Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s presidential campaign has gone on air with its second television ad in Iowa. The 30-second ad-spot features Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds who endorsed DeSantis for the Republican presidential nomination at a sparsely attended event last week. The ad is a part of a $2 million campaign blitz announced by DeSantis in October, despite his campaign committee only have about $5 million cash-on-hand at the time.
The Iowa ad-spot has struck some political observers, including The National Pulse’s editor-in-chief Raheem Kassam, as being some what ‘off’. The clips featuring Govs. DeSantis and Reynolds in the video were pulled from the Iowa endorsement event, which appears to only have attracted about 150 people. In the ad, however, the audio alludes to far larger and enthused crowd one might see at a full-scale campaign rally.
Attempting to portray a greater degree of support and enthusiasm than there is, the DeSantis campaign appears to have inserted ‘canned’ crowd audio from an unrelated event. After comparing the relevant ad clips with actual video from Reynolds’s endorsement of DeSantis, Kassam was able to confirm that the Florida Governor had indeed substituted the crowd noise from the original.
Did a quick comparison of the ad vs the original audio. Yep. They’ve added canned applause and cheers lmao watch… pic.twitter.com/gpzdnu6SgR
— Raheem. (@RaheemKassam) November 15, 2023
The National Pulse has previously reported the political relationship between DeSantis and Reynolds is more complicated than what was previously known. Reynolds, who has served in leadership roles at the Republican Governors Association (RGA), appears to have directed an unusual amount of campaign funds to DeSantis’s 2022 Florida Governor re-election campaign. Some of that money was later transferred from his gubernatorial PAC to the pro-DeSantis presidential Never Back Down PAC. Gov. DeSantis’s decision to redirect state pension money to financial firms that made large contributions to the RGA raises additional questions.