ELECTIONS
‘It turned out to be a mistake’: Botched rollout
puts DeSantis on his heels
He portrays himself as a low-drama alternative to
Donald Trump. His campaign launch was the picture of disorder.
By SALLY
GOLDENBERG and MERIDITH MCGRAW
05/24/2023
11:50 PM EDT
Updated:
05/25/2023 12:06 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/05/24/desantis-twitter-campaign-glitch-00098748
You only
get one chance to make a first impression. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ was a
glitch.
The Florida
governor announced his presidential campaign on Twitter Spaces, in an
appearance meant to be a veritable launch hosted by an actual rocket man.
But within
seconds, it was clear that Tallahassee had a problem.
The feed
broke, connections got cut off, the hosts seemed confused. It was inauspicious.
It also was a black mark on the candidate’s supposed trademarks — expert
organization and a comfort with the vanguard of modern media.
“It was
bold. It turned out to be a mistake,” radio host Erick Erickson emailed
supporters about the mishap. “It is recoverable. But it is a reminder that some
things should be under full control of the candidate, particularly the launch
day.”
The risk
for DeSantis is the prospect of the botched rollout forming a narrative and
cutting against the very argument he is making to Republican primary voters —
that he is a competent alternative to the chaotic presidency of former
President Donald Trump. The governor has been portraying himself in public
speeches and private donor meetings as a controlled, low-drama politician who
embraces many of Trump’s policy positions without the trademark
unpredictability. But on Wednesday, DeSantis — who fiercely values control —
was the picture of disorder.
The
governor’s team was quick to spin the moment as a sign of unprecedented
enthusiasm for the 44-year-old candidate, with hundreds of thousands of Twitter
users trying to tune into the event throughout the hour.
“Hi, this
is Governor Ron DeSantis. I’m running for president of the United States to
lead our great American comeback. We announced that on Twitter spaces earlier
tonight and it broke the internet because so many people were excited about
being on the Twitter space,” DeSantis said in a hastily-recorded video that
doubled as a fundraising pitch.
But in
corners of the conservative press, including outlets pining for an alternative
to Trump, there was little willingness to sidestep the face plant. The National
Review’s Philip Klein called it a “disaster.”
The Florida
governor entered the presidential race Wednesday to much fanfare — polls
showing him in second place, substantial money in supportive PACs and a record
of Republican accomplishments. But his unconventional decision to launch his
bid in a live chat on Twitter went awry when the talk failed to take off for
more than 30 minutes, leaving supporters and listeners wondering when the
governor would actually announce his campaign.
Once it
started, the nearly hour-long event offered DeSantis an opportunity to deliver
his stump speech and field easy questions from allies like Rep. Thomas Massie
(R-Ky.) about the more controversial aspects of his record. It also, for all
its problems, seemed to generate interest. His campaign spokesperson, Bryan Griffin,
said the team raised $1 million online in one hour and top adviser Gennera Peck
tweeted that more than 700,000 people had joined the virtual rollout — more
than triple the 200,000-plus people in the room later in the discussion.
But it also
invited an onslaught of mockery, including from Trump.
“Glitchy.
Tech issues. Uncomfortable silences. A complete failure to launch. And that’s
just the candidate!” a spokesperson for the Trump campaign sent out to
reporters.
Trump world
had been hinting that the former president would do something to potentially
overshadow or distract from DeSantis’ launch, and there was speculation that
Trump himself would even make a reemergence on Twitter Wednesday night. That
didn’t materialize. Instead, Trump watched the DeSantis roll out with some of
his advisers, who were reveling in the technical difficulties and mocking the
DeSantis team both publicly and privately.
By the end
of the night, Trump’s campaign released a video comparing Trump’s announcement
at Mar-a-Lago with the static and awkward beginning of the DeSantis Twitter
event and a flurry of statements on everything from the Florida governor’s
record to accusations his team swiped a line from a Trump State of the Union
speech.
“Ron
DeSantis’ botched campaign announcement is another example of why he is just
not ready for the job,” said Karoline Leavitt, a spokesperson for the pro-Trump
super PAC MAGA Inc., in a statement.
DeSantis’
original plan had been for him to do his first post-announcement interview on
Fox News with Tucker Carlson, according to two people familiar with his plans.
When the Fox News host was fired, the governor kept his commitment to the
network. He appeared with fill-in host Trey Gowdy in the 8 p.m. hour although
the cable news channel has seen evening viewership plummet since Carlson’s
ouster.
An official
with DeSantis’ political operation said they couldn’t confirm the details of
the planning.
Gowdy poked
fun at Twitter’s technical problems early in the interview, but also covered
substantive issues with DeSantis, like inflation, China, abortion and
immigration. DeSantis said he would declare a national emergency on his first
day in office and “mobilize all forces” to rebuild the border wall. He talked
about his plans to fire FBI Director Chris Wray and reorganize the “weaponized”
Department of Justice. Neither Gowdy nor DeSantis discussed Trump by name.
As the
night progressed, some Republicans did rush to DeSantis’ defense.
“He was
consistent, passionate and modern. He stood for what he believes in,” said Dan
Eberhart, a Republican donor and DeSantis supporter. “DeSantis announced this
way: Future focused and bypassing traditional media.”
One attendee
at a DeSantis donor event in Miami, meanwhile, said that the room was unmoved
by the launch’s problems. Instead, they were focused on raising a major sum of
money that would put those problems on the backburner. At the Four Seasons
Hotel, they congregated in a packed room, munching on finger food, mingling
with top figures on the governor’s campaign, including former Nevada Senate
candidate Adam Laxalt. DeSantis is expected to speak to the group tomorrow and
there is expected to be a political briefing from the top advisers as well.
But the
incident appeared likely to linger well past launch day, serving as a cudgel
not only for rival Republicans, but Democrats looking ahead to the general
election.
“You never
get a second chance to make a first impression!” tweeted political media
consultant Lis Smith, a Democrat. “Which is why most presidentials agonize over
the most minute details of a launch- the location, music, shot, program,
speech, etc. Unfathomable that you’d blow that *once* in a campaign free media
op for whatever this was.”
Alex
Isenstadt and Daniel Lippman contributed reporting.


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