Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ campaign fired several staffers on Thursday, a sign that the campaign is retooling after continually lagging former President Donald Trump in polling and after a fundraising quarter in which the campaign spent nearly 40% of what they raised.
While the exact number of staffers is unknown, the campaign confirmed on Saturday that fewer than 10 staffers were laid off. The staffers were involved with event planning, the campaign said. The news was first reported by Politico.
“Never Back Down,” the super PAC backing DeSantis, has received resumes from some of the staffers laid off, a person familiar with the group confirmed. Two other staffers, media advisor Dave Abrams and advisor Tucker Obenshain, left the group earlier this week to help a non-profit that will support DeSantis’ run.
The DeSantis campaign reported $20.1 million raised between April through June and spent $7.87 million in the same timeframe. Their filing reported $674,941.63 going towards 92 staffers on the payroll. About $1 million was for payments for WinRed, the main online fundraising platform for Republicans.
It also showed payments for digital fundraising consulting to 21 vendors (a total of $883,628 in payments), $867,583 for media placements, over $845,000 for travel and $730,498 for direct mailers.
DeSantis campaign spokesperson Andrew Romeo wrote in a statement that momentum for DeSantis “will only continue as voters see more of him in-person, especially in Iowa.”
“Defeating Joe Biden and the $72 million behind him will require a nimble and candidate driven campaign, and we are building a movement to go the distance,” he added.
“Never Back Down,” the super PAC backing DeSantis that has a larger footprint of staffers, announced it had raised $130 million since launching in early March. A bulk of this, $82.5 million was transferred from the coffers of his state political committee account, “Friends of Ron DeSantis.” The super PAC has until the end of July to file a fundraising report.
Asked on Fox News on Sunday about the reports of staffers being let go, DeSantis said “the media does not want me to be the nominee.”
“I think it’s interesting that they’re talking about some of this campaign process,” he said about the reports, before noting the high totals of his fundraising haul.
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