Detroit Free Press

DeSantis super PAC moves to organize Iowa support

- Thomas Beaumont

SIOUX CENTER, Iowa – LaTomah Hauff stopped at the red-draped table on her way into Dean’s Classic Car Museum to jot her contact informatio­n on a sign-up sheet to hear more about Ron DeSantis.

The 75-year-old retired speech pathologis­t had driven an hour to hear the Florida governor speak in northwest Iowa on May 13. She was one of more than 600 Iowa Republican­s who filed into the exhibit hall and past the display’s brochures about DeSantis and cards to sign pledging support for him in next year’s Republican presidenti­al caucuses.

The display, with all the earmarks of a presidenti­al campaign, was the work of Never Back Down, a super political action committee promoting DeSantis while he moves toward a 2024 bid.

It was also an early glimpse of how this group – able to receive unlimited sums from wealthy donors, unlike a presidenti­al campaign – plans to build a network of supporters necessary to compete in the caucuses.

Essentiall­y, it’s a caucus campaign that, for legal reasons, cannot attach itself explicitly to a candidate.

The novel approach, aimed at maximizing super PAC dollars, underscore­s the stakes in Iowa for DeSantis. He needs to show early that he is a viable threat to former President Donald Trump, whose team says it has already signed up thousands of Iowa volunteers and supporters before DeSantis has even declared his candidacy.

The effort comes with thorny challenges. The super PAC must essentiall­y build a separate grassroots network to finagle commitment­s from Iowans to support DeSantis without coordinati­ng with him.

“The biggest difficulty is the tightrope they are going to have to walk,” said Marlys Popma, a veteran Iowa Republican campaign organizer and former top adviser to John McCain’s 2008 presidenti­al campaign. “Walking that line is going to be the most interestin­g thing, but I certainly see that it can be done and I

think it’s a really interestin­g approach.”

About 240 miles southeast of the fundraiser DeSantis headlined in Republican-heavy Sioux County, the real work of Never Back Down was well under way.

In an office in Des Moines’ western suburbs, Republican operatives had by mid-May conducted three five-day training sessions for classes of paid organizers, with three more scheduled for June. By early May, the group had hired more than a half-dozen seasoned political strategist­s and recruited volunteers from veteran statewide organizers, including former senior aides to Gov. Kim Reynolds and former Gov. Terry Branstad.

The goal is to secure commitment­s to back DeSantis at the caucuses, which are expected to lead off the 2024 Republican voting season, in all of the 1,670 precincts where the party plans to hold them next year.

“When you talk about caucus organizing, there are a lot of layers. But our particular layer is trying to build a ground game, build a volunteer network,” super PAC senior adviser David Polyansky said.

He said similar plans were in place in South Carolina and other early states.

 ?? THOMAS BEAUMONT/AP ?? Signs promoting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2024, financed by the super PAC backing DeSantis, line a street in Sioux Center, Iowa, on May 13.
THOMAS BEAUMONT/AP Signs promoting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2024, financed by the super PAC backing DeSantis, line a street in Sioux Center, Iowa, on May 13.

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