DeSantis Allies’ $200 Million Plan for Beating
Trump
As the Florida governor prepares to enter the 2024
race, his allies are building an army of organizers to flood the states with
the first nominating contests.
Shane
GoldmacherJonathan SwanMaggie Haberman
By Shane
Goldmacher, Jonathan Swan and Maggie Haberman
May 24,
2023, 3:00 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/24/us/politics/ron-desantis-2024-super-pac.html
A key
political group supporting Ron DeSantis’s presidential run is preparing a $100
million voter-outreach push so big it plans to knock on the door of every
possible DeSantis voter at least four times in New Hampshire, Nevada and South
Carolina — and five times in the kickoff Iowa caucuses.
The effort
is part of an on-the-ground organizing operation that intends to hire more than
2,600 field organizers by Labor Day, an extraordinary number of people for even
the best-funded campaigns.
Top
officials with the pro-DeSantis group, a super PAC called Never Back Down,
provided their most detailed account yet of their battle plan to aid Mr.
DeSantis, whom they believe they can sell as the only candidate to take on —
and win — the cultural fights that are definitional for the Republican Party in
2024.
The group
said it expected to have an overall budget of at least $200 million, including
more than $80 million to be transferred from an old DeSantis state political
account, for the daunting task of vaulting the Florida governor past former
President Donald J. Trump, who has established himself as the dominant early
front-runner.
Mr.
DeSantis is set to enter the presidential race on Wednesday in a live audio
conversation on Twitter, and the super PAC’s enormous cash reserves are
expected to be among the few advantages that Mr. DeSantis has in the race.
The group
is already taking on many tasks often reserved for the campaign itself:
securing endorsements in early primary states, sending mailers, organizing on
campuses, running television ads, raising small donations for the campaign in
an escrow account and working behind the scenes to build crowds for the
governor’s events. Hiring is underway in 18 states and officials said plans
were in the works to assemble various pro-DeSantis coalitions, such as for
voters who are veterans or those focused on issues like abortion, guns or
agriculture.
“No one has
ever contemplated the scale of this organization or operation, let alone done
it,” said Chris Jankowski, the group’s chief executive. “This has just never
even been dreamed up.”
In Iowa,
the group has opened a boot camp on the outskirts of Des Moines, giving the
facility the code name “Fort Benning,” after the old Army training outpost,
with 189 graduates of an eight-day training program the first wave of an
organizing army to follow. Door knocking begins on Wednesday in New Hampshire.
The
endeavor echoes the “Camp Cruz” that Senator Ted Cruz’s 2016 presidential
campaign set up near Des Moines.
At the helm
of the DeSantis super PAC is Jeff Roe, a veteran Republican strategist who was
Mr. Cruz’s campaign manager then. In an interview, Mr. Roe described an
ambitious political apparatus whose 2,600 field organizers by the fall would be
roughly double the peak of Senator Bernie Sanders’s entire 2020 primary
campaign staff.
Mr. Roe
also previewed some of the contrasts that Never Back Down planned to draw with
Mr. Trump. He argued that Mr. Trump had shied away from key fights that
motivate the Republican base and on which Mr. DeSantis has led, including on
L.G.B.T.Q. issues, schools and taking on corporate America.
“How do you
beat Trump?” Mr. Roe said, pointing to Mr. DeSantis’s assertiveness on those
cultural issues. “Well, you beat Trump by beating Trump. And where Ron DeSantis
has beaten Trump is by doing what Republican voters want him to do the most.”
The race
begins. Four years after a historically large number of candidates ran for
president, the field for the 2024 campaign is starting out small and is likely
to be headlined by the same two men who ran last time: President Biden and
Donald Trump. Here’s a look at some of the contenders who have entered the race
so far:
President
Biden. The president has cast himself as a protector of democracy and a
stabilizing force after the upheaval of the Trump administration. Biden is
running for re-election as the oldest person ever to hold the presidency, a
subject of concern among many Democrats, though the party has publicly set
aside those worries and rallied around him.
Donald
Trump. The former president is running to retake the office he lost in 2020.
Though somewhat diminished in influence within the Republican Party — and
facing several legal investigations — he retains a large and committed base of
supporters, and he could be aided in the primary by multiple challengers
splitting a limited anti-Trump vote.
Nikki
Haley. The former governor of South Carolina and U.N. ambassador under Trump
has presented herself as a member of “a new generation of leadership” and
emphasized her life experience as a daughter of Indian immigrants. She was long
seen as a rising G.O.P. star but her allure in the party has declined amid her
on-again, off-again embrace of Trump.
Tim Scott.
The South Carolina senator, who joins a growing number of Republicans running
as alternatives to Trump, is the first Black Republican elected to the Senate
from the South since Reconstruction and has been one of his party’s most
prominent voices on matters of race.
Asa
Hutchinson. The former governor of Arkansas is one of a relatively small number
of Republicans who have been openly critical of Trump. Hutchinson has denounced
the former president’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election and said Trump
should drop out of the presidential race.
More
candidates. On the Republican side, Vivek Ramaswamy and Larry Elder are also
making a run for the White House, while Marianne Williamson and Robert F.
Kennedy Jr. have launched campaigns for the Democratic nomination. Read more
about the 2024 candidates here.
Mr.
DeSantis has steadily lost ground so far in 2023 and is trailing Mr. Trump
nationally in polls by an average of 30 percentage points. And as the
governor’s standing has diminished, more candidates have jumped into the race,
an ever-expanding field that could make the sheer math even harder for Mr.
DeSantis to topple a former president with a significant base of loyalists.
Steven
Cheung, a spokesman for Mr. Trump, mocked the group as “Always Back Down,”
calling it “a clown show of epic proportions.”
“If
DeSantis runs his campaign the same way as his super PAC, he’ll be in for a
rude awakening,” Mr. Cheung said.
In framing
the 2024 race, Mr. Roe acknowledged that Mr. Trump has been “the leader of a
movement.” But, in Mr. Roe’s telling, it is Mr. DeSantis alone who “has the
opportunity to be the leader of the party and the movement.”
“That is a
key difference,” he said. “I don’t believe people fundamentally understand that
you can be a leader of a movement and not be the leader of your party. Ron
DeSantis has the ability to be both. Trump does not.”
That is a
line that Mr. DeSantis himself articulated last week in a private call with
donors that was organized by Never Back Down. He played up the money he has
raised for state parties, including in New Hampshire.
“Ultimately,
politics is a team sport,” Mr. DeSantis told donors, adding an oblique shot at
Mr. Trump. “You know, there’s some that kind of raise money just for
themselves.”
Republican
primary voters, Mr. Roe said, see the battle against the progressive left as an
existential fight. He argues that Mr. DeSantis, not Mr. Trump, has led on three
touchstone issues in that fight: taking on corporate America, engaging in what
is being taught in schools and confronting shifting norms and acceptance around
sexual orientation and transgender medical care.
The
governor’s clash with Disney touches on all three: battling a big corporation
over what began as a fight over classroom discussions about sexual orientation
and gender identity in elementary schools. Mr. Trump sees the Disney battle as
futile and has recently cheered on the company as it hit back against Mr.
DeSantis.
Mr. Roe
added that the intensity of the threat that Republicans perceive to their way
of life is what makes electability a more salient issue for the party in 2024,
and what makes Mr. DeSantis’s ability to fight those fights and still win in
Florida so appealing.
“That is a
manifest separation between the two candidates,” he said.
Unlike a
candidate’s campaign committee, which has to abide by strict caps for each
donor, there are no limits on how much a super PAC is allowed to raise.
And this
one begins with unmatched financial firepower. Never Back Down is expected to
begin with around $120 million — $40 million it says it already raised and $80
million from Mr. DeSantis’s old state political committee — a sum that is equal
to what Jeb Bush’s super PAC spent in total in 2016.
But there
are several legal impediments to this financial freedom. The people who run
super PACs are prohibited from discussing strategy with the candidate or the
campaign staff. Of course, if Mr. DeSantis disagrees with any super PAC
decisions, he can always say so publicly and urge them to change course.
As a
result, the biggest super PACs — entities that have existed for just the last
roughly 12 years — have often essentially become independent vehicles to buy
expensive television advertising. That model, however, is extremely
inefficient. When the election nears, the airwaves are cluttered and candidates
are guaranteed, by law, far lower rates than super PACs. It is one reason the
pro-DeSantis group plans to spend so heavily on its field program, officials
said, citing studies that show personal voter contact has far greater return on
investment.
“That’s not
to say that we won’t do TV, it’s that it’s not all that we’ll do,” said Kristin
Davison, the chief operating officer of Never Back Down. “We understand that in
the first four states that peer-to-peer, neighbor-to-neighbor conversation and
conversion is going to be extremely important.”
Hiring is
underway in 18 states and officials said plans were in the works to assemble
various pro-DeSantis coalitions, such as for voters who are veterans or those
focused on issues like abortion, guns or agriculture.Credit...Haiyun Jiang/The
New York Times
Strategists
with Never Back Down have been consulting lawyers and studying precedent to see
exactly how far the group can stretch the legal bounds of what tasks it can
perform without tripping any legal wires. One overlooked twist in election law
is that super PAC advisers can move to the campaign, so it is possible entire
departments at Never Back Down could eventually join the DeSantis campaign.
The
hand-in-glove efforts were on display during Mr. DeSantis’s recent trip to
Iowa. After Mr. Trump canceled a rally near Des Moines, the governor decided he
wanted to swoop in for a last-minute event in the area. But it wasn’t the
governor’s staff that scrambled to bring people to the location but employees
of the super PAC, who, working with Mr. DeSantis’s team, sent a flurry of texts
and calls to assemble a crowd at Jethro’s BBQ that evening.
“On like
two hours’ notice, at some local pizza joint or barbecue joint, we got like 200
people to show up,” Mr. DeSantis raved to donors on the call, which The New
York Times listened to.
Despite Mr.
DeSantis’s professed aversion to political consultants, particularly those who
work around Washington, and his history of asking questions about what people
who work for him are making, his team has anointed one of the Republican
Party’s most famous consultants to oversee Never Back Down.
Mr. Roe has
emerged as an unusual lightning rod, among DeSantis allies and rivals alike.
His aggressive approach to both campaigning and business development was the
subject of a recent Washington Post article that detailed his firm’s efforts to
vacuum up ever more revenue, including from its political clients.
Mr. Trump
himself obsesses over Mr. Roe, who is the only political consultant that he
regularly talks about, according to people who have discussed the matter with
the former president. Advisers so regularly feed him stories about the money
spent on Mr. Roe’s losing campaigns that Mr. Trump has coined a nickname for
him: “the kiss of death.”
Never Back
Down has already spent more than $10 million on pro-DeSantis television ads
this spring. The early spending has been the subject of second-guessing from
some DeSantis allies as it coincided with a drop in the polls. But Never Back
Down advisers defended the ads as not just propping up Mr. DeSantis before he
enters the race but as part of an enormous experiment — including mail, text
messaging and control groups — to study what means of communicating works
against Mr. Trump.
Officials
said voters were surveyed before and after in tens of thousands of interviews
to determine the impact.
Shane
Goldmacher is a national political reporter and was previously the chief
political correspondent for the Metro desk. Before joining The Times, he worked
at Politico, where he covered national Republican politics and the 2016
presidential campaign. @ShaneGoldmacher
Jonathan
Swan is a political reporter who focuses on campaigns and Congress. As a
reporter for Axios, he won an Emmy Award for his 2020 interview of
then-President Donald J. Trump, and the White House Correspondents’
Association’s Aldo Beckman Award for “overall excellence in White House
coverage” in 2022. @jonathanvswan
Maggie
Haberman is a senior political correspondent and the author of “Confidence Man:
The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America.” She was part of a team
that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for reporting on President Trump’s advisers
and their connections to Russia. @maggieNYT





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