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The Florida governor has struggled to break into Trumpâs lead and his campaign has been burning through money.
Ron DeSantisâ presidential campaign has fired roughly a dozen staffers â and more are expected in the coming weeks as he shakes up his big-money political operations after less than two months on the campaign trail.
Those who were let go were described to NBC News by a source familiar as mid-level staffers across several departments whose departures were related to cutting costs. The exits come after the departures of David Abrams and Tucker Obenshain, veterans of DeSantisâ political orbit, which were first reported by Politico.
Sources involved with the DeSantis campaign say there is an internal assessment among some that they hired too many staffers too early, and despite bringing in $20 million during its first six weeks, it was becoming clear their costs needed to be brought down.
Some in DeSantisâ political orbit are laying the early blame at the feet of campaign manager Generra Peck, who also led DeSantisâ 2022 midterm reelection bid and is in the hot seat right now.
âShe should be,â one DeSantis donor said.
âThey never should have brought so many people on, the burn rate was way too high,â said one Republican source familiar with the campaignâs thought process. âPeople warned the campaign manager but she wanted to hear none of it.â
âDeSantis stock isnât rising,â the donor added. âTwenty percent is not what people signed up for.â
The person noted that DeSantis has a penchant for switching out staff, which means that he has no core team that has worked together before. DeSantis had three different campaign teams for each of his three runs for Congress, and notably had a huge campaign shakeup during his first run for governor in 2018.
âAmericans are rallying behind Ron DeSantis and his plan to reverse Joe Bidenâs failures and restore sanity to our nation, and his momentum will only continue as voters see more of him in-person, especially in Iowa. 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,â DeSantis campaign spokesman Andrew Romeo told NBC News.
DeSantisâ campaign had 92 people listed as being on the payroll for at least some period of time during its first fundraising period, according to campaign finance reports filed Saturday with the Federal Election Commission. It is by far the most of any Republican presidential candidate, and it has left his campaign with huge payroll expenses and, the new filings show, fewer resources than originally thought.
DeSantis has $12 million in the bank, but of that $3 million can be used only during the general election. And about $14 million of his second quarter haul came from donors who gave the maximum legal amount. In other words, roughly two-thirds of his early donors will not be able to give directly to his campaign for the duration of the race.
Never Back Down, the pro-DeSantis super PAC, has said it will spend up to $200 million to boost the governorâs White House bid and has a significantly larger staff than the official campaign.
The moment of potential reset comes ahead of a national finance committee meeting for DeSantisâ campaign Sunday in Tallahassee, which will bring the campaignâs brain trust together as they try to figure out how to chip into Trumpâs massive GOP primary lead.
The event will include a briefing at the campaignâs Tallahassee headquarters followed by a barbecue at the governorâs mansion, according to an invite reviewed by NBC News.
DeSantis has been unable to make up ground against Trump after nearly two months as an official candidate. That stagnation is starting to frustrate some supporters, who want a shakeup of the campaign, which is led day-to-day by Peck and Ryan Tyson, a longtime Republican Florida pollster.
âYeah, there are people grumbling about it, no doubt,â one DeSantis donor said. âThere is an overall sense, including with me, that he just has not ignited the way we thought he would.â
The person said that they think DeSantisâ inner circle underestimated just how hard â and expensive â it would be to break the grip on the Republican base held by Trump, who has a commanding lead and is seen as the overwhelming frontrunner. Even in Florida, a state that re-elected DeSantis by nearly 20 percentage-points just seven months ago, Trump now has his own 20-point lead on DeSantis, according to a Florida Atlantic University poll released last week.
The shake-up could include the reemergence of Phil Cox, the veteran Republican operative who helped run DeSantisâ 2022 re-election campaign and served as an adviser to Never Back Down before stepping away from that role in late May.
Cox is in Tallahassee for the national finance meeting, but he does not have a formal role with the campaign, a source familiar told NBC News.
DeSantis has signaled that he is aware his campaign did not start the way he wanted, but her has largely blamed media coverage and other outside factors.
To try and re-center, his campaign is doubling down on the early states, especially Iowa, whose first-in-the-nation nominating contest is now seen as a crucial marker. If DeSantis wins, the field will get smaller and he will get closer to the one-on-one matchup with Trump that he wants. But losing the key state would likely cement Trumpâs status as the unbeatable frontrunner even further.
That assessment was outlined in a confidential internal memo NBC News obtained Friday outlining the campaignâs strategy to regain its footing. The memo indicated that there would be a heavy focus on early states where, DeSantis advisers think, Trumpâs supporters can be won over.
âEarly state voters are only softly committed to the candidates they select on a ballot question this far out â including many Trump supporters,â read the memo. âOur focus group participants in the early states even say they do not plan on making up their mind until they meet the candidates or watch them debate.â
Never Back Down is bolstering those efforts, focusing both on early states and a handful of Super Tuesday states â most notably California â where the group is expected to hire roughly 80 organizers in the near future.
For some supporters, though, there are now three keys to DeSantis remaining viable: Iowa, Iowa, Iowa.
âThey need to treat it like itâs all that matters right now,â the DeSantis donor said. âIf Trump wins it it is over. It means he needs to be there a lot. He needs to do all the retail politics he can.â
The person said DeSantisâ wife, Casey, is a great asset when doing the sort of retail politicking needed to win Iowa, but DeSantis himself needs to improve.
âHe needs to find that gear,â the person said. âHe needs to find it fast.â
Itâs the product that is the problem, not the people selling it.
Stop voting for Republicans, all they have is bigotry and hate.
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