Few would deny Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) is popular among the masses. Influencers on Twitter will speak favorably of him, and some are even acknowledged by his campaign Press Secretary Christina Pushaw.
According to the Daily Beast's Jake Lahut, this cannot possibly be because Gov. DeSantis is just that popular.
"Scoop โ A look at the Ron DeSantis digital strategy and his A-team of influencers. Top flak Christina Pushaw has been recruiting conservative content creators/media types and making a pitch (which she denies) either IRL or through intermediaries," he tweets.
Scoop โ A look at the Ron DeSantis digital strategy and his A-team of influencers.
Top flak Christina Pushaw has been recruiting conservative content creators/media types and making a pitch (which she denies) either IRL or through intermediaries.https://t.co/DPwEABpWjp
— Jake Lahut (@JakeLahut) January 25, 2023
Instead, as his tweet suggests, Lahut insinuates that the DeSantis office has "quietly recruited a network of conservative social media influencers as part of a broader attempt to circumvent the mainstream press and appeal directly to GOP primary voters nationwide."
This is somehow supposed to be a bad thing.
Lahut describes how three influencers (anonymous, of course), were supposedly approached by Pushaw (who had previously been accused of being a "secret foreign agent" by Charlie Crist) to tweet in favor of DeSantis for pay. Never mind the fact that Democrats and liberal groups do the same thing on platforms such as TikTok.
Naturally, Twitter is quick to call him out.
Pushaw herself responds to the article by asking "where is the evidence of this supposed "Pitch"? You have 3 anonymous sources. Zero receipts. Because it does not exist. Who is your editor?" When another user responds confirming what Pushaw says, she replies that "I've never done that and have no reason to ask anyone. People contact me often to ask how they can help get the governor's message out because they like his policies. I am grateful for any help, whether it's from anonymous accounts or well-known media personalities."
Where is the evidence of this supposed "Pitch"? You have 3 anonymous sources. Zero receipts. Because it does not exist. Who is your editor?
— Christina Pushaw ๐ ๐บ๐ธ (@ChristinaPushaw) January 25, 2023
I've never done that and have no reason to ask anyone. People contact me often to ask how they can help get the governor's message out because they like his policies. I am grateful for any help, whether it's from anonymous accounts or well-known media personalities.
— Christina Pushaw ๐ ๐บ๐ธ (@ChristinaPushaw) January 25, 2023
Three influencers who are mentioned by name in Lahut's article are Caleb Hull, John Cardillo, and Jack Murphy. One user jokingly says "BREAKING: Campaign hires staff." Pushaw responds that "None of the people mentioned here are campaign staff. Nobody connected to the governor nor myself pays anyone to tweet or attend events. Governor DeSantis has organic support because he leads on conservative policies that people like. 19.4!," referring to the large margin by which DeSantis beat Charlie Crist in the midterm election for Governor.
None of the people mentioned here are campaign staff. Nobody connected to the governor nor myself pays anyone to tweet or attend events. Governor DeSantis has organic support because he leads on conservative policies that people like. 19.4!
— Christina Pushaw ๐ ๐บ๐ธ (@ChristinaPushaw) January 25, 2023
Similarly, State Rep. Alex Andrade (R-2) mockingly replies to Lahut with "BREAKING: Politician we donโt like has a sECrEt ARmY of iNfluEnCeRSโฆ" while including a picture of TikTok influencer Benito Skinner, who worked with the Biden White House to create a comedic video in 2021.
BREAKING: Politician we donโt like has a sECrEt ARmY of iNfluEnCeRSโฆ https://t.co/bUKjtDJraF pic.twitter.com/Mj6nF1L5Xh
— Alex Andrade (@RAlexAndradeFL) January 25, 2023