DeSantis barnstorms through Iowa to boost his candidacy, as his campaign adjusts


Florida Governor Ron DeSantis barnstormed Iowa this week with six events in two days, hoping to spark a new beginning for his campaign after a series of recent setbacks.

The bus tour, hosted by the super PAC “Never Back Down,” which is supporting his run, featured the trappings of a traditional primary campaign: DeSantis spoke to more intimate crowds and did more of the retail politicking early-voting states value. The tour featured more engagements with press, all adjustments his campaign’s top brass laid out to donors last weekend.

Election 2024 DeSantis
Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis greets local residents during a meet and greet at the Hotel Charitone, Thursday, July 27, 2023, in Chariton, Iowa.

Charlie Neibergall / AP


“We’re gonna keep working. We’re not entitled to anything. I’m not a political prognosticator. All I’m saying is I’m gonna outwork everybody, and we are going to earn the support,” DeSantis told reporters Friday in Albia.

But with stagnant poll numbers, a campaign finance report showing a high spending rate for his campaign, layoffs of a third of his large staff in recent weeks and an outcry from Black congressional Republicans about his state’s education standards that isn’t quieting down, DeSantis traveled through Iowa this week battered by questions about the strength and viability of his candidacy. 

Still, DeSantis’ campaign says it is prioritizing and building momentum in Iowa, and pointed to a slate of 39 legislators who have endorsed DeSantis, growing support from local pastors and other legislators (including one who previously backed Trump until his criticism of Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds) and an Iowa-heavy campaign schedule for DeSantis in the coming weeks.

DeSantis campaign political director Sam Cooper said Iowa “is a place that has not been sucked into this national narrative of where the campaign’s at” and dismissed early state polls, saying it’s difficult to poll GOP caucus goers.

“A national survey or state survey in July six months before the caucus, doesn’t mean anything. If it did, Jeb Bush would be president,” Cooper said. “The reason I’m not worried about the surveys right now is most people haven’t dialed into this thing yet. It’s summer. And for caucus goers, we have to go introduce him.”

DeSantis downplayed the layoffs as part of the campaign process and expressed confidence in his strategy for the early presidential primary states.

“As a commander, you put out intent about what you want to see. If that intent is not followed, you ensure it’s going to be followed. I think that we’re in good shape,” DeSantis told CBS News in an interview Thursday when asked about any further staff cuts. 

The DeSantis campaign also argued there’s an opening for him among Iowa Republicans after former President Trump disparaged Gov. Reynolds, who is popular among the GOP in her state. 

Reynolds has said she would remain neutral in the 2024 Republican contest, but has appeared at several campaign events with DeSantis and even one with his wife, Casey DeSantis. Trump also plans to  skip the one-on-one interviews Reynolds is doing with all of the presidential candidates at the Iowa State Fair in August. 

“I opened up the Governor position for Kim Reynolds, & when she fell behind, I ENDORSED her, did big Rallies, & she won. Now, she wants to remain ‘NEUTRAL,’ Trump posted in early July, referencing his own endorsement of her in the 2018 race and the fact that the post was vacant after he named Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad to be ambassador to China. 

DeSantis has defended Reynolds and said he’d consider her as a potential running mate. He called Trump’s attacks “out of hand” and “not the way we win.” 

A survey conducted by Public Opinion Strategies and shared by the DeSantis campaign found that 78% of likely Republican Iowa caucus goers disagreed with Trump’s comments about Reynolds. Other internal campaign polling showed Trump and DeSantis with the same favorability rating among Iowa Republicans, at 78%. 

Trump has also snubbed Bob Vander Plaats, an influential Evangelist leader in the state who has crticized the former president. Trump  did not attend his Vander Plaats’ cattle call of candidates earlier this month.

Cooper also said DeSantis’ electability against President Joe Biden is key to his message in Iowa.

“Caucus goers wanna win. They’ve seen winning in Iowa with Kim Reynolds and her legislature there. They see winning in Florida with Gov. DeSantis. And they want to get there with family values that puts the country first,” he said. 

Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung responded by pointing to an awkward moment on the trail on Thursday between DeSantis and a child, and criticism by  Black congressional Republicans of Florida’s Black history standards. 

“From traumatizing a child for having an Icee during a hot summer day to disgustingly criticizing Black Republicans in Congress, Ron DeSantis’ reboot is as wobbly as his high-heeled shoes,” Cheung said. 

Republican voters across the state this week signaled an openness to hear from DeSantis and other candidates, despite Trump’s big lead in the polls. But among those who attended the DeSantis events, while there was a sense of fatigue around Trump and his ongoing complaints about the 2020 election, most said they were just starting to get to know DeSantis. 

“I think Trump is finished. I think he’s done. He’s just deluding himself now,” said Richard Borg of Fairfield, an undecided Iowa Republican who attended a DeSantis event in Albia. Asked why he attended DeSantis’ event, Borg said, “Just curiosity. I like being able to see and hear live, the candidates. It’s an opportunity you get in Iowa that is very rare.” 

Roger Gay, who said DeSantis did a “very fine job” during an event he attended in Oskaloosa, called for “someone younger” than Trump to become president.

“We need someone who’s going to be honest,” he added. 

Karen Fesler, an undecided Iowa voter and former Caucus Coalitions adviser for former Sen. Rick Santorum’s 2016 presidential bid, said she’d like to see DeSantis “do better” in the state but noted Trump’s base in Iowa “is still very strong.”

She thinks a statewide 99-county tour might boost DeSantis, but warned that it would take commitment to carry off. 

“There’s doing a 99-county tour the way Rick Santorum did it [in 2012], and there’s doing the 99-county tour the way Michelle Bachman did it. If Michelle Bachman stopped at Casey’s and filled her campaign bus up with gas and got a piece of pizza and left, she checked that county off,” she said.

“If you’re gonna do it, come in and do it. We’ll see,” she added. “It’s the first of August and our caucuses are the 15th of January. And you’ve got Thanksgiving and Christmas and New Year’s holidays in there. There’s not a whole lot of time left.”

Ed O’Keefe, Olivia Rinaldi and Musadiq Bidar contributed reporting.





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Trump, DeSantis to share stage as candidates for first time


Trump, DeSantis to share stage as candidates for first time – CBS News

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2024 GOP candidates gathered in Iowa on Friday to speak to hundreds of Republican voters in the state. The annual Lincoln Day Dinner saw the race’s two front-runners — Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis — share the same stage for the first time since they launched their campaigns. CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O’Keefe reports from Des Moines.

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What we know about the new charges against Trump


What we know about the new charges against Trump – CBS News

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Former President Donald Trump campaigned in Iowa on Friday just one day after facing new federal criminal charges in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case. The new charges allege that Trump and his aides conspired to destroy surveillance video at his Florida estate after the government issued subpoenas. CBS News chief election and campaign correspondent Robert Costa reports, and criminal defense attorney Joseph Tully examines the case.

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Trump, GOP rivals react to new charges on campaign trail


Trump, GOP rivals react to new charges on campaign trail – CBS News

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As former President Donald Trump prepared to campaign in Iowa Friday night, his legal troubles are becoming a big topic on the campaign trail. CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O’Keefe and CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett have more.

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What the newest charges against Trump in documents case mean


What the newest charges against Trump in documents case mean – CBS News

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Former President Donald Trump is now accused of conspiring to delete security camera footage after receiving a subpoena for that footage in the classified documents investigation. CBS News has also obtained audio of Trump contradicting some of his public claims about those documents. CBS News chief election and campaign correspondent Robert Costa and CBS News legal contributor Jessica Levinson have more.

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Trump hit with new charges as special counsel expands Mar-a-Lago documents case


Washington — Prosecutors with special counsel Jack Smith’s office have added new charges against former President Donald Trump in the case involving documents with classified markings discovered at this Florida resort of Mar-a-Lago, according to court papers filed in federal court Thursday evening.

A superseding indictment unsealed by the Justice Department lists multiple new counts against Trump, including: altering, destroying, mutilating, or concealing an object; and corruptly altering, destroying, mutilating or concealing a document, record or other object; and an additional charge of willful retention of national defense information.

Trump was previously charged with 37 felony counts, including 31 counts of willful retention of classified documents and one count of conspiracy to obstruct justice. He has pleaded not guilty and claimed the prosecution is a politically motivated “witch hunt” against him. Speaking Thursday with Breitbart, Trump called the charges “harassment” and “election interference.”

Walt Nauta, the former president’s aide, was also charged in the case and pleaded not guilty.

The new document names a third defendant in the case: Carlos De Oliveira, a Mar-a-Lago property manager and former valet. He faces one count of altering, destroying, mutilating, or concealing an object; one count of corruptly altering, destroying, mutilating or concealing a document, record or other object; and one count of making false statements and representations during a voluntary interview with federal investigators.

He has been ordered to appear in federal court in Miami on Monday morning. An attorney for De Oliveira declined to comment, as did a lawyer for Nauta.

Steve Cheung, spokesman for the Trump campaign, claimed the new counts are part of an effort to damage Trump as he seeks the Republican presidential nomination and “nothing more than a continued desperate and flailing attempt by the Biden Crime Family and their Department of Justice to harass President Trump and those around him.”

The 32nd count of willful retention of national defense information in the superseding indictment stems from a document Trump showed to four people during a July, 21, 2021, meeting at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, according to the new filing. The indictment alleges that the document, which Trump had until mid-Jan. 2022, was marked TOP SECRET/NOFORN, and is described in the indictment as a “presentation concerning military activity in a foreign country.”

The superseding indictment notes that Trump was participating in a recorded interview with a writer and a publisher, and two of his aides were also present. The former president told the group he had a “plan of attack” from a senior military official. Trump characterized the document as “highly confidential” and “secret information” and noted that “as president I could have declassified it. … Now I can’t, you know, but this is still a secret.” The indictment also points out that neither the aides nor the writer or publisher had a security clearance.

The document, which CBS News reported was a Defense Department memo on Iran, was not part of the original 31 counts of retention of national defense information charged in Smith’s initial indictment. 

What are the allegations against Carlos De Oliveira?

The superseding indictment names De Oliveira as one of the aides who helped move boxes for Trump, and federal prosecutors allege that he, along with Trump and Nauta, instructed an unnamed employee to delete Mar-a-Lago security camera footage to prevent it from being turned over to a federal grand jury. 

According to the filing, the Justice Department emailed the attorney for Trump’s business with the final grand jury subpoena, requiring the production of surveillance records, videos and images, on June 24, 2022. The next day, on June 25, Nauta and De Oliveira went to the security guard booth where surveillance video is displayed, and pointed out surveillance cameras, the indictment alleges.

On June 27, 2022, the indictment says, De Oliveira took another Trump employee to a small room known as an “audio closet,” and asked the employee how many days the server retained security footage. The employee said he believed it was about 45 days. 

“De Oliveira told Trump Employee 4 that ‘the boss’ wanted the server deleted,” the indictment states. “Trump Employee 4 responded that he would not know how to do that, and that he did not believe that he would have the rights to do that. … De Oliveira then insisted to Trump Employee 4 that ‘the boss’ wanted the server deleted and asked, ‘What are we going to do?'”

Federal investigators spoke with De Oliveira at his house on Jan. 13 and asked him about the location and movement of the boxes stored at Mar-a-Lago, prosecutors said in the filing. De Oliveira told the FBI at the time that he was not part of a group that helped unload and move boxes at the end of Trump’s presidency, the indictment states. In response to a question about whether he was aware that boxes were being moved, he replied that he “never saw anything,” according to the Justice Department.

According to the indictment, De Oliveira also told the FBI during the voluntary interview that he didn’t know where items would’ve been stored when Trump returned to Mar-a-Lago.

His statements “were false, as De Oliveira knew, because De Oliveira had personally observed and helped move Trump’s boxes when they arrived at” Mar-a-Lago in January 2021, according to the filing.

The charges against Trump related to his handling of sensitive government records are the first brought by the Justice Department against a former president. The judge overseeing the case, Judge Aileen Cannon, has set a trial date of May 2024, to take place at the courthouse in Fort Pierce, Florida.

The new charges come as the former president and his attorneys are waiting for the possibility of a separate indictment stemming from Smith’s investigation into attempts to alter the 2020 presidential election and interfere with the peaceful transfer of power. Trump’s attorneys met with federal prosecutors at the special counsel’s office Thursday in Washington, D.C. He has also denied wrongdoing in this case.



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