For DeSantis’ 2024 campaign, Iowa brings a make-or-break moment

For DeSantis’ 2024 campaign, Iowa brings a make-or-break moment

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© Reuters. Republican presidential candidate Florida Governor Ron DeSantis gestures while speaking during a campaign event in Waukee, Iowa, U.S., January 3, 2024. REUTERS/Cheney Orr
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By James Oliphant and Gram Slattery

WAUKEE, Iowa (Reuters) -If Ron DeSantis wants to capture the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, it all likely comes down to the next 12 days.

On Wednesday, the Florida governor began a breakneck stretch of campaign events in the run-up to Iowa’s Jan. 15 caucuses, which will offer the first signal of whether Republican voter preferences match public polling that shows former President Donald Trump as the party’s runaway frontrunner.

No candidate has staked more on a strong result in Iowa than DeSantis: He visited all 99 counties in the state, fiercely courted its socially conservative voters and secured the backing of its governor.

Associates of DeSantis say he needs at least a second-place finish in Iowa, and a poor showing there would likely doom his bid. The next Republican nominating contest comes Jan. 23 in New Hampshire, where he has been lagging in polls behind Trump and former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley.

At an event in a small community center in Waukee, Iowa, on Wednesday, DeSantis peppered his remarks with criticism of Trump, contending that he failed to follow through on his campaign promises, including building a wall on the U.S. southern border and deporting millions of migrants in the country illegally.

“What makes you think somehow he’s gonna get it done the second time around?” DeSantis asked the crowd of about 100 people.

One attendee, Christopher Garcia, 75, of Woodward (NASDAQ:WWD), Iowa, challenged DeSantis, noting that he was faring poorly in polls and pushing him to go more “directly after” Trump. He cited Trump’s attacks on the late U.S. Senator John McCain, arguing that it had harmed the party’s standing with veterans.

DeSantis took exception, cutting him off and maintaining that he has been tough on Trump. After a further back and forth with Garcia, DeSantis conceded the point that Trump “has been his own worst enemy.”

Since the early days of the campaign, DeSantis, Haley and other Republican aspirants have largely stayed cagey about criticizing Trump, recognizing that they would need some of Trump’s voters to win the nomination.

However, Trump has been less reticent about mocking them, creating the impression at times that he had cowed the field into silence.

Afterward in an interview, Garcia said he would caucus for DeSantis, complaining that Trump “can’t keep his mouth shut.”

“We need somebody in there who can be president. DeSantis would be fine, but he’s got to fight,” he said. “Are these people afraid to take Trump head-on? Is that the problem?”

The Republican nominee will face Democratic President Joe Biden in the November election.

Another attendee, Tom Shields, 78, of Clive, Iowa, said he also will caucus for DeSantis after supporting Trump in the past.

Trump “comes on pretty strong, and I think he turns a lot of people off,” Shields said.

LATE IN THE GAME

DeSantis’ campaign has been plagued by money woes and discord between his campaign staff and a super PAC supporting him, Never Back Down. But more fundamentally, he has struggled to expand his appeal beyond a narrow slice of the Republican electorate and position himself as an heir to Trump’s political movement.

At a campaign rally for supporters on New Year’s Eve, DeSantis’ most influential evangelical supporter, Bob Vander Plaats, urged those in the room to not surrender. “Everywhere I go, the polls don’t match up with reality,” he said.

Those close to DeSantis or his nomination effort privately acknowledge that he needs to finish at least second in Iowa to keep his candidacy viable.

One person who speaks with the governor frequently said even a close finish that results in both DeSantis and Haley coming away with the same number of delegates would be a defeat. The 40 delegates up for grabs in Iowa are awarded on a proportional basis.

“We’re hoping that we’re going to surprise everyone,” said that person, who requested anonymity to speak frankly about the state of the campaign. “If he gets the same amount of delegates, that’s bad.”

One major donor, who has spent more than $1 million supporting DeSantis, said a third-place finish would be the end of the campaign. 

DeSantis’ campaign has rejected the notion that his campaign has staked more on Iowa than the governor’s foes, pointing out that Haley and her allies have been dumping resources into the state in recent weeks at a breakneck rate.

In the run-up to Iowa, Haley and one of the super PACs backing her have been outspending both DeSantis and Trump. The PAC, SFA Fund Inc, has blanketed TV airwaves with negative ads against DeSantis while leaving Trump alone.

“Given her massive Iowa spending advantage, it’s now second place or bust for her,” said David Polyansky, DeSantis’ deputy campaign manager.

Haley returns to Iowa on Thursday for a televised town hall with voters. DeSantis will participate in a similar event that evening.

He barnstormed the western part of the state on Wednesday holding several events, and he will do the same in the eastern region over Friday and Saturday, when Trump will also hold four rallies in Iowa.

“Iowa … I just think is important because this is the first one, you know, all the fanfare,” DeSantis said at a campaign event at a restaurant in Sioux City. “And we think that will really propel us as we go forward.”

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