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Many Trump supporters not only dislike DeSantis, but echo Trump's assertions that DeSantis betrayed him and say they would never consider him again. DeSantis' campaign against Trump had soured her on the governor, she said. “He backstabbed President Trump. DeSantis' allies believe the Florida governor has a clear path to another presidential bid should he want one. But he hasn’t yet offered an olive branch to angry Trump supporters.
Persons: DeSantis, , Trump, , Pamela Shinkwin, Mary Sullivan, Nikki Haley, Donald Trump, Sullivan, President Trump, Trump’s, he’ll, Joe Biden, needled Trump, Florida Sen, Marco Rubio, Little Marco, Carly Fiorina’s, Ted Cruz’s, John F, Kennedy, , Ron DeSanctimonious ”, Haley, Melissa Davis, “ DeSantis, ” Davis, What’s, Edward X . Young, diehard Trump, DeSantis “, ‘ Trump, ’ I’ll, ” Young, Jacob Morgan, Morgan, Steve Peoples, Michelle L, Price, Linley Sanders Organizations: Trump, Florida, Florida Republican, PAC, CNN, University of New, GOP, ABC, Republicans, Republican, DeSantis, Associated Press Locations: Florida, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Manchester, Texas, University of New Hampshire, Iowa, Windsor Heights , Iowa, He’s, New Jersey, Rochester , New Hampshire, New York, Washington
CNN —Former President Donald Trump holds a wide lead over his Republican presidential competitors among likely GOP caucusgoers in Iowa, the final Des Moines Register/NBC News/Mediacom poll before Monday’s caucuses found. Overall, 48% of likely caucusgoers say Trump would be their first choice, 20% name former South Carolina Gov. While majorities of their supporters say they are enthusiastic about their candidates, only about 4 in 10 of hers say the same. About 8 in 10 Trump supporters – 82% – say their minds are made up, up from December when 70% said they were locked in. Results for the full sample of likely caucusgoers has an error margin of plus or minus 3.7 percentage points.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis, DeSantis’s, DeSantis, Haley, Vivek Ramaswamy, Texas Sen, Ted Cruz’s, Florida Sen, Marco Rubio, Cruz, Rubio Organizations: CNN, Republican, Des Moines Register, NBC, South Carolina Gov, Florida Gov, Trump, Locations: Iowa, Texas, Florida, year’s Iowa
Washington CNN —In her new book “Enough,” former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson paints the closing days of the Trump White House as even more chaotic and lawless than she previously disclosed in her shocking televised testimony last summer. “We killed Herman Cain,” Meadows told Hutchinson and asked for his wife’s phone number. Unlike White House communications director Alyssa Farah, who resigned on December 3, 2020, or deputy White House press secretary Sarah Matthews, who left on January 6, 2021, Hutchinson remained. In the summer of 2017, Trump’s first year in office, Hutchinson was an intern in Sen. Ted Cruz’s office. It turns out, Hutchinson writes, that she coordinated with Farah, who is now a CNN political commentator, telling her everything she knew.
Persons: Washington CNN —, Cassidy Hutchinson, Donald Trump, Mark Meadows, Trump, Rudy Giuliani gropes Hutchinson, Kevin McCarthy, Joe Biden, “ Cass, ” Meadows, Hutchinson, Cassidy Hutchinson's, Simon, Schuster, Meadows, , ” Hutchinson, Herman Cain, Covid, furtively, Hunter Biden, Tony Bobulinski, Mark ’ Meadows, National Intelligence John Ratcliffe, Tom Brenner, McCarthy, Ken Paxton, ” Trump, Trump . Hutchinson, Devin Nunes, “ Mark doesn’t, , Tony Ornato, Mike Flynn, Sidney Powell, Patrick Byrne, Derek Lyons, Brad Raffensperger, Pat Cipollone, Cipollone, Tony, , ” Ornato, They’re, Giuliani, Rudy Giuliani, Brendan Smialowski, Alyssa Farah, Sarah Matthews, Donald Trump’s, Hey Cass, Kimberly Guilfoyle’s, , , Kayleigh McEnany, Wisconsin Tom Brenner, Trump’s, Sen, Ted Cruz’s, didn’t, Stefan Passantino, Passantino, “ Stefan, Andrew Harnik, Farah, Liz Cheney, Jobs Organizations: Washington CNN, White, Trump White House, Trump, Capitol, White House, GOP, CNN, Secret Service, Republican National Committee, National Intelligence, Texas, Meadows, Georgia, State, Biden, Capitol Hill, Getty, Team Trump, Legislative Affairs, Press, Air Force, Texas Republican Locations: Tulsa , Oklahoma, North Carolina, Meadows, Fulton, Georgia, AFP, Russia, you’re, California, Wisconsin, Texas, Florida
CNN —Former President Donald Trump has attracted a lot of attention for his lead in the polls and the money race, but he’s also already ahead in an essential area that’s gotten less notice: the delegate process. Republicans often point to Jeff Roe, who is leading the pro-DeSantis super PAC, as an expert on the delegate process. The delegate process rivalry between DeSantis and Trump speaks to the overall strategy of many of these campaigns. Trump’s state party advantageIn 2016, the idea that Donald Trump would eventually have deep roots with state Republican party officials seemed outlandish. The Trump campaign denies the former president ever made such a comment.
Persons: Donald Trump, he’s, Ron DeSantis, , Simply, Trump, DeSantis, Chris Christie’s, Sen, Tim Scott’s, Christie, Scott, Trump’s, Chris LaCivita, Susie Wiles, Brian Jack, Texas Sen, Ted Cruz, Jeff Roe, Ken Cuccinelli, LaCivita, Ken Cuccinelli –, Cuccinelli, Cruz, “ There’s, ” LaCivita, “ We’ll, , , ” Cuccinelli Organizations: CNN, Republican, Flordia, Trump, Republican National Committee, New, New Jersey Gov, RNC, Advisers, Republicans, DeSantis, Republican National Convention, GOP, White, Party, Michigan Republican Party, Trump’s Department of Homeland Security Locations: New Jersey, Louisiana, Texas, headwinds, California , Massachusetts , Idaho , Colorado, Nevada, Michigan
Opinion | The Stagnation of Ron DeSantis
  + stars: | 2023-07-22 | by ( Ross Douthat | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Pundits have to hope so, since otherwise our advice-giving beat becomes a bit irrelevant. For Ron DeSantis, currently engaged in a campaign reset after months of stagnant polling, there’s no way to sell these case studies to his restive donors. And it’s easy enough to list things that DeSantis could be doing differently. But any benefit from these shifts is likely to be incremental rather than dramatic. Meanwhile, the reset that’s so often urged on DeSantis — the idea that he needs to go hard after Trump’s unfitness for high office — is a theory supported by exactly zero polling evidence.
Persons: John Kerry, John McCain, Joe Biden, Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump, Ted Cruz’s, DeSantis, unfitness
Roland Gutierrez, a Democratic state senator who has been an outspoken gun-control proponent since last year’s massacre in Uvalde, Texas, announced on Monday that he would seek Senator Ted Cruz’s seat next year. Mr. Gutierrez, whose district stretches from San Antonio to the Rio Grande and includes Uvalde, is the second major Democratic politician to enter the race, most likely ensuring a high-profile primary contest among Texas Democrats. Representative Colin Allred, a second-term congressman from the Dallas area, declared his candidacy in May. Both candidates have entered the race vowing to focus their attacks on Mr. Cruz rather than on any Democratic rivals. He is a familiar face on cable news, commenting not only on the killings in Uvalde and the delayed police response but also on other mass shootings.
Persons: Roland Gutierrez, Ted Cruz’s, Gutierrez, Colin Allred, Cruz Organizations: Democratic, Texas Democrats, Texas Capitol Locations: Uvalde , Texas, San Antonio, Rio Grande, Dallas, Texas, Uvalde
Among the various reassessments of Kevin McCarthy following his successful debt ceiling negotiations, the one with the widest implications belongs to Matthew Continetti, who writes in The Washington Free Beacon that “McCarthy’s superpower is his desire to be speaker. He likes and wants his job.”If you hadn’t followed American politics across the last few decades, this would seem like a peculiar statement: What kind of House speaker wouldn’t want the job? But part of what’s gone wrong with American institutions lately is the failure of important figures to regard their positions as ends unto themselves. On the Republican side, this tendency has taken several forms, from Newt Gingrich’s yearning to be a Great Man of History, to Ted Cruz’s ambitious grandstanding in the Obama years, to the emergence of Trump-era performance artists like Marjorie Taylor Greene. And the party’s congressional institutionalists, from dealmakers like John Boehner to policy mavens like Paul Ryan, have often been miserable-seeming prisoners of the talking heads, celebrity brands and would-be presidents.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, Matthew Continetti, hadn’t, wouldn’t, what’s, Yuval Levin, , Newt Gingrich’s, Ted Cruz’s, Obama, Marjorie Taylor Greene, John Boehner, Paul Ryan Organizations: Washington Free, American Enterprise Institute, Republican, Trump Locations: Washington
First, there’s the limits of ideological box-checking in a campaign against Trump. Part of DeSantis’s advantage now, compared with Cruz’s situation in 2016, is that he has seemed more congenial to the party’s bigger-money donors. Remember how nothing remotely like that happened among Republicans in 2016? This reflects another tendency that helped elect him the first time, the weird fatalism of professional Republicans. In 2016 many of them passed from “he can’t win” to “he can’t be stopped” with barely a way station in between.
Ron DeSantis lead an early — and still incomplete — Republican presidential field, according to a new national Monmouth University poll released Thursday. Asked whom they’d like to see as the GOP’s presidential nominee, 33% of Republican voters answered Trump and another 33% picked DeSantis. But the contest is closer among respondents who identify as strong Republicans (DeSantis 49%, Trump 46%) and among evangelical Republicans (DeSantis 51%, Trump 44%). The worst favorable/unfavorable ratings among Republican voters were for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (23%-53%) and embattled freshman Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., (12%-42%). The Monmouth University poll was conducted Jan. 26 to Feb. 2 of 566 registered Republican voters, and it has a margin of error of plus-minus 6.1 percentage points.
New York CNN Business —Sen. Ted Cruz’s “The View” interview was disrupted by protesters multiple times on Monday, including some demanding the Texas Republican talk about climate change. Later in the interview, Cruz was interrupted once again. “Three members of the audience interrupted ‘The View’ today during Sen. Ted Cruz’s appearance protesting about climate,” said a “View” spokesperson. “They were promptly escorted out by security.”The protesters at The View once again start shouting from the crowd as the segment goes to break. You don’t do it to Hillary Clinton, who stood up and said, ‘Trump stole the election,’” Cruz said.
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