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Tag: republican primaries

  • In South Carolina, Nikki Haley’s Bill Comes Due

    In South Carolina, Nikki Haley’s Bill Comes Due

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    The afternoon before Donald Trump’s blowout win in South Carolina’s primary, Shellie Hargenrader and Julianne Poulnot emerged from a rally for the former president bubbling with righteous conviction.

    They had spent the previous hour listening to the candidate’s son Donald Trump Jr. regale supporters at the campaign’s headquarters in an office park outside Charleston. The crowd had been energized, frequently calling out in response to his words as if at a church service, while Trump Jr. lacerated President Joe Biden, the media, the multiple legal proceedings against his father, and the punishment of the January 6 insurrectionists. “Trump is my president,” one man shouted.

    Hargenrader and Poulnot were still feeling that spirit when they stopped on their way out from the rally to talk with me. When I asked them why they were supporting Trump over Nikki Haley, the state’s former governor, they started with conventional reasons. “Because he did a great job and he can do it again,” Hargenrader told me. Poulnot cut in to add: “He stands for the people and he tells the truth.”

    But within moments, the two women moved to a higher plane in their praise of Trump and condemnation of Haley. “I think the Lord has him in the chair,” Hargenrader told me. “He’s God’s man.” Poulnot jumped in again. “And the election was stolen from him,” she said. “You have to live on Mars to not realize that.” And Haley? “I think she’s an opportunist and … she sold her soul to the devil,” Poulnot told me.

    Such is the level of evangelical fervor for Trump within much of the GOP base that buried Haley in her home state on Saturday. Haley had said her goal in South Carolina was to match the 43 percent of the vote she received in last month’s New Hampshire primary, an exceedingly modest aspiration. But she appeared to fall short of even that low bar, as Trump routed her by a tally of about 60 percent to 40 percent, at the latest count.

    Trump’s victory in South Carolina placed him in a virtually impregnable position for the nomination. Since South Carolina established its primary near the front of the GOP calendar in 1980, the candidate who won here has captured the Republican nomination in every contested race except one. With his win tonight, Trump became the first GOP contender other than an incumbent president to sweep the big three early contests of Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina.

    Reinforcing the message from the key initial contests of Iowa and New Hampshire, the South Carolina result showed that Haley faces a ceiling on her support too low to beat Trump. For Haley to catch Trump now would require some massive external event, and even that might not be enough.

    But for all the evidence of Trump’s strength within the party, the South Carolina results again showed that a meaningful floor of GOP voters remains uneasy with returning him to leadership. “I like his policies, but I’d like to cut his thumbs off and tape his mouth shut,” Juanita Gwilt of Isle of Palms told me last night just outside Charleston, before Haley’s final rally leading up the primary. In Haley’s speech to her supporters, she insisted that she would remain in the race. “I’m an accountant. I know 40 percent is not 50 percent,” she said. “But I also know 40 percent is not some tiny group. There are huge numbers of voters in our Republican primaries who are saying they want an alternative.”

    As in Iowa and New Hampshire, Trump’s pattern of support in South Carolina simultaneously underscored his dominant position in the party while pointing to some potential vulnerabilities for the general election. In this deeply conservative state, Trump carried virtually every major demographic group. Trump beat Haley, for instance, by nearly as much among women as men and by nearly as much among suburban as rural voters, according to the exit polls conducted by Edison Research for a consortium of media organizations. The robust overall turnout testified again to Trump’s greatest political strength—his extraordinary ability to motivate his base voters.

    Still, some warning signs for him persisted: About one-third of all primary voters and even one-fourth of self-identified Republicans said they would not consider Trump fit for the presidency if he was convicted of a crime. More than four in five Haley voters said he would be unfit if convicted, about the same elevated share as in Iowa and New Hampshire. And as in the earlier states, Trump faced much more resistance among primary voters with a college degree than those without one, and among voters who did not identify as evangelical Christians than those who did. (The exit polls showed Haley narrowly carrying both groups.) As in both Iowa and New Hampshire, Trump won only about two in five independents in South Carolina, the exit polls found.

    The magnitude of Trump’s victory was especially striking given the mismatch in time and money the two candidates devoted to the state. Haley camped out in South Carolina for most of the month before the vote, barnstorming the state in a bus; Trump parachuted in for a few large rallies. Her campaign, and the super PACs supporting her, spent nearly $9.4 million in South Carolina advertising, about nine times as much as Trump and his supporters, according to data provided by AdImpact.

    In South Carolina, Haley also delivered a case against Trump that was far more cogent and cohesive than she offered earlier in the race. During the multiple nationally televised Republican debates through 2023, Haley barely raised a complaint about Trump. Through Iowa and New Hampshire—when she had the concentrated attention of the national media—she refused to go any further in criticizing Trump than declaring that “chaos follows him, rightly or wrongly.”

    But after allowing those opportunities to pass, she notably escalated her challenge to Trump over the past month in her South Carolina rallies and a succession of television appearances. This morning, after she voted near her home in Kiawah Island, reporters asked her about some racist comments Trump made last night at an event in Columbia. In her response, no trace remained of that passive voice. “That’s the chaos that comes with Donald Trump,” she said firmly, now clearly describing him as the source of the chaos rather than a bystander to its eruption. “That’s the offensiveness that is going to happen every day between now and the general election.”

    Yesterday, at a rally in Moncks Corner, a small town about an hour north of Charleston, Haley delivered a biting critique of Trump’s comments that he would encourage Russia to invade NATO countries that don’t meet the alliance’s guidelines for spending on their own defense. “Trump is siding with a thug where half a million people have died or been wounded because [Russian President Vladimir] Putin invaded Ukraine,” she said. “Trump is siding with a dictator who kills his political opponents. Trump is siding with a tyrant who arrests American journalists and holds them hostage.”

    A few minutes later, Haley lashed Trump for questioning why her husband, who is on a military deployment, has not appeared with her during the campaign. “Donald Trump’s never been near a uniform,” she said. “He’s never had to sleep on the ground. The closest he’s ever come to harm’s way is if a golf ball happens to hit him on the golf course.” Later, she criticized Trump for using tens of millions of dollars in campaign contributions to pay his own legal bills. And she insisted that he cannot win a general election.

    Haley remains careful to balance every criticism of Trump with an equal jab at Biden. But though she portrays both Biden and Trump as destabilizing forces, the core of her retooled message is a repudiation of Trump’s insistence that he will make America great again. No, she says, the challenge for the next president is to make America normal again. “Our kids want to know what normal feels like,” she insisted in Moncks Corner.

    Taken together, this is an argument quite distinct from the case against Trump from Biden, or his sharpest Republican critics, including former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and former Representative Liz Cheney. Haley doesn’t join them in framing Trump as a threat to democracy or an aspiring autocrat. The refusal to embrace that claim as well as the staunch conservatism of her own agenda and her repeated indications that she’ll likely support Trump if he wins the nomination probably explains why Haley failed to attract as many independent and Democratic voters as she needed to participate today. Those non-Republicans cast only about 30 percent of the total votes, according to the exit polls. That’s about the same share as in both the 2016 and 2012 South Carolina primaries, and far less than the nearly 40 percent share then-Senator John McCain turned out in his “maverick” 2000 presidential bid against George W. Bush. (And even with that, Bush beat him by consolidating a big majority of partisan Republican voters, as Trump did earlier today.)

    Instead, in South Carolina, Haley offered a case against Trump aimed more directly at wavering Republicans. She accused Trump of failing to display the personal characteristics that conservatives insist they value. It’s telling that at Haley’s rallies yesterday, she drew almost no applause when she criticized Trump on policy grounds for enlarging the federal deficit or supporting sweeping tariffs. But she inspired cries of disdain from her audience when she disparaged Trump, in so many words, as a grifter, a liar, and a self-absorbed narcissist more focused on his own grudges than on his voters’ needs. “Poor guy,” one man yelled out last night after Haley complained about Trump constantly portraying himself as a victim.

    Would it have made any difference if Haley had pressed these assertions earlier in the race, when she had the large national audience of the debates, and Trump had not progressed so far toward the nomination? Several GOP strategists and operatives this week told me that attacking Trump while the field was still crowded would only have hurt Haley and benefited the other contenders who stayed out of the fray. Even now, in a one-on-one race, directly confronting Trump is rapidly raising Haley’s negative rating among GOP voters. Whit Ayres, a veteran GOP pollster, told me as the results came in Saturday night that GOP voters who voted for Trump twice might take it as a personal insult about their own prior decisions if Haley echoed Christie and Cheney in portraying the former president as “unfit for office and a threat to democracy.”

    Hargenrader and Poulnot underscored Ayres’s point yesterday: They speak for millions of Republican voters who see Trump in quasi-religious terms as uniquely fighting for them, and the legal challenges ensnaring him only as evidence of the burdens he’s bearing on their behalf. “I don’t think people appreciate sufficiently the fine line Nikki Haley has to walk with this coalition,” Ayres told me.

    After months of vacillation and caution, Haley is now making a forceful case against Trump, and displaying great political courage in doing so: She is standing virtually alone while most of the GOP establishment (including virtually all of the political leadership in South Carolina) aligns behind him. Ayres believes that Haley is speaking for a large enough minority of the party to justify continuing in the race for as long as she wants—even if there’s virtually no chance anymore that she can expand her coalition enough to truly threaten Trump. “Nikki Haley represents a perspective, an outlook on the world, and a set of values that are still held by what remains of the Reagan-Bush coalition in the Republican Party,” Ayres told me.

    But the bill for treating Trump so gingerly for so many months has now come due for Haley in South Carolina. Haley waited until the concrete in this race had almost hardened before giving Republican voters a real reason to think twice about nominating Trump again. Perhaps the circle of GOP voters open to an alternative was never large enough to support a serious challenge to the former president. What’s clear after his decisive victory in South Carolina is that neither Haley nor anyone else in the GOP tried hard enough to test that proposition until it was too late.

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    Ronald Brownstein

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  • Trump Is Dropped From Maine Primary for “Insurrection” But Remains on California Ballot

    Trump Is Dropped From Maine Primary for “Insurrection” But Remains on California Ballot

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    Maine became the second state to bar Donald Trump from its primary election ballot on Thursday after the state’s secretary ruled that the former president’s attempt on January 6, 2021 to overturn the legitimate 2020 election made him ineligible to hold office.

    Just hours later,  California — which has 54 electoral votes, and where election officials have limited power to remove candidates — signaled that the GOP frontrunner would remain on the ballot, bucking pressure from several top Democrats in the state (though the state’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, had opposed removing him.)

    In her ruling, Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, who is a Democrat, acknowledged that a president had never been barred from an election based on the insurrection clause of the 14th amendment, which prohibits anyone from holding the office who “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” against the government. But, she wrote, “no presidential candidate has ever before engaged in insurrection.”

    Bellows wrote that the January 6 attack was “violent enough, potent enough, and long enough to constitute an insurrection.” Trump, she added, “used a false narrative of election fraud to inflame his supporters and direct them to the Capitol to prevent certification of the 2020 election and the peaceful transfer of power.” 

    Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung said Thursday night that both rulings were “partisan election interference efforts” and amounted to “a hostile assault on American democracy.” Cheung attacked Bellows in particular as a “former ACLU attorney, a virulent leftist and a hyper-partisan Biden-supporting Democrat,” and said that the Trump campaign would appeal the ruling.

    The two decisions contribute to what has become a growing checkerboard of divergent opinions regarding whether the insurrection clause permits Trump to remain on both primary and general election ballots in 2024. Colorado’s supreme court ruled last week that Trump had engaged in insurrection and would be removed from the primary ballot, while secretaries of state in Michigan and Minnesota have, like their counterparts in California, decided to keep Trump on the ballot.

    In total, lawsuits seeking to keep Trump from running have been filed in 30 states, though only 14 are currently active, according to the legal website Lawfare. The next state likely to rule on the question is Oregon. The swing states of Nevada and Wisconsin are two of the states with pending suits. Ultimately, the question is likely to be taken up by the Supreme Court, as the decisions have created pressure for the highest court, which is dominated by conservatives, to create a general standard and avoid a situation in which Trump only appears on some states’ ballots.

    In his comments last week opposing removing Trump from the ballot, Newsom admitted that “there is no doubt that Donald Trump is a threat to our liberties and even to our democracy,” adding, “But in California, we defeat candidates we don’t like at the polls. Everything else is a political distraction.”

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    Jack McCordick

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  • The DeSantis Campaign Is Already Lowering Iowa Expectations: “A Strong Second-Place Showing”

    The DeSantis Campaign Is Already Lowering Iowa Expectations: “A Strong Second-Place Showing”

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    A floundering Ron DeSantis campaign is managing expectations for the Iowa caucuses set for January 2024. As polls continue to show former president Donald Trump as the first choice for most GOP primary voters in the Hawkeye State, a top DeSantis campaign official told Politico that the campaign is hoping for a “strong second-place finish.”

    “Our goal is to get this down to a two-person race on the ballot, especially as we head into South Carolina and beyond into March,” the official, who was granted anonymity to discuss the campaign’s strategy, said. “A strong second-place showing gives us an opportunity to go in[to] New Hampshire and show success.”

    The comments come as the Florida governor is more than halfway through a tour of Iowa’s 99 counties. The itinerary has come to be known as the “full Grassley,” named for one of the state’s two senators, who has visited each of Iowa’s counties every year for four decades. DeSantis has reportedly recruited organizing chairs in every county. Trump, meanwhile, has visited the state a grand total of six times. Both candidates are in Des Moines for Saturday’s Iowa-Iowa State college football game.

    The DeSantis official’s expectation-setting lowers the bar from just a few weeks ago, when the head of DeSantis’s mammoth super PAC, Never Back Down, was predicting a big win in the first GOP primary. “Iowa is a real state for us because of its education — it’s a highly educated state — because of income, because of Bible reading,” Never Back Down lead strategist Jeff Roe told a gathering of donors before the August 23 GOP debate in Milwaukee. “[Donald Trump is] going to lose the first two states. We’re going to beat him in Iowa.” A post-debate poll of Iowa caucus-goers found a slight increase in DeSantis’s favorability, but still showed him 20 points behind the former president.

    As the campaign continues to fail to close the gap, Roe and the official DeSantis campaign are playing the blame game, Vanity Fair’s Gabriel Sherman reported Friday. “Ron is telling everyone that the biggest mistake he ever made was hiring Jeff Roe,” a prominent Republican close to the campaign told Sherman.

    But Never Back Down is still blanketing Iowa, and is hosting DeSantis this weekend on a bus tour through the state. The PAC, which has set up five offices that employ 20 people in the state, is also sponsoring an air-wave blitz and door-knocking operation.

    DeSantis’s deputy campaign manager, David Polyansky, told Politico that the amount of DeSantis facetime Iowa voters will have gotten by January will pay dividends. “On caucus night, every Republican caucus goer will have had the chance to meet the governor and probably the first lady at least once, and that’s a big advantage,” he said.

    The campaign also hopes that Trump’s relative lack of presence in the state and his multi-tentacled state and federal legal issues will help close the gap by January. “I think that former President Trump is not coming and mobilizing the people who support him,” Iowa state Senate President Amy Sinclair, a DeSantis supporter, told NBC News on Friday. “Will they even show up to a caucus? I think he’s making a bad choice.”

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Ron DeSantis Super PAC Admits They’re Scared of Vivek Ramaswamy, Leaked Recording Reveals

    Ron DeSantis Super PAC Admits They’re Scared of Vivek Ramaswamy, Leaked Recording Reveals

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    The head of Ron DeSantis’s mammoth super PAC privately admitted to spreading opposition stories on upstart candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, whose recent rise in the polls is threatening the Florida Governor’s increasingly tenuous hold on (a very distant) second place in the GOP primary race.

    “Everything you read about him is from us,” Jeff Roe, who runs the pro-DeSantis Never Back Down political action committee, told a gathering of donors just before the first GOP primary debate in Milwaukee on August 23. “Every misstatement, every 360 he’s conducting or 180 that he is going through in life, is from our scrutiny and pressure. And so, he’s not going to go through that very well, and that will get worse for him.”

    A recording of the comments, parts of which had previously been reported by CNN and The New York Times, was obtained by Politico and reported on Sunday.

    The official DeSantis campaign has struggled to fundraise from small-dollar donors, and much of the day-to-day campaign activity has been overtaken by Never Back Down, even as super PACs are barred from explicitly coordinating with any campaign.

    Roe will be launching a $50 million fundraising push following Labor Day, and told donors he hoped to raise the bulk of it before the second GOP debate on September 27, the Times previously reported.

    “​​Now the good news is that we have all the money we need in this room,” Roe told the donors gathered in Milwaukee. “The bad news is it’s still in your wallet.”

    “We’ve just been playing without pads, practicing without pads,” he said in the part of the recording reported by Politico Sunday.

    The Ramaswamy campaign responded to the report Sunday morning. “When DeSantis’s Super Pac campaign, Chris Christie, the New York Times, MSNBC and the rest of the bipartisan establishment are all going after you at the same time, you know you’re right over the target,” Ramaswamy spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told Politico. “America watched Vivek dominate the debate stage, it’s no wonder Never Back Down is pissing away another $20+ million after Labor Day.”

    The campaign is laser-focused on the early primary states, added Roe. “Iowa is a real state for us because of its education — it’s a highly educated state — because of income, because of bible reading,” he said. “New Hampshire is a terrible state for Donald Trump. But he’s going to lose the first two states. We’re going to beat him in Iowa.”

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Ron DeSantis Says He’d Consider Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds as Running Mate

    Ron DeSantis Says He’d Consider Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds as Running Mate

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    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said he’d consider Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds as a potential running mate at an event during his two-day tour through the state. “Of course,” he said on Saturday when asked about the prospect of running with Reynolds, who is extremely popular in her state and boasts a 90 percent approval rating among Republicans. “I mean, she’s one of the top public servants in America.”

    The statement is just the latest example of a growing coziness between the two governors, as DeSantis hopes to mount a strong challenge to current Republican frontrunner Donald Trump chief rival in the Iowa caucus in January and revive his flagging campaign. The campaign recently hired a former Iowa state senator as a “senior adviser on all things Iowa,” Axios reported, and has embarked on a blitz of events in the state.

    As part of his Iowa-focused strategy, DeSantis is hoping to exploit an emerging rift between Trump and Reynolds, which came to a head after a New York Times report detailed the Iowa governor’s attempts at “softening the ground in Iowa for Mr. DeSantis.” To date, Reynolds has followed Iowa tradition and held off endorsing any Republican presidential candidate, but she has appeared on numerous occasions with DeSantis and frequently praised his leadership.

    “I opened up the Governor position for Kim Reynolds,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post on Monday, referring to his appointment of Reynold’s predecessor to his administration, which allowed Reynolds to run. “& when she fell behind, I ENDORSED her, did big Rallies, & she won.” Trump added that he would not invite Reynolds to his campaign events. Following the post, DeSantis wrote on Twitter that Reynolds is “a strong leader who knows how to ignore the chirping and get it done.”

    That same day, the Trump campaign said it would skip the Family Leader summit in Des Moines, hosted by a conservative evangelical group. DeSantis called the move “a snub of Iowa conservatives.”

    In response to Trump’s attacks on Reynolds, one Iowa state senator who had previously pledged his support to Trump flipped to DeSantis, Politico reported.

    Reynolds has previously told The Des Moines Register that she was not interested in being included on any presidential tickets. “I love what we’re doing here in Iowa, and hopefully, I continue to make it pretty clear we’re not done,” she said in February. “So I’m going to continue to ask and encourage candidates to come to Iowa, highlight what we’re doing here in the state and look for ways that we can continue to keep our national profile rising.”

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    Jack McCordick

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  • DeSantis In Disarray As Campaign Sheds Staff, Focuses on Iowa

    DeSantis In Disarray As Campaign Sheds Staff, Focuses on Iowa

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    Ron DeSantis’s presidential campaign is shedding staff as it redirects its focus to the Iowa caucus in January. Fewer than ten staffers—around 10% of the campaign’s on-the-books staff— were let go on Thursday, Politico reported Saturday and even more staffers are expected to be cut in the cost-cutting shakeup in the coming weeks, according to NBC.

    Despite clocking over $20 million in second-quarter donations, the Florida governor’s expensive bid for the White House has fallen short of fundraising expectations.

    The move is part of a broader campaign strategy as DeSantis will reportedly begin giving interviews to traditional media outlets, which he has largely spurned in the first few months of his campaign. On Sunday, CNN announced that DeSantis will sit down with Jake Tapper for an interview on Tuesday.

    DeSantis spokesperson Andrew Romeo sounded upbeat about the state of the campaign. “Americans are rallying behind Ron DeSantis and his plan to reverse Joe Biden’s failures and restore sanity to our nation, and his momentum will only continue as voters see more of him in person, especially in Iowa,” he said in a statement on Saturday. “Defeating Joe Biden and the $72 million behind him will require a nimble and candidate-driven campaign, and we are building a movement to go the distance.”

    The campaign is reportedly focused on going all-in for the first GOP primary in Iowa in mid-January. That strategy was on display this weekend as DeSantis skipped a major gathering of conservative activists in his home state to campaign in Iowa. The conference, hosted by Turning Point USA, was headlined by former president Donald Trump, who spoke Saturday night. “Donald Trump gave us an opening in Iowa this week, and we’re taking it,” DeSantis spokesperson Andrew Romeo told Politico. The Iowa trip included a stop at Dairy Queen, a dig toward DeSantis’s chief rival, who flubbed an event at the fast food chain a week prior.

    Trump spent his prime-time address Saturday night bashing DeSantis, who he said has no path to victory and should withdraw from the race. “He was never that close, by the way,” Trump, who leads the Florida Governor by 30 points, told the crowd of 6,000 conservatives assembled in West Palm Beach.

    The former president and Republican frontrunner criticized DeSantis for skipping the event, which included about a third of the Republican presidential field. “I don’t know why he’s not here,” he said. “He should be here representing himself.”

    “Governor DeSantis spent the day with Iowans and spoke to a packed house at the Tennessee G.O.P. Statesman Dinner later that night,” Brian Griffin, DeSantis’s press secretary, said in a statement on Saturday. “This was a day after he delivered the strongest interview at the Family Leadership Summit, which Donald Trump notably skipped. Ron DeSantis is campaigning to win.”

    DeSantis had previously worked closely with Turning Point USA, but may have decided to skip the event after Trump was named the headliner on the same day DeSantis announced his campaign.

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Trump’s Support Among Republicans Increased After Criminal Indictments: Poll

    Trump’s Support Among Republicans Increased After Criminal Indictments: Poll

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    It happened first after the August 2022 Mar-a-Lago FBI raid, and second after his 34-count hush-money indictment in New York in April. And now we know that it happened yet again after his 37-count federal indictment in early June on criminal charges of mishandling classified documents: Donald Trump’s poll numbers got a bump.

    At least that’s according to a new NBC poll of 1,000 registered voters released Sunday. 51% of the poll’s respondents said they’d vote for Trump in a Republican primary ballot—a five point increase from April. Trump had bragged as much at a Georgia GOP convention speech directly following the indictment: “I mean, the only good thing about it is, it’s driven my poll numbers way up,” he said. Though that assessment was premature, it was arguably spot on.

    Trump now leads Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, currently his chief Republican rival, by 29 points, a near doubling of his lead in NBC’s April poll. DeSantis’s worsening numbers are one of the poll’s other major findings: 46% of all voters rated the Florida governor either “somewhat” (9%) or “very” (37%) negative, an increase of twenty points over the last year. In a head-to-head primary matchup, Trump would beat DeSantis by 24 points, according to the poll.

    No other Republican primary candidate broke into double digits. Former vice president Mike Pence came in third with 7%, and former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, who has made Trump-bashing the centerpiece of his campaign, rounded out the top four with just 5%.

    Asked specifically whether Trump’s federal indictment gave them any concerns, a whopping 77% of Republican primary voters said it gave them either minor concerns (14%) or no concerns at all (63%). Compare that with more than half of all registered voters who said the indictment gave them concerns.

    The poll did reveal a near 50-50 split among Republicans on the question of whether Trump should remain the party’s standard-bearer. 21% of primary voters, a majority of whom selected DeSantis as their first choice, agreed that Trump “was a good president, but it is time to consider other leaders.” An additional 29% agreed that the GOP needs a “new leader with better personal behavior and a different approach.” That latter group’s support was spread across DeSantis, Pence, Christie, and other worse-polling candidates. Still, Republican pollster Bill McInturff, who helped conduct the survey, told NBC News that Trump posting 49% in response to this question “is a strong starting number” in a crowded primary field.

    The poll was also the first in the 2024 presidential cycle to directly pit President Joe Biden against Republican rivals. In a hypothetical Trump-Biden rematch, the current president won by four points, which was within the poll’s margin of error. A hypothetical Biden-DeSantis contest showed the two in a dead heat.

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Trump Lashes Out in First Speeches Following Federal Indictment

    Trump Lashes Out in First Speeches Following Federal Indictment

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    Following a damning 37-count federal indictment related to alleged illegal possession of classified documents, former President Donald Trump didn’t pull any punches on the campaign trail on Saturday. Speaking in front of two Republican state conventions in Columbus, Georgia and Greensboro, North Carolina, Trump called the indictment “ridiculous and baseless” and “among the most horrific abuses of power in the history of our country.” 

    “They’ve launched one witch hunt after another to try and stop our movement, to thwart the will of the American people,” Trump said in Georgia. “In the end, they’re not coming after me. They’re coming after you.”

    Addressing a raucous crowd of loyal supporters in a Columbus building that once manufactured weapons for the Confederate Army during the Civil War, Trump called for the elimination of his political enemies: “Either the Communists win and destroy America, or we destroy the Communists,” he said, seemingly referring to the Democratic Party.

    Trump also lashed out by name at the federal and state officials at the center of his legal woes. He called Jack Smith, the special counsel leading his federal prosecution, “deranged” and “openly a Trump hater,” and referred to Georgia Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis as “a lunatic Marxist.” The latter is likely to hand down a possible indictment related to Trump’s election meddling schemes sometime later this summer

    Despite—or rather because of—his legal issues, Trump remains the frontrunner for the GOP nomination. Trump’s poll numbers received a bump after his indictment in New York in March for hush money payments to Stormy Daniels. On Saturday, he bragged that his latest charges had further increased his support: “I mean, the only good thing about it is it’s driven my poll numbers way up,” he said in Columbus. 

    In an interview with Politico between the Georgia and North Carolina events, Trump vowed to “never leave” the presidential race, even if convicted in federal court. 

    Both Saturday speeches hammered the themes of persecution and vengeance the former president has placed at the center of his reelection efforts. “When they go after me, they go after you,” he said at the Waco, Texas rally that kicked off his campaign back in March. At that event, Trump called the 2024 election “the final battle,” a line he repeated on Saturday in Georgia.

    The martial language that has become a ubiquitous presence on the Trump campaign trail has only heightened over the past week. The New York Times reported Saturday that in the wake of the indictment, many of Trump’s close allies have cast it “as an act of war, called for retribution and highlighted the fact that much of his base carries weapons.” 

    Trump’s first appearance in federal court is scheduled for this Tuesday. 

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    Jack McCordick

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