ELECTIONS
Trump-DeSantis feud gets ugly fast
The two frontrunners for the GOP nomination are
fighting over everything from a campaign bus in Iowa to the former president’s
White House record.
By SALLY
GOLDENBERG, ALEX ISENSTADT, NATALIE ALLISON and LISA KASHINSKY
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/06/01/trump-desantis-feud-gets-ugly-fast-00099830
06/01/2023
08:57 PM EDT
LACONIA,
N.H. — Shortly after Ron DeSantis snapped at a reporter who questioned his
limited voter engagement during a swing through New Hampshire on Thursday, his
chief primary rival tried to one up him.
Donald
Trump made a crack about his opponents’ fear of the media and proceeded to
field 20 minutes of questions from reporters in Iowa, drawing an immediate
contrast to his protege turned foe. Elsewhere, a super PAC backing DeSantis
drove a bus that mockingly followed Trump around the state. And DeSantis all but
accused Trump of failing to push through a sufficiently sweeping conservative
agenda during his four years in office, while ripping the former president for
his “juvenile” use of derisive nicknames.
The day on
the trail illustrated just how bitter the race has become in its embryonic
stages. While the campaign is still young – Republicans won’t begin voting for
more than six months — Trump and DeSantis are already engaged in the kind of
mano-a-mano fight typically seen much closer to the first nominating contests.
Top Republicans involved in the contest predict the race will get far nastier
as time marches on.
The
development could have profound consequences for the party. Should Trump and
DeSantis continue down the path of savagery towards each other, it could leave
the eventual nominee hobbled for what is expected to be a tough general
election fight against President Joe Biden. Top Republicans have been watching
the escalating tit-for-tat warily.
“It’s a
15-round boxing match, and when boxers come out pummeling each other from the
beginning, they’re not pacing themselves for the balance of the match,” said
Rob Stutzman, a Republican consultant based in California. “We’re still, what,
six to eight weeks from a debate stage when they really can go after each
other. When you turn it up to 11 from the beginning, it’s hard to de-escalate.”
Even before
Trump took the stage in Urbandale, he was girding for a fight. On Thursday
morning, the former president’s lieutenants agreed that they should respond to
DeSantis’ quip that Trump had failed to push through enough of his agenda, and
that if he, DeSantis, were elected, he’d have eight years to achieve sweeping
conservative policies. The idea, the Trump team settled on: Push back on the
notion it should take eight years.
“It’ll take
me six months,” Trump remarked at his Urbandale event.
When later
asked about Trump’s comment, DeSantis fired back: “Why didn’t he do it in his
first four years?”
There was
Trump’s jab at how DeSantis pronounces his last name. And then there was the
squabble over DeSantis’ chiding of the reporter in New Hampshire. Most
Republican politicians would cheer on the badgering of the press. That
certainly would be expected from Trump, who is prone to call reporters the
“enemy of the people.”
But in the
case of the 2024 Republican primary, the enemy of the enemy has become the
campaign cudgel. And neither Team Trump nor Team DeSantis appear eager to let
cudgels go unused.
“Politics
is a cutthroat business,” said Republican George Preston, a Trump backer from
Salem who went to a DeSantis event in New Hampshire for his wife, a DeSantis
supporter.
Preston,
like many other Trump supporters in New Hampshire, said he would love to see
the two run on a ticket together — “if either of their egos could stand it.”
It hasn’t
all been shivving. The two camps can show the occasional restraint and civility
when the cameras are off or they themselves are offline. When Trump and his
staff arrived at his hotel in downtown Des Moines Wednesday night, sitting in
the lobby were top operatives from a pro-DeSantis super PAC, including Jeff
Roe, David Polyansky and Kristin Davison.
Trump
walked by without stopping, though one of his top advisers, Chris LaCivita,
exchanged a “hello” with the Never Back Down officials, according to two people
present for the encounter. Davison and another Trump campaign staffer embraced.
One of the
people present described the moment as “all cordial and smiles — no brawls.”
But
Republicans have worried for months about the need for party unity ahead of
what is likely to be a bruising general election. RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel has
openly warned that “infighting” could jeopardize the party’s prospects in 2024.
And for
DeSantis — a candidate who has pitched himself as a sober, substantive
counterweight to Trump — the engagement in petty rivalries with Trump may serve
as a particular distraction.
“I think
it’s not his brand to do that and I don’t think he will, it’s not who he is,”
said DeSantis endorser and New Hampshire House Majority Leader Jason Osborne in
Manchester, N.H. “I don’t expect it from him. He is, I do think every bit the
insult comic that Trump is. But he’s more Shakespeare while Trump is more Triumph
the [Insult Comic Dog] puppet.”
Before he
formally entered the race, it seemed that DeSantis would try and avoid directly
going after Trump. But the opening days of the campaign have largely dispelled
that notion.
DeSantis’
speech in Salem, N.H., was littered with veiled jabs at Trump that grew more
pointed as the hour wore on. “Leadership is not about entertainment,” DeSantis
declared early on. Later, he blamed the former president — without naming him —
for Republicans’ underperformance in the midterms and called to “shake this
culture of losing that’s infected our party in recent years.”
During his
tour on Thursday, DeSantis hopscotched New Hampshire, which will hold the GOP’s
second nominating contest early next year. Central to his speeches was the
argument that Trump has proven himself unelectable in a race against President
Joe Biden — whose re-election would deliver what DeSantis described as
unaffordable green-energy mandates, undue reliance on Chinese manufacturing and
an unworkable immigration strategy. The reception was positive. But a lack of
more direct exchanges with attendees left some of those who had come to see the
governor wanting more.
“He has
lots of points that many of us have heard before, that are probably on topic. I
was disappointed there weren’t questions — or any interactivity — with the
audience. We like to hear from candidates and we have questions of our own,”
Vikram Mansharamani, a former GOP candidate for U.S. Senate, said after
DeSantis delivered a speech at a VFW post in Laconia, N.H. “Why did I have an
hour of a lecture? I wanted interactivity.”
DeSantis
would go on to argue that his glad-handing and chatting with attendants in the
packed room following his speech was tantamount to the town hall-style
conversation New Hampshire voters are used to. He flared up when an Associated
Press reporter asked him why he wasn’t taking official questions from
attendees.
“Are you
blind? Are you blind?” DeSantis said as he made his way through the supportive
crowd.
The early
pugnaciousness on the trail has been supplemented by a take-no-prisoners
approach from each side’s aides and supporters online.
After a leak
emerged from the donor confab that DeSantis’ team hosted in Miami last week,
Christina Pushaw, the campaign’s director of rapid response, tweeted out a
photo of the gathering with the accused leaker circled in yellow highlighter.
Her insinuation was that Trump world was behind the audio getting out. But the
photo also included dozens of other attendees. Among them was conservative
commentator Clay Travis, who was subsequently subjected to an online badgering
from Trump supporters — including conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer.
The bus
became embroiled in even more sniping later when a Trump-plated SUV temporarily
stopped it from leaving a parking lot — presumably an attempt to keep them from
following the former president’s motorcade — by stalling out in front of it.
“Nasty?”
said a former Trump adviser granted anonymity to discuss the dynamics of the
race freely. “This is child’s play. You wanna see nasty? Stay tuned.”
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