Good morning and welcome to Thursday.
WAUKEE, Iowa — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is in the middle of a frenzied sprint across the battleground state of Iowa, with just days left before the contest that could make-or-break his presidential campaign. And he keeps having to answer discomforting questions about how he’s talking about the other Florida GOP candidate in the race: former President Donald Trump. It happened during a televised town hall that aired on multiple affiliate stations Tuesday night when an audience member pushed DeSantis over whether he has been forceful enough in his criticisms of Trump. “I take issue” with the question, DeSantis said. Then, during a Wednesday morning stop at a community center in the town of Waukee, a potential voter brought it up again. This time, 75-year-old Christopher Garcia bluntly said to the governor, “Can I be honest with you?” Garcia — noting that DeSantis was down in the polls — said that the Florida governor had not been going directly after Trump. When DeSantis asked what he meant, Garcia replied that “in my viewpoint you are going pretty soft on him.” DeSantis responded by pushing back, complaining that the media wants Republicans to “smear him personally …. That’s just not how I roll.” Garcia went on and talked about how Trump “had no class” and had angered women and veterans with comments, such as when he faulted the late Arizona Sen. John McCain. He suggested that DeSantis should use that against Trump. DeSantis agreed that Trump had “been his own worst enemy, there’s no question about that.” He also suggested that Trump did not do as well in Florida’s Panhandle, home to several Navy and Air Force bases, because of his remarks. The questions to DeSantis about Trump are, of course, nothing new and have haunted the campaign for more than a year. Even before DeSantis made his presidential ambitions public, Trump was already beginning to take shots at him. The governor and his team initially held their fire, but over the course of the last several months they have responded more forcefully. But as DeSantis has pointed out, his jabs at Trump have been over policy differences during the covid pandemic or arguments that he failed to carry out all the promises from his 2016 campaign, such as completing the construction of the southern border wall. Former New Jersey and Republican presidential candidate Gov. Chris Christie — who has called Trump “unfit” for office — has swiped at DeSantis and other Republicans for the way they have dealt with Trump. Ahead of a Florida campaign appearance last November, Christie told POLITICO that DeSantis and other GOP candidates were “too scared of Trump” and appeared to be acting in a way that would preserve their political future with Trump supporters. Polls have shown that Trump has a significant lead over his most serious rivals, DeSantis and former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley, but DeSantis on Wednesday contended that many of the polls are “garbage.” Supporters of the governor — as well as some on the ground — remain hopeful that DeSantis can win Iowa outright, or at least come out with a strong second-place showing due to extensive work done in Iowa. If the DeSantis scenario does in fact come true, however, it would seem the questions about Trump will only intensify and come in rapid succession. — Gary Fineout — WHERE'S RON? Gov. DeSantis will join Gary Sadlemyer on KFAB’s Morning News at 9:15 a.m. Then at 9 p.m. he’s participating in a CNN town hall with Kaitlan Collins. Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for Playbook? Get in touch at: kleonard@politico.com — POLITICO’s Gary Fineout is on the ground in Iowa this week. Follow along on X. |
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