Key players in Rick Perry’s campaign are starting to see the writing on the wall spelling doom to the former Texas governor’s presidential prospects.
The Perry campaign’s New Hampshire political director Dante Vitagliano became the latest staffer to step down after he announced late Tuesday that he plans to join Ohio Gov. John Kasich’s team instead.
It seems the only news Perry’s campaign is generating these days has been a series of unflattering headlines about staffers defecting to competing campaigns. Just last week Perry’s campaign co-chair in Iowa, Karen Fesler, jumped ship to join former Sen. Rick Santorum’s team. Before that his other co-chair Sam Clovis stepped down to join Donald Trump. Perry’s team in Iowa has since been whittled down to one paid staffer, while in South Carolina, Perry staffers were kicked off of the payroll and asked to continue working for free.
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The mass departures leave the campaign hobbling forward with a bare-bones staff as Perry’s fundraising coffers run dry. All that’s left to save him now is the Super PAC supporting him, Opportunity and Freedom PAC, to fill in the gaps with the more than $17 million raised as of mid-July.
Austin Barbour, senior advisor to the Super PAC, said the group deployed a field team of a few dozen members in Iowa this week in a broad ground game, working the phones and going door-to-door, all without a key player in the canvassing — the candidate himself.
“It’s something that’s never been done before at the presidential campaign level,” Barbour said.
Super PAC operatives are allowed to raise unfettered sums of cash while shielding the identity of donors, but by law, they are not allowed to coordinate with the campaigns they support. The Perry campaign’s staffing struggles launches the role of Super PACs even further into uncharted territory as these third party groups take on more and more of the duties and resources traditionally left up to the candidate’s operation. Perry’s primary presence in key early states will now be operated almost entirely by outside groups.
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“There’s nothing in the rule book that says you can’t do it. Obviously we’re going to do everything the law allows us to do to support Gov. Perry,” Barbour said. “And Iowa is our main focus right now.”
Perry’s first two months of campaigning has been light-years away from what he saw four years ago when he rose to the top of polls almost immediately after he announced his candidacy. He came out as a three-term governor with a strong record in a major state only before stumbling in a series of unforced errors. He later backed out of the race just ahead of the South Carolina primaries.









