Trump to ramp up efforts to secure 2024
Republican nomination after slow start
Events aim at giving ex-president a narrative reset
after being criticized for his ‘low energy’ and inactivity, sources say
Hugo Lowell
in Washington
@hugolowell
Fri 13 Jan
2023 08.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jan/13/trump-events-secure-2024-republican-nomination
Donald
Trump is scheduled to venture out of his Mar-a-Lago resort and conduct a swing
of presidential campaign events later this month, ramping up efforts to secure
the Republican nomination after facing hefty criticism around the slow start to
his 2024 White House bid, according to sources familiar with the matter.
The former
US president is expected to travel to a number of early voting states for the
Republican nomination – the specific states have not been finalized – around
the final weekend of January, the sources said, where he is slated to announce
his state level teams.
The move
comes after a slow start to the campaign and an announcement speech at
Mar-a-Lago that has been widely panned as “low energy” and inactive in terms of
events, further knocking Trump’s political image after key Senate candidates he
endorsed in November’s midterms faced embarrassing defeats.
That has
apparently given enough confidence for a host of Republicans to prepare their
own White House runs and though Trump says he believes a wide field will be
beneficial, he seems set to face possible candidates including Florida governor
Ron DeSantis and ex-cabinet officials like Nikki Haley.
Trump’s
quick blitz of travel on his private plane is aimed at giving him something of
a narrative reset, the sources said, as well as conveying a sense of swagger
and the insurgency feel of his 2016 presidential campaign that he has told
advisers in recent weeks he is determined to recapture.
The
campaign has otherwise planned for Trump to gradually increase the number of
political events this year, while it first spends time building out the wider
political operation with the aim of starting to peak in activity at the start
of election year.
The idea,
the sources said, is to do the less glamorous but operationally necessary
groundwork now, when Trump remains the only declared candidate for the
presidency, to build as large of a head start as possible for when DeSantis or
others formally enter the 2024 fray.
In the
weeks since Trump announced his candidacy at Mar-a-Lago last November, the
campaign appears to have spent the majority of its time building its
fund-raising operation based off small-donor lists that his political action
committees have amassed since 2016.
Trump has
historically had among the best lists in politics and the team has started to
transfer the rich data of names, email address, phone numbers and contributions
histories over to the campaign.
The snag
has been that the lists are technically owned by his Pacs, and the campaign has
needed to find workarounds to access the data; for instance, Trump has raised
money through another Pac that shares proceeds between an entity like Trump’s
Save America Pac and the 2024 campaign.
The
campaign has also focused on expanding the pool of potential donors, one source
familiar with the matter said. In recent weeks, it has stepped up efforts to
identify moderate Republican voters who have supported Trump politically but
have not made contributions for possible ad targeting.
Trump has
endorsed this strategy of completing the groundwork while he remains the only
declared candidate for 2024, people close to the campaign said, and has largely
shrugged off his initial anger at having the launch derided as “low energy”
after a disappointing midterms for the GOP.
Still,
Trump has remained attuned to criticism that the campaign had a slow start and
appears to have taken steps to make the leadership team for his latest bid for
the White House similar to the 2016 team, which featured a group of core aides
and advisers.
The
campaign is being helmed by Susie Wiles, the top political adviser to Trump for
the past two years who helped him win Florida in his previous two presidential
bids, and Chris LaCivita, a veteran strategist and former political director
for the National Republican Senatorial Committee.
Both Wiles
and LaCivita are considered seasoned political operatives who know how to run
successful campaigns but Wiles in particular is expected to be an asset for
2024 as Florida governor Ron DeSantis considers a presidential run, given she
previously worked as a top adviser for DeSantis.
The group
of top aides also includes former White House political director Brian Jack,
former Trump 2016 campaign rapid response director Steven Cheung serving as the
senior adviser for communications, Justin Caporale who helped create some of
the most memorable Trump rallies in the past, and Trump’s in-house counsel
Boris Epshteyn.
But even as
Trump assembles what Republican operatives consider the gold standard for a
presidential campaign team, whether he heeds their advice over the long term
remains an issue.
The former
president invariably turns to informal advisers on all topics and over the
objections of his professional team, particularly when he finds people who
might be willing to affirm his own ideas and impulses, or find him convenient
exits to otherwise uncomfortable realities.
To be sure,
part of the reason for Trump’s early 2024 campaign announcement was his own
eagerness to begin a new campaign. But it was also a result of advice that
declaring his candidacy might make the justice department less inclined to
pursue criminal investigations or indictments against him.
That theory
did not pan out, and the 2024 campaign launch led the Attorney General Merrick
Garland to appoint a special counsel whose prosecutors have in fact been even
more aggressive and escalatory than before Trump announced his third bid for
the White House, the Guardian has previously reported.
The legal
blowback underscores how Trump at times has demonstrated a remarkable ability
for self-sabotage, such as when he was waived off taking a meeting with the
disgraced rapper Kanye West but did it anyway, and ended up also having dinner
with white supremacist Nick Fuentes.
Advisers
have also wrestled with Trump’s impulses for airing grievances about the 2020
election, even when the topic was shown to be a loser in the midterm elections.
But even at his campaign launch, Trump could not help himself, and discussed it
at length in his speech.
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