Trump tells Iowa dinner ‘there is only one candidate’ who can win back the White House and voters shouldn’t ‘take a chance’ on DeSantis – as the only GOP candidate to point out his legal woes gets BOOED offstage
Former President Donald Trump made a rare appearance at an event with other presidential candidate to tell an Iowa crowd that ‘there is only one candidate’ who can ‘win the election big.’
Trump was the final speaker at the Republican Party of Iowa’s Lincoln Dinner, which was attended by 13 Republican hopefuls, each only given 10 minutes to speak.
It was clear that the ex-president won the crowd – receiving standing ovations and more applause than any other candidate – with the only Republican to bring up Trump’s legal turmoil booed offstage.
Whether he could win the next election after losing the last was another story, but he pointed to all sorts of polling data to make his case, claiming that his chief primary rival, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis ‘is losing to Biden in all cases.’
‘I wouldn’t take a chance on that one,’ he said, garnering laughs.
Former President Donald Trump made a rare appearance at a 2024 event with other GOP candidates, attending Friday night’s Lincoln Day Dinner in Des Moines
Trump focused all of his attacks on Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who only vaguely constrasted himself with the ex-president during his 10 minutes onstage
DeSantis managed only a gentle contrast, offering himself as the most electable of the field. And former Vice President Mike Pence delivered his familiar warning of ‘the siren song of populism.’
Trump didn’t bother with any of the other hopefuls – only calling out the Florida governor.
‘I’ve been an unwavering warrior for Iowa ethanol and I will remain your ethanol champion, very important to you economy. Ron DeSanctus has aggressively fought against ethanol, which I think would be devastating for Iowa,’ he said, starting out his assault.
Trump talked up his relationship with Iowa in other ways too.
Many in the GOP field are running an Iowa-or-bust strategy, so if Trump squashes them in the January 15 caucuses, he has a much easier path to the nomination.
‘I’m here to deliver a very simple message Iowa has never had a better friend in the White House than President Donald J. Trump,’ he said at the top.
He later gave himself credit for saving the Hawkeye State’s first-in-the-nation caucus position.
Former Rep. Will Hurd was the only candidate to bring up Trump’s legal woes – and was awarded by the audience by getting booed
Former Rep. Will Hurd was the only candidate to bring up Trump’s legal woes – and was awarded by the audience by getting booed
Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson also told the crowd that the party needed to move on from Trump. He was the only candidate to go over his allotted 10 minutes, getting his mic cut off
‘I won Iowa twice by really a lot. And together we will crush crooked Joe Biden. The most crooked president in the history of our country by a lot. He’s also grossly incompetent, he doesn’t know what he’s doing, he’s destroying our country,’ Trump said.
The ex-president only briefly brought up his mounting legal woes, with Special Counsel Jack Smith filing a surprise superseding indictment Thursday, alleging that Trump had ordered surveillance footage at Mar-a-Lago wiped.
‘By the way, if I weren’t running, I would have nobody coming after me,’ he said. ‘If I was losing by a lot I would have nobody coming after me – they wouldn’t be coming after me.’
Only rank outsider Will Hurd, a former U.S. Representative, dared remind the 1,200 or so Iowa Republicans gathered at the Des Moines convention center of the brewing legal storm.
‘Donald Trump is not running for president to represent the people that voted for him in 2016 and 2020,’ he said. ‘Donald Trump is running to stay out of prison. And if we elect …’
Former Vice President Mike Pence said he ‘understand the temptation to cling to what is familiar’ but floated that the party should move on from his old boss
He was cut off by boos and jeers. ‘I know. I know… The truth is hard,’ he said before wrapping up his speech a minute and a half early, hurrying offstage.
Another longshot candidate, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, also called out Trump by name.
He was also the only candidate – who went over the 10-minute time limit and had his microphone cut off.
DeSantis shied away from hitting Trump directly, reheating his stump speech that majors on cutting down the federal government, focuses on his achievements in Florida and talks up the culture wars.
He did allude to Trump’s controversial handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, when touting how he kept Florida open.
‘You don’t coddle bureaucrats like Dr. Fauci, you bring them in and you say, “You are fired,” DeSantis said.
Earlier he pointed out to DailyMail.com, that Trump keeping Fauci on staff was one of the areas where he’s openly criticized the ex-president.
‘He elevated Fauci, he left him in there, he didn’t fire him. I would have done just the opposite,’ DeSantis said.
But the Florida governor ended with what might be his most important contrast with a president who failed to secure a second term in 2020: electability.
‘We either win this election and make good on all the promises that we’re making, or the Democrats are going to throw this country into a hole that’s going to take us a generation to come out of,’ he said.
‘I believe that decline is a choice. I believe success is attainable, and I know that freedom is worth fighting for.
‘This is our chance in 2024 to send the Biden Harris administration to the dustbin of history where it belongs.’
Half the room rose from their seats and their plates of chicken and mashed potatoes for a rousing round of applause.
Pence used the chance to take a swing at his old boss.
‘Joe Biden has been a disaster for America. And I understand the temptation to cling to what is familiar over leadership fitted to the times,’ he said in a familiar refrain from his stump speech.
‘But I believe we must resist the politics of personality, and the siren song of populism unmoored to conservative values, because different times calls for different leadership to defeat Joe Biden.’
Former U.N. Amb. Nikki Haley poked fun at the Biden family drama saying that the mental competency tests she’s pitched for office holders older than 75 are easy: ‘What town were you born in? How many grandchildren do you have?’
Some of the candidates had fun with the latest Biden family drama, with the president and first lady acknowledging their seventh grandchild for the first time.
They did so in a statement to People magazine, as the Bidens head to their Rehoboth Beach home for summer vacation.
‘Our son Hunter and Navy’s mother, Lunden, are working together to foster a relationship that is in the best interests of their daughter, preserving her privacy as much as possible going forward,’ it said.
‘This is not a political issue, it’s a family matter,’ Biden’s statement continues. ‘Jill and I only want what is best for all of our grandchildren, including Navy.’
Former U.N. Amb. Nikki Haley alluded to the news, as she talked about how easy it would be to pass one of the mental competency tests she’s pitched for office holders older than 75.
‘There aren’t a tough test,’ she said. ‘What town were you born in? How many grandchildren do you have?’ she added to laughs.
Hutchinson, who appeared directly after her onstage, used a similar line: ‘I know how many grandchildren I have – seven.’