’s Youngkin on Friday, in this case going so far as to mock his name, spelling it “Young Kin” and saying it “[s]ounds Chinese, doesn’t it?”

Like DeSantis, Youngkin is a rising star in the GOP. His upset victory over former Gov. Terry McAuliffe in 2021 is widely seen as having written a new playbook for Republicans on how to win statewide elections in swing states.

Trump posted that Youngkin “couldn’t have won without me. I Endorsed him, did a very big Trump Rally for him telephonically, got MAGA to Vote for him – or he couldn’t have come close to winning. But he knows that, and admits it.”

Youngkin responded to Trump’s comments Friday in a statement shared by his spokesman, saying, “I work really hard to bring people together, I do not call people names. This is a moment for us to come together.”

The statement also included a subtle plug for Youngkin’s own ability to govern in a purple state, a message he would likely amplify if he were to run for president in 2024.

“We are potentially going to have divided government in Washington and just like we have divided government in Virginia, we have proven that we can come together and get things done.”

Virginia Republican gubernatorial nominee Glenn Youngkin speaks during his election night party at a hotel in Chantilly, Virginia, U.S., November 3, 2021.

Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

Both DeSantis and Youngkin have played coy about whether they would entertain a run for president, but DeSantis is farther along in the process and has much bigger national name recognition after Tuesday than Youngkin does.

Still, neither of them is anywhere near where Trump is in the process, namely just days away from an expected announcement.

“President Trump is going to announce on Tuesday he’s running for president, and it’s gonna be a very professional, very buttoned-up announcement,” said Trump adviser Jason Miller on “The War Room,” former Trump White House advisor Steve Bannon’s TV program.

Miller said more than 250 media outlets would attend and there would be “1,000 people there with the signs already.”

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  • Trump’s favorite candidates disappoint on Election Day, raising questions about his 2024 pitch
  • Live updates — Midterm elections: Democrat Shapiro wins Pennsylvania governor’s race, key Senate contest is too early to call, NBC projects
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Trump’s leadership PAC, Save America, also used the upcoming announcement to drum up fundraising, sending out sweepstakes offers to win a free trip for two to Palm Beach on Tuesday “to be the very first person to meet [Trump] in Mar-a-Lago after my big announcement.”

Trump’s fundraising appeals are famous for their hyperbole, and this was no exception, telling would-be donors “this announcement will perhaps be the most important speech given in the history of the United States of America.”

But even as Trump faces detractors within his party, inside Trump’s camp his advisers see an American political landscape that has been fundamentally changed by the former president, and millions of voters who remain loyal to his America First agenda.

As Republican House and Senate leaders grappled with the changing face of their caucuses and challenges to their own positions, Trump’s influence was plainly visible.

Current House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who has been loyal to Trump, faced potential challenges to his leadership from more conservative members of his caucus.

Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, meanwhile, faced problems of his own, as four members of his caucus circulated a letter calling for a delay in leadership elections until after the Georgia Senate runoff on Dec. 6. The letter amounted to an outright rebellion against the most powerful Republican figure in the Senate in the past 20 years.

“As a party, we found ourselves consistently navigating the power struggle between Trump and anti-Trump factions of the Party, mostly within the donor class,” wrote Michigan Republican Party chief of staff Paul Cordes, in a memo obtained by the Detroit Free Press. “That power struggle ended with too many people on the sidelines and hurt Republicans in key races.”

But for Trump’s team, the theory of the case is simple. “As President Trump looks to the future, he will continue to champion his America First agenda that won overwhelmingly at the ballot box,” Budowich told CNBC.

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Trump lashes out at DeSantis and Youngkin

Former U.S. President Donald Trump and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speak at midterm election rallies, in Dayton, Ohio, U.S. November 7, 2022 and Tampa, Florida, U.S., November 8, 2022 in a combination of file photos. 

Gaelen Morse | Reuters

WASHINGTON — As former President Donald Trump readies for the planned launch Tuesday of his 2024 presidential campaign, he issued fresh broadsides against two Republican governors who emerged as early favorites to challenge him for his party’s nomination: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

Trump’s attacks came as scores of Republican officials across the country placed the blame for their party’s disappointing results in Tuesday’s elections squarely on Trump’s doorstep.

“‘You’re fired!’ That’s the message Republicans must deliver to Donald Trump. ASAP!” said Republican New York Rep. Pete King, a longtime backer of Trump’s. “He held massive rallies where he ranted endlessly about himself, complained about the 2020 election and attacked other Republicans. It was Trump’s ego first, last and always,” King said in a tweet Thursday.

Arkansas Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Trump’s support for candidates didn’t help them in general elections. “Trump’s endorsement comes with a cost. The cost is that it minimizes your ability to attract independents and to win in November,” Hutchinson said Friday on PBS’ “Firing Line with Margaret Hoover.”

Trump even appeared to have lost the support of influential conservative blogger Mike Cernovich, who told his 1 million Twitter followers that Tuesday’s losses meant “at least no one has to suck up to Trump anymore.”

Trump and his team responded to the blame in part by showcasing his record of having endorsed hundreds of winning candidates.

“President Trump has racked up over 215 wins for his endorsements — a truly unprecedented accomplishment and something only possible because of President Trump’s ability to pick and elect winners,” Trump spokesman Taylor Budowich told CNBC.

Trump-backed candidates did indeed win hundreds of races in the midterms, although many of them were in districts that were not considered competitive, and by candidates who were endorsed by Republicans across the party spectrum.

“There’s no question this was a bad election for Donald Trump,” said Asher Hildebrand, an associate professor at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. “With the possible exception of [gubernatorial candidate] Kari Lake in Arizona and [Senate candidate] Herschel Walker in Georgia, every governor and Senate candidate he endorsed in five main battleground states appears to have lost.”

“That combined with DeSantis’ strong showing in the Florida governor’s race increases pressure among Republican elites to find another standard bearer in 2024,” he added.

DeSantis won reelection in a landslide, defeating former Florida Gov. Charlie Crist by 19 points and winning accolades from conservative media and Republican officials.

In a lengthy statement Thursday, Trump sought to take credit for elevating DeSantis out of relative obscurity in 2017, posting on his Truth Social site that DeSantis “came to me in desperate shape in 2017—he was politically dead … low approval, bad polls, and no money, but he said that if I would Endorse him, he could win.”

Trump also made a startling claim that he “sent in the FBI and the U.S. Attorneys” to Florida during the immediate aftermath of the 2018 election there, and “fixed” what he claimed was voter fraud in Broward County, which he said was costing DeSantis and now-Sen. Rick Scott tens of thousands of votes per day.

If the claim were true, it would amount to an extraordinary admission by Trump, who was president at the time, that he had personally intervened in a state election.

But as of late Friday, NBC News and other major outlets could find no indication that this ever happened. Sarah Isgur, who served as a spokeswoman for the Trump Justice Department in 2017, tweeted Friday that the alleged intervention “never happened.”

DeSantis, for his part, has remained focused this week on the damage and recovery effort from Hurricane Nicole, which struck his state on Wednesday.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks during a press conference to update information about the on ongoing efforts to help people after hurricane Ian passed through the area on October 4, 2022 in Cape Coral, Florida.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images

In addition to DeSantis, Trump took aim at Virginia’s Youngkin on Friday, in this case going so far as to mock his name, spelling it “Young Kin” and saying it “[s]ounds Chinese, doesn’t it?”

Like DeSantis, Youngkin is a rising star in the GOP. His upset victory over former Gov. Terry McAuliffe in 2021 is widely seen as having written a new playbook for Republicans on how to win statewide elections in swing states.

Trump posted that Youngkin “couldn’t have won without me. I Endorsed him, did a very big Trump Rally for him telephonically, got MAGA to Vote for him – or he couldn’t have come close to winning. But he knows that, and admits it.”

Youngkin responded to Trump’s comments Friday in a statement shared by his spokesman, saying, “I work really hard to bring people together, I do not call people names. This is a moment for us to come together.”

The statement also included a subtle plug for Youngkin’s own ability to govern in a purple state, a message he would likely amplify if he were to run for president in 2024.

“We are potentially going to have divided government in Washington and just like we have divided government in Virginia, we have proven that we can come together and get things done.”

Virginia Republican gubernatorial nominee Glenn Youngkin speaks during his election night party at a hotel in Chantilly, Virginia, U.S., November 3, 2021.

Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

Both DeSantis and Youngkin have played coy about whether they would entertain a run for president, but DeSantis is farther along in the process and has much bigger national name recognition after Tuesday than Youngkin does.

Still, neither of them is anywhere near where Trump is in the process, namely just days away from an expected announcement.

“President Trump is going to announce on Tuesday he’s running for president, and it’s gonna be a very professional, very buttoned-up announcement,” said Trump adviser Jason Miller on “The War Room,” former Trump White House advisor Steve Bannon’s TV program.

Miller said more than 250 media outlets would attend and there would be “1,000 people there with the signs already.”

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  • Control of Senate hinges on handful of states that could take days — or longer — to resolve
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  • Midterm elections: Several key races are still too close to call, leaving control of U.S. Senate, House up in the air
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Trump’s leadership PAC, Save America, also used the upcoming announcement to drum up fundraising, sending out sweepstakes offers to win a free trip for two to Palm Beach on Tuesday “to be the very first person to meet [Trump] in Mar-a-Lago after my big announcement.”

Trump’s fundraising appeals are famous for their hyperbole, and this was no exception, telling would-be donors “this announcement will perhaps be the most important speech given in the history of the United States of America.”

But even as Trump faces detractors within his party, inside Trump’s camp his advisers see an American political landscape that has been fundamentally changed by the former president, and millions of voters who remain loyal to his America First agenda.

As Republican House and Senate leaders grappled with the changing face of their caucuses and challenges to their own positions, Trump’s influence was plainly visible.

Current House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who has been loyal to Trump, faced potential challenges to his leadership from more conservative members of his caucus.

Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, meanwhile, faced problems of his own, as four members of his caucus circulated a letter calling for a delay in leadership elections until after the Georgia Senate runoff on Dec. 6. The letter amounted to an outright rebellion against the most powerful Republican figure in the Senate in the past 20 years.

“As a party, we found ourselves consistently navigating the power struggle between Trump and anti-Trump factions of the Party, mostly within the donor class,” wrote Michigan Republican Party chief of staff Paul Cordes, in a memo obtained by the Detroit Free Press. “That power struggle ended with too many people on the sidelines and hurt Republicans in key races.”

But for Trump’s team, the theory of the case is simple. “As President Trump looks to the future, he will continue to champion his America First agenda that won overwhelmingly at the ballot box,” Budowich told CNBC.

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