The Daily - Inside the Sputtering Campaign of Ron DeSantis
Episode Date: August 21, 2023Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida began the race for the Republican nomination with high expectations and a clear argument: that he was a political fighter with a solid record of conservative achievements ...in his state. Now, he appears to be in a downward spiral.Shane Goldmacher, a national political reporter for The Times, explains why the DeSantis campaign is stumbling so badly.Guest: Shane Goldmacher, a national political reporter for The New York Times.Background reading: Governor DeSantis, who has been losing ground in polls and dealing with staffing, spending and messaging issues, tweaks his messaging and tactics.Here are four major challenges facing his campaign.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, in the 2024 Republican race for president, no campaign began with higher expectations
than that of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
So why is his campaign now stumbling
so badly? My colleague Shane Goldmacher explains. It's Monday, August 21st.
Shane. Hi, Michael. It is really nice to sit across from you, so thank you for coming in.
Thanks for having me in. We are here, you and I, to perform a kind of mid-campaign autopsy on the
Republican presidential candidacy of Ron DeSantis, and to talk through why it is that campaign has
been going so poorly. Knowing, of course, that things can change,
that it's still early, nobody's voted yet anywhere, but that even with all those caveats,
his campaign is in a pretty bad way. Yeah, I mean, I would say autopsy is maybe a strong word.
The candidacy of Ron DeSantis is very much still alive. He's very much still Donald Trump's leading opponent.
But what you are right about is the depths of the challenges that he's been facing,
both internal and external challenges. Externally, he's struggling. He's struggling to connect with
voters. He's struggling to have his message meet voters where they are. And internally,
he's struggling with his campaign finances
and his campaign staff. He's gone through a series of shakeups,
and he's only a couple months into this race. Right. And campaigns are all about projecting
strength. And this campaign, especially with all of its very public shakeups, is not projecting
strength and winningness, but instead a kind of internal conflict. But that wasn't how
things started for DeSantis. So I want to go back and understand how it is we got to this seemingly
pretty low point for the campaign. I think strength is a really good place to start when you think
about Ron DeSantis and to think about the place of strength he was in last November, right after the midterms.
Ballots are still being counted in some states, but already a loser has been declared in the midterm election.
The pundits say it was Donald Trump.
We're already seeing some Republicans distancing themselves from him and even blaming his endorsement for key losses this time around. You'll remember that Republicans in races across the country,
in House races, in Senate races, in governor's races,
Republicans were backed by Donald Trump.
They lost races that the party had expected to win.
Right.
This was supposed to be a red wave, and in most of the country, it wasn't.
There was a red wave last night, but it started in Florida and it ended in Florida.
But Florida was an exception to that.
A disaster for Donald Trump and a triumph for his number one rival, Ron DeSantis.
Florida, a traditional purple state, a swing state.
Ron DeSantis, he dominated.
These are margins that you do not often see in a state like Florida.
He won in a landslide, 19 percentage points.
They picked up house seats in Florida.
This race here could be the perfect springboard into a presidential campaign.
And so what that gave Ron DeSantis was a real contrast with Donald Trump.
We saw freedom in our very way of life in so many other jurisdictions in this country wither on the vine.
That I'm a Republican who can win.
That I can form a message that we can sell to the rest of the country.
Florida held the line.
Even if it's a conservative hardline message, that I can do it in a way that can win.
And so you saw the beginnings of the buzz around Ron DeSantis as a potential presidential candidate.
presidential candidate, that he could be Trump but electable, and a Republican who can win while pursuing a hardline conservative agenda.
And amid that buzz, Ron DeSantis has to make a choice. Does he jump into the race then,
when the iron is hot? Or does he wait and continue to add to those conservative achievements
and build out a policy portfolio
as the basis of a 2024 campaign?
Right.
And the reason, of course, to jump in is,
as you just said, Trump is extraordinarily vulnerable.
Yeah, politics is often about timing, right?
And you see just a week later,
it's Donald Trump who actually gets into
the presidential race. And there wasn't really a lot of excitement at that moment for Donald Trump.
There was this real sense across the Republican Party that maybe this was a moment to move on.
Maybe he had served his purpose for the party, shifted the party, but he was no longer going
to help them into the future. So the thinking at this key moment, if you're DeSantis and his advisors is seize the
moment, right? Emerge as, declare yourself to be the heir apparent to Trump, win the hearts and
minds of Republican voters who are tired of losing. You have just won. Show everybody what a winner
you are. Enter the race. That's one possibility and that's the path not taken. Instead, the decision was from
the DeSantis team, no, they weren't going to go then, they're going to go later. And they're going
to use policy as the way to break through against Donald Trump. And the way they're going to use
policy is to push through a conservative agenda in the state legislature that he has almost complete
control over in the first half of the year, and that that
will form the foundation of his 2024 candidacy and a direct confrontation with Donald Trump,
that that can wait. Right. And there would seem to be a real logic to that, not running and instead
passing all these laws in Florida that would let him hold up his state and his governance of it as a conservative laboratory and a kind of promise of what a DeSantis presidency would look like across the whole country, which is useful in a Republican primary pretty big vacuum in the national media and in the campaign
that Trump could then exploit, and nobody exploits vacuums better than Donald Trump.
So they had to understand that was a risk. I think you have to think about it from
Ron DeSantis' perspective, which is for the years that he'd become a national figure as Florida's
governor, he really didn't have to see the national stage because he was creating his own political weather
that he would get coverage on Fox News and other friendly conservative outlets for basically
whatever he was doing, that he could roll out a book and that he would get coverage,
that he could make an announcement and he would get coverage. And so I don't think he thought of
it as seeding the stage as much as building a foundation that he could use
to eventually challenge Donald Trump
from an even firmer place
than he would have right after the midterms.
But that isn't what happens.
As Donald Trump has done for years with the Republican Party,
he begins to dominate the weather.
And it really starts when he's indicted in New York
for crimes related to
hush money payments made in his 2016 presidential campaign. Right. Trump fundraisers off of that,
raising millions of dollars, as I recall. And DeSantis, who's not yet a candidate,
doesn't really seem to know what to do about it. I remember an episode we did in which we talked about DeSantis' kind of
confusing response. He suggested that the indictment was a little tawdry, but then he
went on to defend Trump against the indictment, kind of bends the knee a bit to Trump. And
suddenly the decision not to be a stated rival in the race seems not necessarily like a brilliant one.
Yeah, you see the Republican Party rally behind Donald Trump.
And because Ron DeSantis was not in the race,
because there was no leading alternative to Trump
yet formally in the race,
Trump was the person to rally behind.
And there wasn't a person to say,
oh, maybe we should get behind this guy instead.
But then eventually, DeSantis does finally
enter the campaign.
I mean, for those who could hear him on Twitter,
he entered the campaign.
Remind us what happened.
It was kind of a thing.
Yeah, so he got into the race in late May
with an event on Twitter.
Yeah, I tried to log into it.
They decided to try to do something unique.
All right, I think we're broadcasting.
And not do a traditional speech for his first event,
not do a video rollout immediately.
I'm super excited to have Governor DeSantis.
And they tried to do this Twitter live spaces.
All right, sorry about that.
We've got so many people here that I think we are kind of melting the servers.
And it was sort of a technical disaster.
Yeah, that was insane. Sorry.
They cut in and out, there were long pauses in the audio.
His commitment to freedom and his willingness to put his money where his mouth is.
Upset the narrative.
And, you know, for Ron DeSantis...
Governor DeSantis, are you there? Can you hear us?
I'm here.
I know, I think you broke the internet there. It stepped on the message he was trying to launch on that first day.
And it sounds kind of small, and we're having a little bit of fun with this idea that a campaign launch is a technical failure.
But campaign announcements have always in politics been seen as kind of metaphors for campaigns,
how well choreographed they are, how well planned they are, what's the speech, how big is the audience, how big is the flag behind the podium. And here, where every decision was in control of
the candidate, decisions were made that resulted in something kind of embarrassing and floppy.
Yeah, I mean, I would call it symbolic, but not significant, right? But if the Twitter launch
wasn't particularly significant, he does run into some significant problems pretty quickly.
Which are what?
Which money. So he raised $20 million in only a short number of weeks. In fact,
he raised more than any other candidate running in that second quarter.
So what's the problem?
The problem is sort of threefold. The first is what kind of money he was raising,
which is big money, money from larger donors who you can't go to over and over again.
So he tapped them once and he can never go back to them. There's limits
in federal campaigns to how much money you can raise.
So basically, fat cats.
Fat cats. Fat cats who can give only a certain amount.
He hit that amount and he can't get money from them again,
so they've been tapped out.
The second problem with his money
is that a lot of it was from such big donors
that he exceeded the amount
he can spend in the primary
and he banked a bunch of money
he can only spend in the general election
if he becomes the nominee.
So that top line says $20 million.
Well, not really $20 million
he can actually spend. Turns out it was closer to $15 million that he could actually spend.
Let me just make sure I understand that. Because of the nature of who he was raising money from
and the dollar amounts they were contributing, a bunch of that money cannot be used in the primary
under the rules. It gets bounced over, carried over to the general election,
which means a lot of it is just kind of walled away.
It's totally walled away.
You can only get $3,300 from a donor
that you can use in the primary.
So he was raising from a lot of people $6,600.
So half that money, he can't spend it.
Shows up in the bank account,
but it's got a little like color coding.
It says, you know what?
This money, you can't use this until at least next year. And if you're not the nominee, you got to give it back.
Really interesting. Okay, what's the third issue?
The third issue is his spending. Ron DeSantis was spending a pretty big chunk of the money
he was bringing in. He was spending on private planes. He was spending on a fancy launch that
accompanied that Twitter rollout, which was at the Four Seasons in Miami. And he's spending in ways that were unsustainable.
So too much spending and from donors who give too much too quickly.
lifeblood of national campaigns. The people who give 20 bucks a month, sometimes they check a box to give it every month. And it really becomes this sustainable source of money for campaigns.
This is what Trump has built. He's a small dollar machine. And when we got the first disclosures for
Ron DeSantis' campaign, it's very much not what he's built, which was top-heavy and had only less
than, I think, 15% of all of his money came from people who gave less than $200.
And it would seem that not getting small donors is not just, of course, a financial dilemma,
but a reflection of the fact that, as a candidate,
DeSantis is not winning the hearts and minds of working-class and middle-class Republican voters.
Or the grassroots of the party, right?
The people who are inspired enough to give.
Now, money doesn't necessarily mean you're winning.
Having the most donors doesn't equal
that you're the best candidate.
But it is one of those ways that you can measure enthusiasm.
And what it shows is that he didn't have
that level of enthusiasm,
certainly to be competitive with Donald Trump.
So what is this heavy spending,
things like planes, fancy events,
and the absence of these small dollar donations,
what does it all together lead to?
It leads to a really turbulent period
for the DeSantis campaign.
They make cutbacks to his staff in mid-July.
Around 10 people are let go.
Not too much longer,
another 25 or so people are let go.
At this point, you're looking at something like 40% of his entire campaign staff
have been removed in a cost-cutting way.
That's a pretty traumatic thing for a candidacy that's only been alive for a few months.
It's a very traumatic thing, right?
Then after that comes a third round, which is his campaign manager.
And his campaign manager is replaced.
third round, which is his campaign manager, and his campaign manager is replaced.
And so now you have this really unusual situation of a new candidate just a few months into his run who's faced three successive resets. And suddenly, Ron DeSantis is at risk
of being a candidate who's being defined by his own campaign's upheaval.
We'll be right back.
Shane, what do you come to understand is really going on behind all these upheavals and kind of failure to launch? And how much of it do you understand to be about these strategic problems like overspending and how much of it is about just a political strategy that's not working, not meeting voters and donors where they are?
I mean, I cover politics, Michael, and so I pay a lot of
attention to how campaigns work and how they operate, how they'll fund themselves and how
they'll reach voters. Voters aren't paying attention to any of these things, right? They
don't know who the campaign manager is. They don't care that you've cut back your staff.
But in the middle of all of these cutbacks, the New York Times did our first poll of the 2024 presidential cycle. And I think that poll
showed the other side of what's happening with the DeSantis candidacy, which is not
the struggles to get their books in shape and to have the right size campaign staff. It's
a more fundamental question, which is, is the message that Ron DeSantis is selling
connecting with Republican voters? And what does that poll tell us?
I mean, the poll doesn't have a lot of good news for Ron DeSantis.
It showed him losing in a landslide to Donald Trump.
And I think the specifics of the poll were even worse than that top line.
And the specifics undercut some of the core things that he's made his candidacy about.
Explain that.
Well, some things we've already talked about,
like that he could be the electable Republican in 2024.
When primary voters were asked,
well, who do you think is better described
as able to beat Joe Biden?
They chose Donald Trump by a two to one margin.
And it's a twofold problem
on the electability question in the poll,
because it's not just that Republican voters saw on the electability question in the poll, because it's
not just that Republican voters saw Trump as more electable in the survey. It's that Republican
voters weren't that into electability in the first place, that when given a choice between would you
like a candidate who mostly agrees with you on the issues or somebody who you think is better able to
beat Joe Biden, more Republicans were saying, actually, I want somebody who agrees with me on the issue. So just the basic idea that winning would be the most important thing
wasn't something that was top of mind for Republican voters in our poll at the end of July.
Shane, how should we understand that? Because as we've talked about earlier,
the midterm losses of Trump-backed candidates, not to mention the fact that Trump
lost the 2020 election, not to mention the fact that Trump has now been indicted several times,
all of those seem to provide a real opening for DeSantis in particular to come into this race
and say, I can win and electability should matter. I mean, that was the thinking.
But what we see is that
it's been a real struggle
to get that to be the top issue,
that Trump being indicted
has rallied Republicans behind him.
He's still seen as the party's leader.
And then there's been this surprise factor,
which has nothing to do
with Republicans at all,
which is President Biden,
which is that Republicans
are seeing clips of President Biden
packaged on Fox News and other outlets. And just if they're watching his speeches, then that he
he's tripping over his words. In one case, he's literally tripping on stage. And it has made this
argument that Joe Biden is some all powerful force that we must pick the most electable person. It's
made it a tougher sell. That's really interesting that Joe Biden is seen as so beatable that, look, anyone can beat him. And so what? Yeah, Trump has different things
that he's not as good at, or maybe he lost, and maybe they don't even think that he lost.
But that somehow Biden himself, his own perceived weakness has made the electability argument
a tougher sell. Got it. I'm really curious about the other plank that DeSantis based his campaign on,
which was the conservative wins that he racked up in Florida and the argument that in addition
to electability, he's been able to pass a deeply conservative agenda. Does our poll touch on that
at all? The poll didn't go through his particular achievements in Tallahassee, but what it did cover
are some of the issues that Ron DeSantis has based his candidacy on. Issues like a six-week abortion
ban, which is one thing that he did pass in Florida, and talking about whether you want to
prioritize taking on woke corporations or not, which is something else that Ron DeSantis is very
closely aligned with. And here's the tricky thing again for Ron DeSantis in this poll
and why it had so little good news for him.
It showed that no matter which side of these issues you were on,
you preferred Donald Trump.
And this was pretty remarkable.
The six-week abortion ban, which Trump has been critical of,
which he has said is too harsh.
If you think this law is bad, you wanted Donald Trump.
If you think this law is good, you also wanted Donald Trump.
If you think that you should go after the woke corporations, you wanted Donald Trump. If you
think you shouldn't be going after the woke corporations, you also wanted Donald Trump.
It really showed a tough pathway for Ron DeSantis, that his issues weren't resonating.
And even among the voters who cared about the particular issues he's focused on,
he wasn't winning those voters either.
So this poll seems to be kind of a red alert moment for DeSantis on top of whatever financial problems he's having with his candidacy.
Because as you've pretty well established, it doesn't really leave him with much of an argument for being in the race.
Well, this is just the national poll, right?
But we did another poll that week that was about Iowa.
And that poll had a little bit more hope for Ron DeSantis.
At the top lines, it showed a closer race.
He was losing to Donald Trump by a big margin,
but it was 44% to 20% versus the 37-point gap that he had nationally.
And the poll showed that there was a little more traction for the question of who do you see as better able to beat Joe Biden in a head-to-head matchup?
Do you think that it's Donald Trump or do you think it's Ron DeSantis?
In Iowa, Trump was ahead, but a much narrower margin by about nine points compared to the 30 percentage points that he led by nationally.
And that's why you're starting to see a real shift in the DeSantis campaign itself.
They've almost downsized their ambitions from being a completely national campaign to challenge Trump everywhere to being an Iowa-based campaign.
And the reason Ron DeSantis is focusing on Iowa is that Iowa is the first state that votes in the
2024 primary. And for years, it's had an outsized impact on shaping the race, not necessarily
picking the nominee, but shaping whether this is going to be a contest at all. So it's the place where Ron DeSantis could potentially take a chunk out of Trump
and show that the former president isn't so inevitable in 2024.
Particularly Iowans, they appreciate when you show up,
particularly in some of the smaller communities,
because sometimes people will overlook that.
So we're going everywhere.
He's made the promise that he's going to visit all 99 of Iowa's counties, many of which are very small. Hello, good morning.
And doing things like a bus tour, stopping at gas stations, doing little town halls and meet
and greets. Yesterday, we're playing catch at the county fair, Clayton County Fair,
right next to a bunch of corn. You know, he's got little anecdotes about his son,
and he took his son to play catch in Iowa,
and his son says, is this heaven?
And he says, no, son, this is Iowa.
Right?
Like, he's leaning into the Iowa campaign
in a way that Ron DeSantis was not a few months ago.
God bless the great state of Iowa.
God bless these United States.
Let's go on to victory.
Thank you, and God bless you all.
And you were just there
on the ground in Iowa.
So I'm curious how you found
Republicans thinking about Ron DeSantis
and talking about him
and how open they are
to this electability argument
that's so central to his candidacy.
So I spent a few days in the Des Moines area.
Yeah, I'm looking to talk to a Republican caucus.
Went to the state fair, which draws a big cross-section of Iowans
from across the state. It's a big event.
And what do you make of the DeSantis argument
that the party needs somebody more electable,
that Trump lost and...
I think that's common sense. Yeah. We want somebody who's electable, that Trump lost and... I think that's common sense.
Yeah.
We want someone who's electable.
It was a really interesting experience talking to a lot of Republican voters, because what
I heard was a receptiveness to this electability argument, more than, frankly, I expected.
Trump got beat once.
He can get beat twice.
I liked what he did.
I liked what he did for the economy, the jobs aspect, China, the whole thing.
But I don't think he can pull it. I might be one out of a thousand, the jobs aspect, China, the whole thing. But I don't think
he can pull it. I might be one out of a thousand, but I don't think he can beat Biden twice.
There were people saying that they had concerns about Trump.
I think he's got too much baggage. He's too much of a distraction to the democratic process.
It's all about Donald. And I did vote for him and I backed him tremendously in the first race.
What about the rest of the field?
So in most of the polls for most of this year, Ron DeSantis has been the leading candidate.
Yeah, he's kind of fading and I don't know why.
I think he's a good guy.
What I also heard was no consolidation behind Ron DeSantis.
I like Tim Scott. I like Mr. Pence back here.
I like Elder. I like Elder. I like Tim Scott. I like Mr. Pence back here. I like Elder. I like Elder. I like Tim Scott.
Yeah.
DeSantis, we'll see.
People said, they're like, I thought he was going to be the guy,
and maybe he's not the guy, and I don't know why he's not the guy.
But he's not the guy for me just yet. Maybe I'll consider him later.
Seems like he's got some drag, something dragging him back,
and I'm just trying to discover what that is,
because he hasn't taken off like I thought he should.
Even people came to see him speak specifically.
They just weren't sold on Ron DeSantis yet.
And so what I heard from voters there
was this openness to finding somebody who wasn't Trump
because they're concerned about losing in 2024.
But the thing that really felt clear
in talking to voter
after voter was a lot of these people were just barely beginning their understanding of these
candidates. And a lot of them were just interested in learning more. I mean, the thing about talking
to voters, Michael, at this stage of a race is you're reminded how early it is. And so you may
not have closed the deal with people because people have barely started tuning in in most of the country.
And I think that's probably about to change.
We have the first debate of the primary season coming up this week, and it's a pretty critical moment for Ron DeSantis and his best chance yet to make the argument that he's a Republican who can win and then deliver a conservative agenda
in a way that Donald Trump can do neither. So is it your sense, despite the roller coaster of a
campaign that we've observed so far, that electability is still the right strategy for
DeSantis to make the argument to Republican voters, even though it didn't bear out in the national poll and it hasn't entirely borne out in the Iowa poll,
that he is the best alternative to Trump.
I think for all the Republicans
who don't want Donald Trump to be the nominee,
they need electability to work.
That there is no campaign that takes out Donald Trump without that. Because
most Republicans in every poll still like Donald Trump. And no one has found a better issue
than electability to try to take people away from him who still like him. And it hasn't worked yet.
But I haven't talked to a Republican who thinks they have some
other magic bullet that will work better. That understanding, that reality, does make you
realize that even though we have spent a lot of time in this conversation talking about the dramas
and maybe the flaws of the DeSantis campaign, it's very possible that even if Ron DeSantis
had so far run a flawless, superb,
upheaval-free candidacy,
he might be in exactly the same position
that he's in right now.
I mean, Ron DeSantis hasn't solved a problem
that no Republican has solved
since Donald Trump emerged on the national stage in 2015,
which is how to beat Donald Trump, right?
And in that way, Ron DeSantis is just the latest
in a long line of candidates
who haven't yet figured out a formula
to pull away the party's base
from the president who they still love.
Well, Shane, thank you very much.
Thank you.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Tropical Storm Hillary made landfall near the border of Mexico and California on Sunday,
delivering high winds and heavy rains that triggered flooding and mudslides.
In parts of California, where at least 11 counties are under a state of emergency,
the storm dropped a year's worth of rain in a single day.
And for the first time in the tournament's history,
Spain has won the Women's World Cup,
despite a series of hurdles that once made its victory there improbable.
Many of Spain's best players spent much of the past year on strike,
and as a result, were not invited to play in this year's World Cup.
Nevertheless, Spain defeated England 1-0.
Today's episode was produced by Rob Zipko and Nina Feldman, with help from Asta Chaturvedi.
It was edited by Rachel Quester with help from Mark George,
contains original music by Marian Lozano, Alisha Ba'itu,
and Rony Nemisto,
and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg
and Ben Landvork of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.