Trump heads to California GOP event two days after skipping debate
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1970-01-01 08:00
A California Republican showdown featuring Donald Trump is coming -- two days after the former president skipped his party's second 2024 primary debate in Simi Valley.

A California Republican showdown featuring Donald Trump is coming -- two days after the former president skipped his party's second 2024 primary debate in Simi Valley.

Trump is among the 2024 GOP contenders who will be in Anaheim on Friday for the California GOP's fall convention. The former president, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott are set to speak to the party faithful Friday. Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy is scheduled to follow them Saturday.

California, with its 54 electoral votes, is reliably Democratic in general elections. But the state has a significant role to play in the Republican primary: It's a delegate-rich contest that takes place on Super Tuesday -- the March 5 slate of primaries that could be decisive in the race for the GOP nomination.

The California Republican Party's executive committee voted this summer to adopt a delegate plan that could be a boon for the Trump campaign. If a candidate receives more than 50% of the vote in next year's primary, that candidate would win all of the state's delegates, the largest haul available in any state in the GOP presidential race.

It's similar to the system California used in 2020, but a departure from what the state has done in certain other past primaries, when each congressional district awarded three delegates -- allowing candidates to strategically target specific regions, rather than face the daunting cost of competing across the massive state.

Trump's trip to California comes near the end of his busiest stretch of campaigning since launching his 2024 presidential bid.

The former president held a rally in South Carolina on Monday, visited autoworkers in Michigan on Wednesday, travels to California on Friday and is set to campaign in Iowa on Sunday.

The one stop missing from his travel schedule: the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, where seven GOP rivals participated Wednesday night in the second debate of the primary.

A 538/Washington Post/Ipsos poll released Thursday found that GOP primary voters who tuned into the debate graded DeSantis' onstage performance best but that, overall, the showdown did little to change their perspectives.

Rivals struggle to break through

The appearances in California for DeSantis, Scott and Ramaswamy come as Trump's primary rivals compete in what appears to be an increasingly futile battle to emerge as the party's lone alternative to the former president.

DeSantis and Trump are scheduled to appear hours apart Friday in Anaheim. But the convention represents an opportunity for the Florida governor, whose second-place position in GOP primary polling has grown shakier in recent weeks, to court the same crowd as the former president.

DeSantis criticized Trump's decision to skip the debate Wednesday night and continued to call the former president "missing in action" the following day.

"He's had a lot to say about me on social media," DeSantis told Fox News. "It's one thing to do it behind the keyboard. Step up onstage and do it to my face. I'm ready for it. You used to say I was a great governor. Now, all of a sudden you're saying the opposite."

DeSantis also floated the idea of a one-on-one debate with Trump moderated by Fox News host Sean Hannity.

Scott, who was largely sidelined at the first Republican debate, sought to command more of the spotlight Wednesday night -- criticizing fellow South Carolinian former Gov. Nikki Haley, as well as Ramaswamy.

"I think it's really important for us to paint a contrast between where I am on some of the important issues and where others are," Scott said on CNN afterward. "Frankly, Republican primary voters, want to know what the differences are."

Ramaswamy, who was targeted onstage Wednesday by several rivals, laid out the next phase of his campaign in a post-debate interview with CNN's Dana Bash, saying he hoped voters will get to know "a different side of me."

"We're not going to be doing media frenzies or anything going forward. I'll talk to everybody, left-wing, right-wing media, doesn't matter. But I'm going to focus more on what is day one going to look like," he said.

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