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The agony of failing to make the GOP debate stage

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Aug 22, 2023 View in browser
 

By Catherine Kim and Calder McHugh

Miami Mayor Francis Suarez speaks at the Republican Party of Iowa's 2023 Lincoln Dinner in Des Moines on July 28. | Sergio Flores/AFP via Getty Images

SHUT OUT — To see the global soccer star Lionel Messi debut for his new team — Inter Miami — in late July, fans paid up to $3,500 per ticket. Miami Mayor Francis Suarez asked for just a $1 donation to his Campaign for the privilege.

The gambit — donate to Suarez’s longshot presidential campaign via Venmo and get entered in a rally for tickets to see Messi play — was part of the mayor’s desperate and ultimately unsuccessful push to get on the Republican Debate stage Wednesday night.

Suarez wasn’t alone. Multiple candidates went to similarly extreme — and creative — lengths to meet the polling and donor requirements to make the debate stage on Wednesday; as with Suarez, it was all for naught. Between the candidates who will be denied an opportunity on the debate stage and those who will fall flat in their performance, it won’t be long before we see the first campaign casualty of the 2024 GOP primary season.

The RNC set the fairly high bar for qualification in order to keep the debate stage manageable; in the end, eight candidates were officially invited to participate: Ron DeSantis, Vivek Ramaswamy, Mike Pence, Nikki Haley, Tim Scott, Chris Christie, Doug Burgum and Asa Hutchinson. Donald Trump — the frontrunner for the nomination — followed through on his promise to skip the debate.

To guarantee a place In the nationally televised showdown, every GOP contender had to meet the donor threshold of 40,000 individual contributors — at least 200 each from 20 states — and a polling threshold of one percent in three national polls, or two national polls plus one state poll. They also had to pledge to support the party’s eventual nominee.

For the big name candidates, reaching these goals was a breeze: former President Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Tim Scott and Vivek Ramaswamy made the cut from the moment the requirements were announced. But for others, the qualifications were daunting — especially those with meager national profiles.

Nearly everyone agreed that an appearance on the debate stage in Milwaukee was essential to being viewed as a serious candidate, and to build any momentum: tens of millions of people watched the 2016 Republican primary debates. Among other reasons, clips from the debates have a much higher chance of going viral than a simple campaign stop, putting a candidate’s face in front of millions of people who may not otherwise have been paying attention.

The first debate looms so large, in fact, that earlier this month, Suarez himself argued that candidates who don’t make the first debate should drop out of the race.

Burgum, the North Dakota governor who had little name recognition outside of his home state, dipped into his own substantial wealth to fund his campaign. A former software executive, Burgum last month announced a giveaway of a $20 gift card for a $1 donation: “Doug knows people are hurting because of Bidenflation and giving Biden Economic Relief Gift Cards is a way to help 50,000 people until Doug is elected President to fix this crazy economy for everyone,” his spokesperson Lance Trover said.

The campaign wasn’t being coy about the fact that this was a ploy to get the governor on stage: “It also allows us to secure a spot on the debate stage while avoiding paying more advertising fees to social media platforms who have owners that are hostile to conservatives,” Trover said.

The viral marketing resulting from his gift card scheme not only spread Burgum’s name, it helped him secure the 40,000 donors he needed. The governor qualified on July 25, a little over two weeks after announcing his gift card scheme.

Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, another successful debate qualifier, paid hundreds of college students $20 a pop for every family member, friend or acquaintance they could persuade to donate $1 to his campaign.

Businessman Perry Johnson — who had been disqualified from running for governor of Michigan in 2022 over fraudulent ballot signatures — tried a host of $1 ploys to meet the donor threshold. When Tucker Carlson was fired from Fox News, he sold a t-shirt on Facebook for $1 reading “I stand with Tucker.” In July, he offered donors a $10 gas gift card for $1. And he sold his book, “Two Cents to Save America” for, you guessed it, $1.

Then there’s Suarez, who in addition to the Messi raffle went to increasingly great lengths to qualify. The super PAC that supports the mayor promised to pay a year’s worth of college tuition to one lucky winner who donated $1 to Suarez’s campaign. Later on, he took a page from Burgum’s book and offered to send out $20 gift cards to those donating $1.

Suarez and Johnson’s efforts paid off with donors — both reached that threshold. But even though they also claimed they had met the polling threshold, the RNC disagreed. Neither made the stage, which could effectively end their longshot campaigns.

Johnson lashed out, arguing about his exclusion from the stage, “Simply put, this is a flawed decision of a poorly run process of a corrupt organization.” Another excluded candidate who insisted he met the thresholds, radio show host Larry Elder, said today he’s suing the RNC in an effort to halt the debate entirely.

Suarez, meanwhile, has said he “respect[s] the rules and process set forth by the RNC.” He now has to contemplate whether he’ll follow his own advice and drop out.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at [email protected]. Or contact tonight’s authors at [email protected] and [email protected] or on Twitter at @ck_525 and @calder_mchugh. PROGRAMMING NOTE: Nightly will not be publishing from Aug. 28 through Sept. 4. We’ll be back to our normal schedule on Tuesday, Sept. 5.

 

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What'd I Miss?

— Trump attorneys guided false electors in Georgia, GOP chair says: Former Georgia Republican Party Chair David Shafer said attorneys for former President Donald Trump, his campaign and the local GOP were responsible for urging him to assemble a slate of false presidential electors that are now at the heart of a sprawling racketeering case. Shafer is among the 18 defendants indicted in Fulton County, Georgia, alongside Trump as part of a conspiracy to subvert the 2020 election.

— Biden pushes new student loan repayment plan as bills loom for tens of millions: President Joe Biden today launched a promotional blitz for his new program that helps student loan borrowers repay their debt, just weeks before millions of Americans are set to receive a loan bill for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic. The Biden administration is mobilizing to convince borrowers across the country to sign up for the new income-driven repayment program — dubbed the “SAVE plan” — which caps interest accrual and lowers the monthly payment amount for many borrowers.

— Former Democratic Rep. jumps into Florida Senate race: Former Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell (D-Fla.) will challenge incumbent GOP Sen. Rick Scott in a race that could prove pivotal in attempts by Democrats to retain control of the U.S. Senate. Mucarsel-Powell, who immigrated from Ecuador at the age of 14, is a Spanish-speaking Hispanic candidate from Miami-Dade who gives Democrats an opportunity to reassert themselves in one of the most crucial counties in the state.

Nightly Road to 2024

NO APOLOGIES — Chris Christie’s current presidential bid is the most interesting candidacy in the Republican primary, and the most important, reports POLITICO. Not because he’s polling near the top of the lot. He’s not. If the contest, though, at this point is Trump and everybody else, and the nominee somehow ultimately comes from that batch of others, there’s nobody else in that everybody else remotely like Christopher James Christie. The about-to-turn-61-year-old former governor of New Jersey was Trump before Trump — charismatic, combative, politically incorrect — and he was, for that matter, Ron DeSantis before Ron DeSantis — winning reelection in a landslide not just in an erstwhile swing state but in an outright blue state.

And now he’s an ex-prosecutor prosecuting a case, and it’s a case that makes so much sense it sometimes can beggar belief that he’s the only one in the field who’s qualified for the first two debates who’s so vociferously making it. The case? Maybe it’s not a great idea to once again back a man who had four years already as president and failed at least as much as he didn’t and lost in 2020 and contributed to GOP losses in 2018 and 2022 and has been indicted four times in the last four months and therefore might spend as much time next year in a courtroom as on the campaign trail.

VIVEK’S CLEANUP — Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy was caught in a blunder after he claimed The Atlantic misquoted him floating the idea that the federal government was perhaps involved in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, writes POLITICO.

During a CNN appearance on Monday night, anchor Kaitlan Collins questioned him about the comments, to which Ramaswamy responded that they were actually about the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. He made a similar comment suggesting he was misquoted to Semafor. But this afternoon, The Atlantic published interview audio that verified the original quote about 9/11 was correct.

Ramaswamy has previously questioned the government’s reports on the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Earlier this month, he said he did not believe the government had told the complete truth.

CRUNCH TIME — Gov. Ron DeSantis on Monday warned hundreds gathered at a beachside restaurant of the existential crisis facing America if he is not elected president in 2024. For the once-rising Republican superstar, however, his moment of truth may be now, POLITICO writes.

The Florida governor’s visit was put together by Never Back Down, the super PAC supporting DeSantis, as his struggling campaign has been through several reboots. And now, attention is turning to whether he will shine or shrink when the bright lights of the first Republican debate are turned on. With Trump vowing to skip FOX’s televised event — reportedly for his own prime time interview with Tucker Carlson — the debate stage in Milwaukee could serve as the backdrop for DeSantis’ much-needed campaign reset.

The two-hour, Trump-free setup offers DeSantis an opportunity to improve his diminishing performance in the polls, but presents him with a challenge: How to convince Republican primary voters to embrace him without attacking Trump, who is far ahead in every major public-opinion survey. A leaked memo outlining a preferred debate strategy — drafted by the firm running the PAC that is all-but running the DeSantis campaign — advised the governor to defend Trump. DeSantis later said he was unaware of the contents of the strategy document.

AROUND THE WORLD

Spanish right-wing opposition party Partido Popular (PP) leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo looks on during a campaign meeting in Barcelona on July 17. | Pau Barrena/AFP via Getty Images

TRYING AND FAILING — Alberto Núñez Feijóo, leader of the conservative Popular Party, has been given the first shot at forming a new Spanish government, writes Paul Dallison.

Spain’s king, Felipe VI, decided today that Feijóo, whose party won the most votes in last month’s inconclusive national election, should try and form a coalition.

But Feijóo’s efforts will surely be doomed. The PP failed to secure the number of seats in parliament needed to govern, and even with the backing of the far-right Vox party, Feijóo won’t be able to overcome the opposition of a majority of Spain’s MPs.

Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is in a better position to remain in post. Sánchez and his left-wing allies control 171 of the 350 seats in the parliament, which means that in order to form a government he would need to persuade several MPs belonging to the Catalan separatist Junts party to vote for him.

However, last week Sánchez received a boost when Junts gave its votes to Francina Armengol, the Socialist candidate for the presidency of the parliament’s bureau, the powerful body which approves the creation of parliamentary groups, authorizes investigative commissions and ultimately determines which bills are taken up by MPs.

 

Enter the “room where it happens”, where global power players shape policy and politics, with Power Play. POLITICO’s brand-new podcast will host conversations with the leaders and power players shaping the biggest ideas and driving the global conversations, moderated by award-winning journalist Anne McElvoy. Sign up today to be notified of the first episodes in September – click here.

 
 
Nightly Number

$48 Billion

The amount of money that New York state consumers will pay to fund the transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources over the next two decades. Some upstate New York electric customers are already paying 10 percent of their utility bill to support the state’s effort to move off fossil fuels and into renewable energy, and the high price is causing some New York politicians to worry about the political risk of the transition.

RADAR SWEEP

CLOUD COVERAGE — If you’ve ever seen a photograph of Neptune, you’d likely notice a blue planet with some white clouds covering the surface. But now, recent photographs taken of the planet are showing a dispersal of the clouds. It’s a strange phenomenon. And even though Neptune is the outermost planet in our solar system, it’s plausible the sun — and its UV rays — are responsible, writes Will Sullivan for Smithsonian Magazine. Relying partly on the work of a paper from scientists in the journal Icarus, Sullivan investigates what’s going on with Neptune and why it looks so different right now.

Parting Image

On this date in 1991: New York City Mayor David Dinkins (second left) and Police Commissioner Lee Brown (third left) listen to a man during a meeting with about 50 black youths at P.S. 167 in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. Crown Heights experienced three days of riots from Aug. 19 to 21 after two children were struck by a car driven by a Hasidic man running a red light. One of the children died and the other was seriously injured, leading to attacks on Jews in Crown Heights in the ensuing days. | David Burns/AP Photo

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