Longtime DeSantis friend Adam Laxalt to chair super PAC backing Florida governor's expected 2024 run
Adam Laxalt coming on board as chair of the pro-DeSantis super PAC 'Never Back Down,' which takes a lead in targeting Trump
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Former Nevada attorney general Adam Laxalt has signed up for a new mission — to help his longtime friend and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis win the presidency.
Laxalt is joining the pro-DeSantis super PAC Never Back Down as chair, the group confirmed to Fox News on Saturday.
Officials with Never Back Down, which is the top outside group backing an expected 2024 presidential campaign by DeSantis, said that Laxalt had been involved unofficially with the super PAC for weeks and is now coming on board in an official capacity.
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DeSantis and Laxalt have a long history together. The pair were roommates during their days at Naval training school, and both spent time in the Navy Judge Advocate General’s (JAG) Corps in the mid-2000s, before they both entered politics.
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Last year, as Laxalt ran for the Senate in battleground Nevada as the GOP nominee with an endorsement of former President Donald Trump, DeSantis visited the state to campaign with his friend. Laxalt narrowly lost his bid to defeat Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto.
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The super PAC was founded early last month by Ken Cuccinelli, the former Virginia attorney general and 2013 gubernatorial nominee who later served as acting deputy homeland security director during the last two years of the Trump administration.
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Super PAC officials told Fox News that his role as the group’s founder continues and that there are no changes to his role or responsibilities.
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Word of the moves at Never Back Down first came from a senior adviser with Trump's 2024 White House campaign. Chris LaCavita took to social media on Friday evening to spotlight what he called a "campaign shakeup" at the super PAC.
While DeSantis remains on the 2024 sidelines, he’s expected to launch a presidential campaign sometime after the end of Florida’s legislative session, which concludes next month. But behind the scenes, he’s already made plenty of moves toward launching a campaign, including beefing up staff in Tallahassee. And in recent weeks, he’s made campaign-style stops in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, the first three states to vote in the GOP presidential nominating calendar.
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Most public opinion polls in the burgeoning GOP presidential nomination race show DeSantis in second place, trailing only Trump, with everyone else in the field of actual and potential contenders in single digits.
Trump, who launched his third White House bid in November, has repeatedly targeted DeSantis for months.
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Last weekend, Never Back Down launched its first TV ad, a spot that targeted Trump, which ran on "Fox News Sunday."
And this past week, the super PAC started running a positive commercial about DeSantis.
On Thursday, the group went up with mailers in the early-voting nominating states, explaining why DeSantis should be the next Republican nominee.
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The super PAC took another shot at Trump on Saturday, "offering Trump financial assistance to help him leave Florida and move to his beloved California, so he can be close to his good buddy @GavinNewsom."
The attacks from Never Back Down come in the wake a full court press from MAGA Inc., the top super PAC backing Trump, to target DeSantis.
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A recent ad by MAGA Inc., titled "Pudding Fingers," which attacked DeSantis on Social Security and Medicare and mocked the Florida governor for allegedly once eating pudding with his fingers, grabbed plenty of national attention.
Super PACs, also known as "independent expenditure-only committees," can legally raise unlimited sums of money from corporations, unions, associations and individuals, and spend unlimited sums to support or oppose political candidates. Unlike traditional PACs, they are prohibited under long-standing federal rules from either coordinating or contributing directly to a candidate or their campaign.