| Tara Palmeri: How do you think DeSantis handled the Trump indictment news?
Peter Schorsch: Not well. It’s his second or third walk-back in 10 days. He used to be Mr. Rule of Law, now the rule of law is not what matters? Of course, it’s extraordinarily difficult to run against a person and then be supportive of them at the same time. I think that’s why you still see people like George Conway and Tony Fabrizio saying maybe DeSantis isn’t going to run in the end. I talk to Desantis world and they do not see a problem with their campaign right now. There is no re-tool. The campaign is operating in a vacuum, external influences be damned. It’s still book tour, travel the country, set up the super PAC, etcetera, no matter what is happening outside of their very tight bubble. They’re not concerned about it.
What about the polls?
I think those who are in his circle, who have national connections, are urging them to say something in response to the polling and the media. I know one of them said to Team DeSantis this week: “You may not care about the New York Times but the people that you are meeting with who you want to donate, they read the New York Times and Wall Street Journal.”
So he’s not playing the inside game.
There is no inside game. I do think one place where they have reacted is bringing on Jeff Roe. It was explained to me that there was a need for a person with a national profile where they can say to big time donors that this is one of the people in the room. Obviously since he is only running the super PAC, Roe isn’t necessarily in the room. But it allows them to present someone with national credibility to the people who were critical of the current operation, which did not have a lot of national experience.
Even with Phil Cox there? They didn’t think there was enough national experience?
The person I spoke with, one of his biggest bundlers, said that they needed a bigger adult. Someone said to me Phil Cox is all but a hologram now. He’s not involved at all.
What about his partner, Generra Peck, who led the successful DeSantis midterm reelection campaign? Will she still be campaign manager?
Yes, from what I’ve been told, there’s going to be a distinct separation now between Peck and Cox on the business side. I haven’t gotten to the bottom of that. [Peck has been removed from the website of Cox’s consultancy P2 Pathway Public Affairs. Neither Cox or Peck commented.]
I’m surprised that Heather Barker is going over to the super PAC [from the state level political committee] because they just like her so much. She’s extraordinarily capable. In theory, they’re not going to be able to talk to her as much. She’s right there. Maybe she’s really good at raising national dollars, that’s why they want her there. She’s an extraordinary fundraiser. We have connections to her husband, she was top five in DeSantis world, I’m a little surprised that they moved her.
How do you think Jeff Roe and the Ted Cruz alumni he brings with him are going to tangle with the Tallahassee crowd?
The Tallahassee crowd is laughing at the selection of Jeff Roe. They’re sending memes of Jeff Roe.
They don’t think he’s as good as the hype?
This was about the choice for DeSantis. They think DeSantis didn’t need this guy. So many people are just dumping on him. Someone sent over an enormous oppo file on all of Roe’s losses in 2022.
What type of person sent over the file?
A top G.O.P. consultant with ties to both Trump and DeSantis world. They’re probably a little jealous that they’re on the outs. They have a good position now. There’s a lot of bad blood for Roe in Florida. He took on one of the most beloved politicians in the state in a primary, Ray Rodrigues, and he got involved in four other primaries in 2022 and lost them all. I know these races, I followed all of these races. He just ran really shitty, scorched-earth, money-wasting campaigns.
For disclosure, did you have any candidates this past election?
No, I haven’t done any candidate work. Jeff Brandes, the former state senator, was my last political candidate, in 2020.
DeSantis always says he doesn’t poll. Do you think that’s true?
DeSantis doesn’t poll but one of his top five advisors, Ryan Tyson, runs the biggest G.O.P. polling shop in Florida. He has plausible deniability about polling but he’s a phone call away from some of the best numbers in the state. Ryan ran the war room. I’m not familiar with the conversations between Ron and Ryan, but if my best friend is a stock broker, I’m probably going to have some good insight on what to buy and sell tomorrow.
Everyone says the DeSantis inner circle is just his wife Casey, but you’re saying Ryan Tyson is in there too. Who else has his ear?
The staff is still in the inner circle. Obviously there is his chief of staff, James Uthmeier, and his deputy Alex Kelly. His former chief of staff, Shane Strum, is still in there and still talks to him, and his other former chief of staff, Adrian Lukis, is also still on the inside. Nick Iarossi is on the inside. Lobbyist Brian Ballard has definitely worked his way from the outside and is back inside, especially with the hiring of Adrian.
I think there’s a trend among the DeSantises where they tend to gravitate toward other political couples and husband-and-wife teams, like Cord Byrd and Esther Byrd. Cord gets appointed to Secretary of State and Esther Byrd gets appointed to the board of education. They’re both from northeast Florida, and I’m not saying that they’re best buddies, but they’re definitely on that second tier. Same thing with the Donalds—Rep. Byron Donalds and Erika Donalds—with whom they’re often interacting there. Same with Mori Hosseini, a University of Florida board of trustee and a major developer. The joke used to be that Ron flew “Air Hosseini”—maybe not as much anymore, because Ron probably has access to a lot of private jets—since he would fly him and Casey around for events.
There are a lot of disgruntled ex-DeSantis staffers. Do you think he’ll have to deal with the vengeance of his former team?
I think it’s very telling that he doesn’t have more staffers still in his orbit. You gear up for a presidential campaign, you had 300 or 400 people who wanted to be a part of that operation. You don’t have that now.
How many does he have?
I’d say 40 or 50. He’s got a lot of these people who he appoints and empowers, but I don’t know that they’re best friends with him. I don’t know that they’re late-night-bull-sessions kind of people. I had a person who was a double appointee, to two important boards, who just met the governor’s staff and had dinner with him recently but he can’t tell you anything on a personal level.
Ron’s not really a people person. Do you think he has a softer side he can show?
I think whatever softer side he may have had he lost during the pandemic. The isolation of the governor’s office. His wife’s health issues, having to go through that during the pandemic. He would talk about it during off-the-cuff moments, that the kids’ grandparents didn’t get to see them be born. I think that really impacted him. |