The Daily Telegraph

Desantis’s staff laid off after defeat in Iowa

Super PAC cuts Florida governor’s manpower on the campaign trail after disappoint­ing results

- By Tony Diver and Benedict Smith

RON DESANTIS’S main campaign backer began laying off staff yesterday, amid fresh questions around the survival of his presidenti­al bid.

Never Back Down, the Super PAC backing the Florida governor in the Republican primaries, began laying off staff in some of the next states to vote for a Republican nominee.

Mr Desantis pledged to fight on after the Iowa caucuses on Monday, where he came second to Donald Trump but trailed the former president by a much larger margin than expected, with just 21 per cent of the vote.

After a short campaign stop in New Hampshire, which will vote next week, Mr Desantis planned to travel straight to South Carolina, effectivel­y skipping the Granite State, where he is thought to have just 4 per cent support.

Never Back Down began sacking employees in several states, including Nevada, while the majority of remaining staff were told to move to South Carolina, The New York Times reported.

George Andrews, a staffer in Iowa, said on Linkedin he had lost his job because of “budget cuts beyond my control”.

Mr Desantis’s disappoint­ing result in Iowa came after he spent months building a sophistica­ted ground campaign and pouring millions of dollars from the Super PAC into the state. Mr Trump won by a landslide, taking 98 of Iowa’s 99 counties and more than half of all votes cast.

On Monday night, Mr Desantis said he had “stamped his ticket” in the state and beaten Nikki Haley, who came third, but analysts said he had failed to capture the crucial constituen­cy of evangelica­l Christians required to seriously challenge Mr Trump.

One poll on Tuesday suggested that

Ms Haley is now neck-and-neck with Mr Trump in New Hampshire, with her campaign buoyed by independen­t voters, who are also eligible to vote in the state’s Republican primary.

She has said she will not participat­e in any more televised debates with Mr Desantis unless Mr Trump agrees to appear, prompting the cancellati­on of two planned events on CNN and ABC in New Hampshire before Tuesday’s vote.

“We’ve had five great debates in this campaign. Unfortunat­ely, Donald Trump has ducked all of them,” Ms Haley said. “He has nowhere left to hide. The next debate I do will either be with Donald Trump or with Joe Biden. I look forward to it.”

Mr Desantis claimed Ms Haley was more interested in self-advancemen­t than becoming the Republican presidenti­al candidate. “The reality is that she is not running for the nomination, she’s running to be Trump’s VP,” he wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

Although her supporters say Ms Haley now stands a serious chance of winning New Hampshire and her home state of South Carolina, it remains unclear how either her or Mr Desantis can erode Mr Trump’s commanding lead in the contest.

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