{"id":22814,"date":"2024-01-22T09:17:14","date_gmt":"2024-01-22T03:47:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/inside-the-final-hours-of-ron-desantis-ill-fated-campaign\/"},"modified":"2024-01-22T09:17:14","modified_gmt":"2024-01-22T03:47:14","slug":"inside-the-final-hours-of-ron-desantis-ill-fated-campaign","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/inside-the-final-hours-of-ron-desantis-ill-fated-campaign\/","title":{"rendered":"Inside the final hours of Ron DeSantis’ ill-fated campaign"},"content":{"rendered":"
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MANCHESTER, N.H. \u2014 On Sunday morning, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis summoned several of his closest advisers to the Governor’s Mansion in Tallahassee for a final conversation about his presidential campaign’s future, according to a person familiar with the discussion.<\/p>\n
Then, DeSantis and his wife, Casey, left the advisers to have a private conversation in the upstairs residence. They decided he would pull the plug on a campaign that had no reasonable path forward. By the time they returned to the advisers, DeSantis had written down lines that would form part of the <\/strong>announcement that he was suspending the campaign.<\/p>\n The discussions at the Governor’s Mansion were the culmination of nearly a week of conversations between DeSantis and his advisers that began last <\/strong>Monday night, shortly after he placed a distant second to former President Donald Trump in the Iowa caucuses.<\/p>\n Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, one of DeSantis’ most prominent backers, traveled to Tallahassee for the final round of discussions, helping DeSantis weigh the merits of exiting the race before the New Hampshire primary and the pros and cons of endorsing Trump, according to people familiar with his role.<\/p>\n Reached by phone Sunday night, Roy said he has been “continuously talking to the governor” during the campaign and thinks “he took the right step” in cutting the campaign short and endorsing Trump. He declined to detail his conversations with DeSantis.<\/p>\n DeSantis had hoped to carry his primary fight against Trump and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley past this week’s <\/strong>New Hampshire primary and into South Carolina, where his advisers believed he would at least have a chance to gain some traction over the next month. <\/p>\n But money was drying up. His campaign and its allied super PACs couldn’t raise enough to replenish the tens of millions of dollars that had been spent in a vain bid to win Iowa. DeSantis <\/strong>wanted to understand what had happened in Iowa and why \u2014 and <\/strong>what his outlook was in the coming states on the calendar. He peppered advisers with questions while he continued to campaign.<\/p>\n For several days, DeSantis caromed around the East Coast, dropping in and out of South Carolina, New Hampshire and Florida, without any <\/strong>discernible change in his fortunes. Apparent decisions to focus on South Carolina at the expense of New Hampshire were signaled to the media, taken back and then reshuffled again. All the while, polls showed him in single digits in New Hampshire, positioned to finish far behind both Trump and Haley, and South Carolina didn\u2019t look much better. <\/p>\n By Thursday, “the information gaps were closed,” said the person familiar with DeSantis’ deliberations. But DeSantis wanted to visit with voters one more time, and he traveled to New Hampshire and South Carolina to get a last look at the electorate. After his last event in South Carolina on Saturday, he traveled home to Tallahassee, where he would make his final call.<\/p>\n In the hours before he announced his decision to suspend the campaign, he canceled planned appearances on Sunday television shows, including NBC’s “Meet the Press,” which led allies and adversaries alike to conclude he was on his way out.<\/p>\n \u201cEveryone wanted to stay in until South Carolina, but raising money became so hard, and it was not going to get easier,\u201d a DeSantis adviser said.<\/p>\n