Ask for cash seems to come from the governor’s office
One corner of the envelope that arrived Saturday has the governor’s signature above “46th governor of Florida.” The other corner has his picture. It all looks very official.
A return address on the lick side, however, shows it was sent by Laxalt for Senate in the Nevada race and the letter from Ron DeSantis inside says Adam Lexalt‘s campaign also paid for it. Lexalt, a former Trump campaign chair who challenged the election victory by Joe Biden, is running against Democrat Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto.
“I think you understand the wreck the Biden-Schumer Democrats have made across America,” starts the missive, which was sent to Republican voters. “While I’ve fought their madness from the Governor’s Mansion here in Florida, the act is that we need more conservative fighters in Washington who can stand up t the radical left’s ‘woke’ agenda from the halls of Congress.
Read related: Gov. Ron DeSantis’ first TV ad is lazy; we want to hear real letters (hate mail)
“I am proud to support Adam Laxal’s campaign to flip Nevada, take back the Senate, and promote an agenda of freedom again over the liberal nonsense the Biden-Schumer Democrats have pushed for the last two years.”
The letter comes with a “pledge of support,” asking for contributions to the Laxalt campaign in one of the most closely-watched races nationally that could decide control of the U.S. Senate for the next two years.
What? Can’t Laxalt find people in Nevada to support him?
It’s sort of expected that DeSantis — who acts like he’s already won his re-election — would stomp for others as he flexes his national profile for what many say will be a 2024 presidential run. But the way this was sent makes it seem like it’s official state business. At least the elderly Republican voter who received this one thought so.
Read related: ‘State of the State’ shows Ron DeSantis’ state of mind is not really on Florida
She also didn’t know that Laxalt was a key proponent of denying the legitimacy of the 2020 election, which we all know led to the Jan. 6 siege on the capitol, an attempted coup de etat. The former attorney general in Nevada spearheaded several legal challenges to the election results, which were all thrown out for lack of evidence, and says Jan. 6 was no big deal.
And he’s still denying.
“There’s no question they rigged the election,” Laxalt said on a conservative podcast in August of last year. And as recently as February, he was quoted as saying “We know the Democrats changed our election.”
If Ron DeSantis had his way, Congress would be packed with people who would have stopped the peaceful transition of power in 2020. Floridians have a chance to stop him in a couple of weeks so he can’t help people like Laxalt anymore.