ELECTIONS
DeSantis lets go of more than a third of campaign
staff as reset continues
The cuts, which were confirmed by advisers, will
amount to a total of 38 jobs shed across an array of departments.
By ALEX
ISENSTADT
07/25/2023
01:18 PM EDT
Ron
DeSantis’ presidential campaign is expanding the number of staff it’s cutting
to include more than a third of his payroll as the Florida governor looks to
get his primary bid back on track.
The cuts,
which were confirmed by advisers, will amount to a total of 38 jobs shed across
an array of departments. They will include the roughly 10 event planning
positions that were announced several weeks ago, in addition to the recent
departures of two senior DeSantis campaign advisers, Dave Abrams and Tucker
Obenshain.
“Following
a top-to-bottom review of our organization, we have taken additional,
aggressive steps to streamline operations and put Ron DeSantis in the strongest
position to win this primary and defeat Joe Biden,” DeSantis campaign manager
Generra Peck said in a statement. “Gov. DeSantis is going to lead the Great
American Comeback and we’re ready to hit the ground running as we head into an
important month of the campaign.”
The
expanded cuts are the latest sign that the Florida governor’s team is pivoting
to a slim-down operation amid concerns over their finances. The campaign
announced it had raised $20 million during the second quarter of this year. But
it had spent a good chunk of that money. Much of the sum it raised, moreover,
came from donors who had given the maximum amount and could not give again.
According
to recent federal filings, the campaign counted 90-plus staffers on its payroll
through the end of June.
During a
donor retreat in Deer Valley, Utah, last week, Peck acknowledged that the
campaign had overspent in some areas and that further adjustments would need to
be made. Advisers also outlined plans for DeSantis — who has been criticized
for overseeing a bloated operation — to reposition himself as an insurgent
underdog. They also said they would aim to reduce costs by doing smaller, more
intimate events and cutting down its travel expenditures.
Some aides
will be leaving the campaign but not the broader effort to elect DeSantis. Both
Abrams and Obenshain are expected to help an outside pro-DeSantis group.
But in a
further indication that the campaign is looking to tighten its belt, the
campaign is naming Carl Sceusa its chief financial officer. Sceusa is also
serving as chief technology officer.
The
campaign has made other staff changes in recent weeks. Ethan Eilon, the digital
director, has been named deputy campaign manager. Cody Hall, a top political
adviser to Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, has been added as senior communications
advisor. Andrew Romeo, who had been the campaign spokesperson, has been elevated
to communications director.

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