Los Angeles Times

Trump nowhere to be seen as Iowa GOP caucus takes shape

Ex-president is absent as potential rivals stream in, but he has begun building a staff.

- By Thomas Beaumont Beaumont writes for the Associated Press.

DES MOINES — Nikki Haley is swinging through Iowa this week, fresh off announcing her presidenti­al campaign. Her fellow South Carolina Republican, Sen. Tim Scott, will also be here as he maps out his political future. And former Vice President Mike Pence was just in the state courting influentia­l evangelica­l Christian activists.

After a slow start, Republican presidenti­al prospects are streaming into the leadoff caucus state. Notably absent from the lineup, at least for now, is former President Trump.

Few of the White House hopefuls face the lofty expectatio­ns in Iowa that Trump does. In the 2016 caucus, he finished a competitiv­e second to Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, a devout social conservati­ve, then went on to carry the state by healthy margins in the 2016 and 2020 presidenti­al elections.

“It is genuinely impossible for this guy to try to manage these expectatio­ns,” said Luke Martz, a Republican strategist who helped lead Mitt Romney’s 2012 Iowa caucus campaign. “They are enormous. They are self-made. I don’t see how anyone who is saying ‘I’m the guy’ can come in and even get even a second-place finish.”

Yet in the three months since he announced his bid for a third nomination, Trump has not set foot in Iowa, the first place his claim of party dominance will be tested early next year.

To be sure, Trump is making moves in Iowa. On Monday, his team announced that it had named a state campaign director, Marshall Moreau, who managed the 2022 campaign of Republican attorney general candidate Brenna Bird. She defeated Democrat Tom Miller, who had been the country’s longest-serving attorney general, first elected in 1978.

Trump has maintained an Iowa political presence, with a national campaign team member, Alex Latcham, based in the state. But Trump held a kickoff rally Jan. 28 in South Carolina, where his 2016 primary victory secured his status as GOP front-runner. And he squeezed in a speaking spot earlier that day at the annual state GOP meeting in New Hampshire, where he won the first-in-the-nation primary seven years ago.

Though nearly a year off, the caucuses remain the first event on the GOP calendar, and some Iowa Republican­s have taken notice of Trump’s absence.

“I found that quite interestin­g,” Gloria Mazza, chairwoman of the Polk County GOP, said of Trump’s New Hampshire and South Carolina stops. “Because Iowa is first in the nation. Doesn’t everybody come here first?”

Meanwhile, others are making inroads. Though Pence is not yet a candidate, his group Advancing American Values last week launched a campaign to organize opposition to school policies like one in an eastern Iowa district that has become a flashpoint among conservati­ves.

Pence was in Cedar Rapids on Wednesday rallying opponents of a policy by the nearby Linn-Mar Community School District that allows transgende­r students to request a support plan to begin socially transition­ing at school without the permission of their parents.

The issue, the subject of a federal lawsuit and an early focus of 2024 Republican presidenti­al prospects, is particular­ly contentiou­s among Christian conservati­ves, with whom Pence routinely says he identifies. At Wednesday’s event at a pizza restaurant — it had the feel of an early caucus campaign stop — Pence illustrate­d its traction.

“We don’t co-parent with government,” Pence told a cheering audience of more than 100. “We trust parents to protect their children, and no one will ever protect America’s children better than their moms and dads.”

Haley had rallies planned in the Des Moines and Cedar Rapids areas on Monday and Tuesday. Meanwhile, Scott is speaking Wednesday at Drake University, as part of what aides call a national “listening tour” aimed at informing his plans, before addressing the annual Polk County Republican fundraiser that evening in suburban Des Moines.

Quietly testing the waters is former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, who visited Iowa in January and last week met with legislativ­e Republican­s in the Capitol in Des Moines and GOP activists in western Iowa.

Though several would-be candidates, including Trump, were in Iowa last year campaignin­g for midterm candidates, these first impression­s at the outset of the GOP presidenti­al primary are important. That’s especially true as many in the party wait to see whether Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis proceeds with a White House bid.

But as the field of candidates grows in the coming months, Trump retains a core of Republican support that could be hard to overcome.

In October, 57% of Iowa Republican­s said they hoped Trump would run in 2024, according to a Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll, while 33% said they hoped he would not, and 10% said they were not sure.

“Of course, there’s a contingent that will support him regardless,” Iowa Republican National Committee member Steve Scheffler said. “But there’s an increasing number of people who want to kick the tires before making a decision. That’s what gives others an open door.”

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? FORMER President Trump faces lofty expectatio­ns in Iowa, where his claim of party dominance will first be tested, yet hasn’t visited since announcing 2024 bid.
Evan Vucci Associated Press FORMER President Trump faces lofty expectatio­ns in Iowa, where his claim of party dominance will first be tested, yet hasn’t visited since announcing 2024 bid.

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