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Why Trump Is Winning By Double Digits Heading Into Iowa: It looks like DeSantis will lose Iowa and New Hampshire. As of now, at least, it looks like Nikki Haley will too.
The Federalist ^ | 01/15/2024 | Emily Jashinsky

Posted on 01/15/2024 10:44:34 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Nobody did it. Probably, at least.

It’s the morning of the Iowa caucus and, in the words of the Des Moines Register, “Donald Trump retains a commanding lead.” This comes according to the outlet’s latest poll, which shows Trump with a staggering 28-point advantage going into the “coldest caucus” in years.

This should chill the Beltway most of all. The Des Moines Register now puts Ron DeSantis in third place at 16 percent, down four points to Nikki Haley, a number just outside the margin of error. This is a shocking failure on the part of DeSantis, a successful populist who tapped an army of Beltway pundits to put nearly all the campaign’s eggs in the Iowa basket. But add DeSantis’ 16 points together with Haley’s 20, and Trump is still up by double digits. Consider also that many millions more ad dollars were spent touting DeSantis and Haley.

Republican voters just prefer Trump. In RealClearPolitics’ polling average, Trump is at 52.5 percent in Iowa and 61.4 percent nationally. He leads by double digits in New Hampshire. Sure, Haley and even DeSantis could over-perform the polls in Iowa, head into New Hampshire and South Carolina with momentum, over-perform there, and cruise into Super Tuesday on March 5 with an influx of cash and confidence.

The odds are low but not impossible. There’s a path if you squint. Yet it requires convincing an enormous swath of the Republican electorate — which has moved further and further into Trump’s corner over the last year — to suddenly pivot.

In 2016, Trump led Iowa by about five points in RCP’s final average. He lost by about three points to Ted Cruz. Trump was polling just under 30 percent. Nationally, he hovered around 35 percent. Well over half of the Republican primary electorate preferred a candidate other than Trump as the caucus kicked off.

DeSantis, according to RCP, was at one point about 13 points behind Trump. He’s now almost 40 points behind the former president nationally.

Democrats’ lawfare coincided with a rise in the polls for Trump. Counterintuitive as it may seem, the indictments were always going to make it difficult for another GOP candidate to poll more competitively. To her credit, Nikki Haley has been steadily eating away at DeSantis’ comfortable second-place position since the fall. (DeSantis led in New Hampshire until Haley started gaining on him in mid-September.) In Iowa, nearly half of Haley’s voters say they would vote for President Biden over Trump. She likely has a ceiling in most states that’ll make it tough to compete down the line.

Ultimately, if Iowa shakes out anywhere near the polling, it will mark the beginning of the end for DeSantis’ much-anticipated political experiment: Can Trump be defeated by a candidate with all the benefits and none of the baggage?

Perhaps the most frustrating takeaway from DeSantis’ slump is that we still don’t know the answer to that question because he allowed Beltway vest aficionados and their friends in the donor class to steer his career off course. When Trump finally attacked Vivek Ramaswamy two days before Iowa, the long-shot candidate’s response was a vision of what could have been for DeSantis.

“Yes, I saw President Trump’s Truth Social post,” Ramaswamy posted on X. “It’s an unfortunate move by his campaign advisors, I don’t think friendly fire is helpful. Donald Trump was the greatest President of the 21st century, and I’m not going to criticize him in response to this late attack.”

He added, “I’m worried for Trump. I’m worried for our country. I’ve stood up against the persecutions against Trump, and I’ve defended him at every step,” later concluding, “I want to save Trump & to save this country. Let’s do it together. You won’t hear any friendly fire from me.”

Back in September, The New York Times reported on a memo from an anti-Trump PAC helmed by Club for Growth President David McIntosh. The memo, McIntosh wrote, “shares findings from our attempts to identify an effective approach to lower President Trump’s support among Republican primary voters so we can maximize an alternative candidate’s ballot share when the field begins to consolidate.”

The takeaway from their research was perhaps the most important observation of the primary cycle, though should have been obvious from the moment every candidate entered the race.

“Broadly acceptable messages against President Trump with Republican primary voters that do not produce a meaningful backlash include sharing concerns about his ability to beat President Biden, expressions of Trump fatigue due to the distractions he creates and the polarization of the country, as well as his pattern of attacking conservative leaders for self-interested reasons,” McIntosh wrote. “It is essential to disarm the viewer at the opening of the ad by establishing that the person being interviewed on camera is a Republican who previously supported President Trump, otherwise, the viewer will automatically put their guard up, assuming the messenger is just another Trump-hater whose opinion should be summarily dismissed.”

Whatever you think of Ramaswamy (he previewed a potential Iowa surprise in an interview with The Federalist here), his response to Trump captured the lesson of that memo almost effortlessly. He’s been doing it for months.

On DeSantis, a popular and successful governor with a healthy war chest, that approach to Trump would almost certainly have improved his odds. It’s why Florida voters loved him. Politically, at least, running against Trump didn’t need to mean attacking him. The governor’s approach didn’t need to change. (I say this as someone endlessly sympathetic to the merits of DeSantis’ arguments on this particular question.)

The McIntosh memo should have been understood by DeSantis’ campaign before it ever launched. Republican voters who see Democrats relentlessly trying to put Trump in prison don’t trust GOP politicians who proactively attack him, often echoing the same critiques made by the same people who pushed the Russia-collusion hoax.

It looks like DeSantis will lose Iowa and New Hampshire. As of now, at least, it looks like Nikki Haley will too. Easily. If that’s the case, it’s remarkable how much money and effort was invested in campaigns that got the biggest question wrong from the beginning, especially the one campaign that should have known better.


Emily Jashinsky is culture editor at The Federalist and host of Federalist Radio Hour. She previously covered politics as a commentary writer for the Washington Examiner. Prior to joining the Examiner, Emily was the spokeswoman for Young America’s Foundation. She’s interviewed leading politicians and entertainers and appeared regularly as a guest on major television news programs, including “Fox News Sunday,” “Media Buzz,” and “The McLaughlin Group.” Her work has been featured in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Post, Real Clear Politics, and more. Emily also serves as director of the National Journalism Center, co-host of the weekly news show “Counter Points: Friday” and a visiting fellow at Independent Women's Forum. Originally from Wisconsin, she is a graduate of George Washington University.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Iowa
KEYWORDS: desantis; florida; haley; iowa; presidenttrump; primaries; rondesantis; trump
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To: SeekAndFind

Ron DeSantis will win Iowa.

He secured the endorsements of their governor and the most influential evangelical voice in Iowa, and Iowa is the largest evangelical state in the country.

In 2016, Trump got 22% of the evangelical vote and lost to Ted Cruz, Trump won’t get 22% of the evangelical vote this time.

And beside all this, DeSantis has the best and largest ground game of the candidates running, having visited all 99 counties in Iowa, not counting an army of volunteers knocking on doors and making phone calls. Even his wife and mother were knocking on doors and connecting with the people.

Tonight an actual conservative will win Iowa.


21 posted on 01/15/2024 1:05:39 PM PST by Southnsoul
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To: Southnsoul

Best of luck to both Trump and DeSantis, seriously. But this is not 1988 when Pat Robertson came in a close second. Trump is a technical incumbent, i.e. this is uncharted territory. Plus people are PO-ed about the 2020 election. They’ve polled this caucus to the nth degree, and I’d be surprised if the polls are far wrong.


22 posted on 01/15/2024 1:11:14 PM PST by scottinoc
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To: SeekAndFind
I want DeSantis for Vice President.

As for Haley, she's got as much chance of getting elected as Christie or Pence--and they're not even running.

23 posted on 01/15/2024 1:28:18 PM PST by Savage Beast (Where truth, joy, love and beauty converge, there is enormous strength and wisdom. Strive for it.)
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To: SeekAndFind

“To her credit, Nikki Haley has been steadily eating away at DeSantis’ comfortable second-place position since the fall”

what credit? she’s simply the only RINO/GOPe/DeepState candidate left standing ... she could have just as easily been Alfred E. Newman and gotten the same number of votes ...


24 posted on 01/15/2024 2:32:38 PM PST by catnipman (A Vote For The Lesser Of Two Evils Still Counts As A Vote For Evil)
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To: janetjanet998

“long haul” will last until his money dries up ... it’s difficult to run a campaign when the only thing you can afford for transportation is a skateboard and have to stay in no-tell motels ...


25 posted on 01/15/2024 2:36:17 PM PST by catnipman (A Vote For The Lesser Of Two Evils Still Counts As A Vote For Evil)
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To: wiseprince

“I have it on some authority”

sure you do ... WHAT “authority”? ... the short order cook on the midnight shift at the local Waffle House?


26 posted on 01/15/2024 2:39:12 PM PST by catnipman (A Vote For The Lesser Of Two Evils Still Counts As A Vote For Evil)
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To: Southnsoul
Ron DeSantis will win Iowa.

Heels will not even be able to win Florida against President Trump. Even before bootgate his popularity was in a nose-dive. Can anyone remember such a promising up and coming politician manage to trash his career in such a short period of time without a sex scandal or serious criminal conviction?

27 posted on 01/15/2024 2:43:51 PM PST by fireman15 (Irritating people are the grit from which we fashion our pearl. I provide the grit. You're Welcome.)
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To: catnipman

It’s just media narrative. If he were to get the normal bump by winning it’d be over and they can’t have that.


28 posted on 01/15/2024 2:46:02 PM PST by wiseprince (Me)
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To: SeekAndFind

The uniparty’s attempt to astroturf Haley now that that game plan has failed with Desantis is Comical..

The poll a few weeks back showing Haley winning NH was grade a laughable... She’s down 17 or something in NH.. that push poll nonsense CNN poll showing her within 7 and those other 2 by the same group both showing her within 4 are just there to make her average look better than it is, they know damned well she’s down 15 points or more.

There are only 4 polls taken in the last 6 weeks that show her under double digits, and they are all laughable...

1 showing her within 3, 2 showing her with 4 and hten the CNN showing her with 7

The remainder have her down 13 points or more, and often MUCH MUCH more... Haley is not going to close the gap in NH by next Tuesday, and they know it. They are trying desperately to try to create reality, hoping they can get her close to try to create some SURGE narrative to keep her alive... then of course go to the NV primaries which mean NOTHING and Trump isn’t even on the primary ballot on 2/6 because there are no electors granted of that stupid pointless thing... So Haley ill likely win it.. only to have Trump take the caucuses and the electors 2 days later, but the press will still latch onto it trying to spin some narrative that Haley is surgin and Trump is in trouble...

They want that narrative for 2 weeks going into the next Primary of SC.. .which is Haleys home state, they are hoping beyond hope that if they can play that narrative up they can get her a win there and stop Trump...

IT AIN’T GONNA HAPPEN... but mark my words they are going to push poll, and spin with every breath they have between NH and SC to try to make it so...

They are going to do everything they can to try to convince you, assuming Haley comes out of NH in any way they can make it seem “strong” that SC will be her moment.... and it isn’t going to happen.

The hundreds of millions so far that have been WASTED on these establishment candidates, could have been going to something meaningful... never ever forget that... my best estimation so far, is that Desantis and Haley and Cristie backers have burned at least 100-250 Million dollars in cash just trying to win a caucus and a primary, most of it spent in just 2 states..

They will likely burn another 100M more between now and Feb 26th or whatever the SC primary date is... all for naught.


29 posted on 01/15/2024 2:54:51 PM PST by HamiltonJay
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To: cgbg

Desantis will be gone by the FL primary at the latest.

If not he will suffer the humiliation of being crushed as the sitting governor in his own state. There will be no coming back ever from that humiliation.. so his absolute last date in the race is 3/18.

If he stays in through the Florida primary, and loses by 20-30 points or more, and that’s whats going to happen, that will be how he’s going to be remembered no matter what else happens to him.. You can’t shake that humiliation off, not even in American politics.

You’ll basically left being the Rick Santorum for the rest of your political life... He lost his re-election by 17.5 points... the greatest margin of an incumbent losing a Senate seat in probably the last 50 years if not more.. You don’t come back from something like that.. you get to be some fringe candidate in presidential primaries trying to keep your name out there, but you are done.

Desantis is absolutely DONE if he stays in through FL primary.... You can’t come back, ever from being the guy, who as sitting governor, lost your parties primary by 30 points or more... and that’s what is going to happen to him if he is still officially in the race on 3/19.

We shall see, Desantis has made some very poor decisions around this race... so maybe I am giving him too much credit.... but I just don’t see how he doesn’t pull out before suffering that humiliation.


30 posted on 01/15/2024 3:02:13 PM PST by HamiltonJay
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To: HamiltonJay

I understand your points—and in a normal year they would be valid.

I am convinced DeSantis has some Deep State types whispering in his ear that Donald Trump will be gone—one way or the other.

I am not kidding—I think that is what he is being told.


31 posted on 01/15/2024 3:05:24 PM PST by cgbg ("Our democracy" = Their Kleptocracy)
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To: Southnsoul

RE: Ron DeSantis will win Iowa.

I will mark your prediction and get back to you tomorrow.


32 posted on 01/15/2024 5:28:01 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: cgbg

Oh I’m sure they have been whispering that in his ear from the
Start but he’s done


33 posted on 01/15/2024 5:39:29 PM PST by HamiltonJay
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To: Southnsoul

RE: Ron DeSantis will win Iowa. He secured the endorsements of their governor and the most influential evangelical voice in Iowa, and Iowa is the largest evangelical state in the country.

I didn’t even have to wait for tomorrow.

See here:

https://dailycaller.com/2024/01/15/trump-dominates-red-state-caucus/

TRUMP WINS IOWA CAUCUS BY A LANDSLIDE

What happened to the governor’s endoresdement and the much vaunted Evangelical Voice? Apparently the Evangelicals refuse to listen to that voice and preferred to vote for the man who has a KNOWN RECORD of representing evangelical concerns.

As for DeSantis, he came in 3rd behind Haley, who came in 37% behind Trump. Herck, you can add DeSantis’ and Haley’s votes and they would not even be equal to Trump’s.


34 posted on 01/15/2024 6:37:59 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: Southnsoul

LOL!


35 posted on 01/15/2024 7:04:44 PM PST by MayflowerMadam ("A coward dies a thousand times before his death, but the valiant taste of death but once.")
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