DeSantis reloads the reboot

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Aug 08, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Garrett Ross

Presented by The U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks.

Ron DeSantis is making another major change to his presidential campaign. | Charlie Neibergall/AP Photo

BREAKING — “Special counsel still scrutinizing finances of Trump’s PAC,” by Betsy Woodruff Swan and Kyle Cheney

GOOD GET — President JOE BIDEN will sit down for an exclusive interview with The Weather Channel to discuss his climate agenda today during his trip to the Grand Canyon. “Meeting viewers where they are — including those who don’t tune into political news on a regular basis,” White House comms director BEN LaBOLT tweeted. The full interview will run at 6 a.m. tomorrow.

ALL SHOOK UP — RON DeSANTIS is shaking up his presidential campaign yet again, this time naming a new campaign manager, replacing GENERRA PECK with JAMES UTHMEIER, a longtime trusted aide in his Florida gubernatorial office, The Messenger’s Marc Caputo scooped.

DeSantis originally asked Uthmeier to take a look around and “diagnose problems” within the campaign to “see if he could fix them,” Caputo reports — an exercise that culminated in today’s news.

More moves: “Joining Uthmeier as a deputy campaign manager will be DAVID POLYANSKY, an experienced Iowa operative who boasts of never losing a Republican presidential primary in the first-in-the-nation caucus state.” Peck will stay with the campaign as chief strategist.

Ixnay on the ‘ebootray’: “Uthmeier shies away from calling the reshuffling a ‘reboot.’ It’s a despised word in the campaign, where advisers prefer to call this the last campaign ‘reload’ — and they’re going to win, despite the naysayers and early polling.”

A sharp point: “Inviting a month of summer process stories by staggering three separate staff changes? That’s a candidate issue not a staff issue,” our colleague Jonathan Martin tweets.

Trail trend: Meanwhile, DeSantis’ campaign is deploying an unexpected trio of surrogates into the mix as he tries to break through the crowded GOP primary field, WaPo’s Hannah Knowles writes.

“The Florida governor is prominently featuring his three kids in his 2024 campaign and doing so in an unusually political way, observers said — not just regaling voters with parenting stories but also weaving them into sharp attacks on his frequent targets of criticism and referencing them as he taps into conservative angst about what kids learn about race, gender and sexual orientation in the classroom and beyond.”

But the decision is very intentional: “Campaign aides view his identity as a father of young kids as a helpful contrast with both Biden and Trump, who are decades older, according to a person familiar with the campaign’s strategy who spoke on the condition of the anonymity to discuss internal thinking.”

THE OTHER ELECTION DAY — While much of today’s attention is on Ohio, where voters are considering a ballot measure with major implications for abortion rights in the state — read this morning’s Playbook for more — there are also statewide primaries taking place in Mississippi, where things are mostly free of drama.

Incumbent GOP Gov. TATE REEVES is expected to cruise through today’s primary against two long shot candidates with very little name ID. Awaiting him on the other side is Democratic challenger BRANDON PRESLEY, who is uncontested in today’s primary and lays claim to fame as a distant cousin of none other than the The King of Rock & Roll, ELVIS PRESLEY.

The state of play: Presley has “played down his party affiliation and used recent scandal and corruption to build out his underdog campaign in this ruby red state,” WSJ’s Cameron McWhirter writes from Philadelphia, Miss. “State polling is sparse but head-to-head matchups between Reeves and Presley show the Republican with a clear lead. Reeves has outpaced Presley in fundraising, with July campaign-finance reports showing Reeves with more than $9.6 million cash on hand compared with Presley’s about $1.9 million.”

More on the down-ballots: “Mississippi candidates for statewide offices square off in party primaries,” by AP’s Michael Goldberg and Emily Wagster Pettus in Jackson

OHIO ELECTION READING — “Abortion’s role as an electoral litmus test hasn’t faded a year after Supreme Court decision overturning Roe,” by CNN’s Ariel Edwards-Levy

Live updates: “Voters will decide today on Ohio Issue 1 in August special election,” by the Cincinnati Enquirer’s Haley BeMiller

Good Tuesday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line: gross@politico.com.

 

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Concerns about policy risks for public companies — changes in taxes, regulations, and enforcement — increased 27% over the last decade, according to a report from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Rising public policy risks threaten business growth, innovation, and our country’s global competitiveness. In Washington, the polarization, gridlock, regulatory overreach, and inability to act smartly and strategically are making it harder for businesses to do their jobs and move this country forward.

 

HEADLINE OF THE DAY — “A 143-Year-Old Portrait Fuels an Absurd Government Turf War,” by WSJ’s Andrew Ackerman and Richard Rubin: “The painting currently hangs in a third-floor hallway at the Treasury Department, which might seem fair enough. [HUGH] McCULLOCH was a two-time Treasury secretary. Not fair at all, says the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, an independent agency within the Treasury that occupies a separate building a mile and a half away.”

2024 WATCH

THE RACE FOR SECOND — With Trump running so far ahead of his Republican challengers, some attention is turning to who might join the former president on the ticket if he does indeed win the nomination. WSJ’s Eliza Collins and Siobhan Hughes report that “aides and allies have started discussing names of possible candidates.” But Trump himself has neither weighed in nor offered any real indication of whom he might select. “They say Trump wants someone who has a record of winning and is aligned with his agenda. Trump also likes people who do well on TV.”

One person it won’t be: Trump’s previous right hand man MIKE PENCE. The rift between Trump and his former VP has grown quite large since leaving office, and things are only escalating on the campaign trail and amid an unfolding indictment. After qualifying for the first RNC debate, Pence campaign spokesperson DEVIN O’MALLEY had this barb for the Trump camp: “Hopefully, former President Trump has the courage to show up.” (h/t Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser)

PRE-STATE FAIR READING — “Why Democrats Lost Iowa,” by WSJ’s Catherine Lucey and Paul Overberg: “Iowa is more white and rural than the rest of the country, and Republicans have grown stronger with those voters, particularly through Trump’s populist appeals. Meanwhile, Democrats have lost droves of voters in rural areas, and Iowa has fewer of the minority and urban voters who tend to be more liberal and have helped the party offset rural losses. Some Iowa Democrats say they are struggling to connect with voters on cultural issues as Americans have grown more polarized.”

To wit: Despite the right-ward lean in the state, Iowa Democratic officials are growing a little frustrated with their party’s general lack of TLC for the early-nominating state, fearing that an “already reddening Iowa could slip even further away,” our colleague Myah Ward writes. “Some Iowa Democrats say they’ve begged for more appearances from President Biden and Vice President KAMALA HARRIS, visits they say could energize the state party and help down-ballot where the GOP message is dominating without pushback.”

 

ATTENTION PLAYBOOKERS! You need to keep up with the latest political news and nuggets, so here’s a juicy tip: You need to add California Playbook to your daily reading. We have a new team at the helm who are eager to take you inside the political arena in California, from Sacramento and Los Angeles to Silicon Valley and throughout the Golden State! Get the latest exclusive news and buzzy scoops from the fourth largest economy in the world sent straight to your inbox. SUBSCRIBE TODAY.

 
 

THE WHITE HOUSE

LABOR PAINS — “As U.S. navigates summer of strikes, Biden’s top labor adviser exits, source says,” by Reuters’ Nandita Bose: CELESTE DRAKE “is leaving the White House to serve as the Deputy Director-General of the International Labor Organization (ILO), based in Geneva, Switzerland, and starts in her new role on Aug. 14, according to the source, who did not wish to be named. … Drake's departure comes at a critical time for an administration dealing with a summer of labor unrest, with estimates from national labor unions showing more than 650,000 U.S. workers were on or threatened strikes in the first half of 2023.”

CONGRESS

THE INEVITABLE I-WORD — As many conservative members of the House GOP have pushed both publicly and privately for a formal impeachment proceeding against Biden, Speaker KEVIN McCARTHY has tried to temper the tempest. “But many House Republicans privately say that it appears to be a foregone conclusion: Biden will face an impeachment inquiry in the fall and could be just the fourth US president ever charged with high crimes or misdemeanors — and that it might all happen by year’s end,” CNN’s Manu Raju, Zachary Cohen, Annie Grayer and Melanie Zanona report.

Those who want to see the investigation proceed say it’s pretty much now or never, and that if they don’t move forward soon it would “create the impression that House Republicans have essentially cleared Biden of any wrongdoing over his ties to his son HUNTER BIDEN’s business entanglements.”

The new normal: “Once Rare, Impeachments and Censures Have Become the Norm in Congress,” by NYT’s Carl Hulse: “The proliferation of censures and cries for impeachment is troubling to some who see it as a threat to the standing of the institution as well as diminishing the weight such punishments are supposed to carry.”

How it’s playing: “Republicans are talking up the possibility of impeaching Biden. Is it what voters want to hear?” by AP’s Michael Blood

MORE POLITICS

MOODY BLUE — “Ex-Rebel With a Cause,” by N.Y. Mag’s Timmy Facciola: “After entering politics by spurning the centrist Democratic Establishment, [MONDAIRE] JONES now seems like he wants to be a part of it. But as he has returned to Westchester County to launch his third bid for Congress, Jones is drifting — or pivoting, depending on whom you ask — to the middle in order to campaign as the sole candidate who can turn the district blue again.”

ABORTION ON THE BALLOT ELSEWHERE — In addition to Ohio’s action on abortion today, a group in Arizona is launching an effort to protect abortion rights in the purple state, WaPo’s Rachel Roubein and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez report. Arizona for Abortion Access, the PAC leading the effort, is submitting a proposal for a constitutional amendment today that would enshrine abortion access in the state constitution. “Arizona currently bans most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. Specifically, the proposed language would guarantee the right to an abortion up until fetal viability, which is typically around 22 to 24 weeks of pregnancy.”

 

HITTING YOUR INBOX AUGUST 14—CALIFORNIA CLIMATE: Climate change isn’t just about the weather. It's also about how we do business and create new policies, especially in California. So we have something cool for you: A brand-new California Climate newsletter. It's not just climate or science chat, it's your daily cheat sheet to understanding how the legislative landscape around climate change is shaking up industries across the Golden State. Cut through the jargon and get the latest developments in California as lawmakers and industry leaders adapt to the changing climate. Subscribe now to California Climate to keep up with the changes.

 
 

POLICY CORNER

A LITTLE LESS CONVERSATION — “Nonprofits are lobbying a lot less than two decades ago, according to new research,” by Alex Daniels of The Chronicle Of Philanthropy for AP: “The survey, conducted for Independent Sector, a membership organization of nonprofits and grantmakers, found that less than one-third of nonprofits have actively advocated for policy issues or lobbied on specific legislation over the past five years, down from nearly three-quarters of nonprofits in 2000.”

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

THE PERSISTENT PANDEMIC — “What to know about EG.5, the most prevalent covid subvariant in the U.S.,” by WaPo’s Grace Moon, Niha Masih, Adela Suliman and Fenit Nirappil

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

SUSPICIOUS MINDS — “An Oil-Rich Ally Tests Its Relationship With the U.S.,” by NYT’s Vivian Nereim in Dubai and Abu Dhabi: “American officials have had limited success in persuading [Sheikh MOHAMMED BIN ZAYED] to align with U.S. foreign policy — particularly when it comes to limiting Chinese military ties and isolating Russia after the invasion of Ukraine. Instead, the Emirates has thrived on inflows of Russian money, oil and gold, fueling a feeding frenzy in real estate in the glittering metropolis of Dubai.”

ON THE BATTLEFIELD — “U.S.-Made Cluster Munitions Fuel Ukrainian Counteroffensive,” by WSJ’s Ian Lovett and Nikita Nikolaienko in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine: “While the cluster bombs alone won’t tilt the battlefield balance of power decisively in Ukraine’s favor, soldiers say they have helped them retake Russian positions that they had struggled to reach.”

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It’s never too early to make sure a founder is telling the truth

TechCrunch+ Newsletter
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TechCrunch+ Roundup logo

By Walter Thompson

Tuesday, August 08, 2023

Welcome to TechCrunch+ Tuesday

Welcome to TechCrunch+ Tuesday image

Image Credits: Getty Images

Social app IRL shut down in June, but SoftBank — which led the platform’s $170 million Series C in 2021 — is now suing the company for $150 million.

IRL told the world it had 20 million monthly active users, but an internal investigation later revealed that 95% of them were fake. According to SoftBank, those “impressive user numbers” encouraged them to invest, hence the fraud lawsuit.

Because “younger startups are now increasingly getting caught in the act” when it comes to misleading investors, Rebecca Szkutak asked several VCs about the red flags they look for while assessing a pitch and performing due diligence.

“There are 100 metrics they can show you, and they will pick the four that will make them look the best," said 37 Angels founder Angela Lee. “Our job as a VC is to ask about the other 96.”

Thanks for reading,

Walter Thompson
Editorial Manager, TechCrunch+

Read More

Beat the clock: 6 smart ways startups can use lawyers effectively

Beat the clock: 6 smart ways startups can use lawyers effectively image

Image Credits: Vaniatos / Getty Images

Legal firms can charge startups anywhere from $175 to $500 per hour, and the fee structures aren't always straightforward.

One founder who racked up $150,000 in legal costs in a single quarter was forced to explain the expense to a team of investors that included angel Marjorie Radlo-Zandi.

"He told us the fees were for documents involving business formation, funding, various agreements, and intellectual property registrations," she writes in TC+.

"Not everything you do requires a lawyer: You simply need to know when to engage your attorney, how much to spend, and when to do it yourself."

Read More

TechCrunch Disrupt 2023

Sponsored by TechCrunch

Come to San Francisco from September 19 - 21 to learn something new and network with other founders and investors.

Buy tickets

The best apps are taking a page from mobile gaming

The best apps are taking a page from mobile gaming image

Image Credits: YuLife

It’s growing more difficult to hang on to mobile app subscribers, but in Saturday’s TechCrunch Exchange newsletter, Anna Heim covered a report showing that “paywall optimization and gamified UX can help.”

Since 2022, “average mobile subscription prices have been growing month over month across all subscription tiers,” according to a study released by Adapty, a mobile subscription management platform.

Read More

6 startup founders gaze into a future-of-work crystal ball

6 startup founders gaze into a future-of-work crystal ball image

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

We’re still figuring out the Future of Work. The rules for how we recruit, train, retain and even fire employees seem to change from day to day.

To learn more about how remote work has evolved over the last few years, Haje Jan Kamps interviewed six founders in the sector “about working from home, returning to the office, and finding hybrid solutions that fall somewhere between the two.”

  • Barnaby Lashbrooke, founder and CEO, Time etc.
  • Alexander Embiricos, CEO, Multi
  • Phil Libin, CEO, Mmhmm
  • Sophie Ruddock, COO, Multiverse
  • Matt Martin, CEO, Clockwise
  • Mandy Price, CEO, Kanarys

Read More

Taking another look at venture debt

Taking another look at venture debt image

Image Credits: Andrii Yalanskyi / Getty Images

Haje Jan Kamps interviewed recent TC+ guest contributor David Spreng (author of "All Money Is Not Created Equal") to learn more about why venture debt is "an option for growth-stage companies with more predictable cash flow."

Spreng, the founder and CEO of Runway Growth Capital, said his firm provides late-stage debt financing for startups that need just enough cash to crest the next hill.

"We position ourselves as being the latest stage, least risky provider of this type of capital," he said. "We look for a real business that has real products, that isn't going to go out of business and isn't contingent on whichever VC happens to be behind it."

Read More

4 ways generative AI makes founders more interesting to journalists

4 ways generative AI makes founders more interesting to journalists image

Image Credits: MicroStockHub / Getty Images

I manage TechCrunch+’s guest contributor program. Here are three of the most common reasons we reject submissions:

  1. It's too promotional.
  2. It covers a general trend or a basic best practice that’s already well understood.
  3. It consists of “thought leadership.”

Hot takes, conventional wisdom and infographics will not help your startup gain media traction. Reporters are looking for actual expertise and opinions supported by facts and relevant experience.

“Startups that want to be seen amid the flurry as AI enters the media will need to remember that what most people really want is a human story,” says Craig Corbett, partner at PR agency Publicize.

Read More

Read more stories on TechCrunch.com

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California Today: Love letters to California

A charming set of reader tributes to why the Golden State is home.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Tuesday. You shared what you love about the Golden State. Plus, striking hotel workers in Southern California say they're being roughed up by employers' security guards.

The shoreline at Big Sur.Ian C. Bates for The New York Times

Surrounded by so much grim news as a reporter, I'm always in search of anything that feels hopeful, or that brings delight into my life.

I often find it in the community that has formed around this newsletter, and the stories and perspectives that you share with us about your lives. Recently, you've been writing about why you love California and what it means to you — charming tributes that have been nothing but a welcome addition to my inbox.

Today I'm sharing some of these testaments, which shed light on why we stay here despite the heat, the fires and the wildly high cost of living. You can email me your own California love letter at CAToday@nytimes.com. These responses have been lightly edited for clarity:

"I left Chile in 1992, after living 17 years under a military dictatorship, and flew directly to L.A. I was very young, and I knew I was different, but didn't know what 'gay' meant. I moved to L.A. without speaking the language or knowing anyone. As soon as I got off the plane at LAX, I felt a sense of peace, familiarity and safety. L.A. has been my home since. I have made great, lasting friendships. I've had incredible love affairs and heartbreaks. I spend my summer weekends at the beach, sunbathing, swimming and relaxing. The sound of the waves crashing on the shore brings me peace and quiet. Traffic is horrible, but I'm willing to deal with it and consider it a small price to pay to live in such a wonderful place." — Cristian Cifuentes, Los Angeles

"Fifty years ago, I was living in Chicago when I decided to open a wine and cheese store, cafe and wine bar. The plan was to open in Chicago. I came to San Francisco to research the wines of Napa and Sonoma. After one week in the city and Wine Country, I thought, never mind Chicago. I'm going to open here. I did a Rocky-type walk to the top of Nob Hill. I threw my hands in the air and said, Yes, this is my new city!" — Dave Crane, San Francisco

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"I grew up in a small town in Iowa, graduated from Iowa State University, got married to my college sweetheart, moved to Houston, then Bethesda, Md. Next, Charlottesville, Va., and then Omaha, Neb. About 35 years ago, we took a family trip to the West Coast and drove down the full length of the Pacific Coast Highway. I fell in love with the amazing Pacific Ocean, as it was like nothing I had ever seen before. I swore to myself that someday I'd live close to it. A few years later, visiting my adult daughter in Los Angeles, I had a wave tattooed on my left ankle as a constant reminder of that goal. Four years ago, in my early 70s, my partner and I finally moved about a mile from the Channel Islands Harbor, and there's not a day that goes by that I don't smile as I breathe the coastal fresh air and greet the California sun/haze/puffy clouds and lush landscape. It's a dream come true!" — Judy Kay, Oxnard

"I lived in N.Y.C. throughout my 20s, but I had a vision: driving around California in a convertible with my ponytail blowing around in the breeze. And so, I moved myself to San Francisco. Thirty-five years later, I consider myself a native. I have lived up and down the San Francisco Bay Area: City, Peninsula and now Santa Cruz for 20-plus years. Where to begin? The weather, the whales in Monterey Bay, the redwoods in Henry Cowell State Park. Year-round tennis and golf. Careers. Beautiful place to raise our kids. Beautiful place to be retired. And yes, I did wind up getting a convertible and I do drive around with my ponytail blowing in the breeze." — Ann Sayer, Santa Cruz

"I was 30 and I knew I had to change my life. Too many teacher layoffs and wilting relationships in Milwaukee pushed me to act extremely when I never did extreme things in my life. Forty years ago, I sold my furniture and my father packed my VW Rabbit until only the driver could fit. I drove across the country for four days, headed to Newport Beach. I had seen California on a couple of summer trips and knew I was taking a big risk, but the warm, dry and sunny weather was just too attractive. I drove into Balboa as the sun was setting and I started off the new year sleeping on an acquaintance's couch. Jogging the boardwalk a few weeks later, I thought I had died and gone to heaven." — Carolyn Fox, Newport Beach

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The investigation began after Attorney General Rob Bonta sent a letter to the Chino Valley Unified superintendent, discussing his concerns.Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

The rest of the news

  • The California attorney general has begun a civil rights investigation into Chino Valley Unified after the school district's board passed a policy requiring parental notification if a student asks to be identified by a different gender than the one listed on the student's official records, EdSource reports.

Southern California

  • Striking hotel workers filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board on Monday saying that they and their supporters had been attacked several times by security guards as they protested outside properties in Los Angeles and Orange Counties, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • A man was shot and killed by Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies Monday morning near a gas station in Carson, The Los Angeles Times reports.

Central California

Northern California

  • Oakland schools reopened on Monday with a shortage of teachers, leaving thousands of students in the district without permanent instructors, The San Francisco Chronicle reported.
  • The Mercury News offers a five-step guide to rebuilding the Pac-12 Conference after Stanford and Cal were left stranded last week by the departure of most of the conference's members.

WHAT WE'RE EATING

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Watts Towers.Brian Baer/California State Parks

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Kathleen Naples, who recommends a trip to the Watts Towers in Los Angeles:

"Simon Rodia worked on the Watts Towers for decades, beginning in the 1920s. I've lived in L.A. for over 40 years, and never went to see them until last Mother's Day with my son, who is a born Angeleno. I didn't realize the tallest towers were demolished in the '50s, which is sad and a commentary on the '50s.

Rodia contributed to the concept of enormous urban art. I consider him a predecessor of all kinds of social landscape artists like Tyree Guyton in Detroit, Isaiah Zagar in Philadelphia, and landscape artists like Cristo and Spencer Tunick, who not only focuses frame-like attention on daily landmarks, but also creates a social community and deals with bureaucracy while questioning the ordinary and conventional."

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

And before you go, some good news

Shane Porter, a firefighter in Riverside County, used to spend hours restoring a 1969 Jeepster Commando with his two sons. But after Porter died of bladder cancer last year, his family was unsure of what to do with the car.

Then a family friend stepped in. He commissioned a group of automotive students at Corona High School in the Inland Empire to take on the restoration, which took more than a year to complete, NBC4 reports.

"As soon as I saw it, it was just a dream come true," Porter's son Tim said. "It was just incredible that they were able to come together as a team and work on it."

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

Briana Scalia and Johnna Margalotti contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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