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DES MOINES, Iowa β With just four months to go until the Iowa caucuses, nearly the entire field of Republican White House contenders is back this weekend in the state that leads off the GOP presidential nominating calendar.
The presidential candidates are speaking Saturday evening at the Iowa Faith and Freedom Coalition’s annual fall banquet, as they each make their case to a large and influential crowd of social conservative leaders, activists, and Evangelical voters, who play an outsized role in Hawkeye State Republican politics.
“Labor Day is over. Kids are back in school and people are starting to really tune in,” longtime Iowa based Republican strategist and communicator Jimmy Centers said.
Pointing to last month’s Iowa State Fair, where all but one contender in the large field of Republican presidential candidates courted voters, Centers noted that “the state fair was when people started to wake up and realized that the caucus was coming.Β
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Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a 2024 Republican presidential candidate, joins Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds at her ‘fair side chats’ at the Iowa State Fair, on August 12, 2023 in Des Moines, IowaΒ (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)
Veteran Iowa Republican operative and consultant Nicole Schlinger highlighted that “once Labor Day has passed, school has started and the weather starts to turn, thatβs when peoplesβ minds start turning to elections and people get more serious about vetting the candidates in terms of making a decision.”Β
With the clock quickly ticking towards the start of the 2024 Republican primary and caucus calendar, former President Donald Trump remains the commanding front-runner for his party’s nomination, as he makes his third straight White House run.Β
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And his historic four criminal indictments β including two for allegedly trying to overturn his 2020 election loss to President Biden β appear to have only strengthened his support among likely Republican primary voters.
Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump waves to supporters at the Iowa Pork Producers tent during a visit to the Iowa State Fair, Saturday, Aug. 12, 2023, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall) (APΒ )
The latest Fox News national survey in the GOP nomination race, conducted Sept. 9-12 and released on Thursday, pointed to Trump expanding his already enormous lead over the rest of the field.
But while still towering over his rivals, Trump’s lead in the latest surveys in Iowa, as well as New Hampshire and South Carolina, two other crucial early voting states in the Republican nominating calendar, is not as overwhelming.
“Itβs closer in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina that it is nationally, but itβs not close,” said David Kochel, a longtime Republican consultant and veteran of numerous GOP presidential campaigns in Iowa and nationally.

Former ambassador and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, a 2024 Republican presidential candidate, holds a agriculture policy community discussion, on Sept. 15, 2023 in Ground Mound, Iowa.Β (Fox News – Deirdre Heavey)
“These things do break late. Thereβs a lot of stuff we havenβt seen or heard yet. Whether itβs Trump’s trials, which I donβt think are going to move any numbers against him. Whether itβs future debates. Whether itβs something we canβt foresee now,” Kochel noted. “The doorβs still open but itβs not as wide open as it was.”
Centers, a presidential campaign veteran in Iowa who also served as communications director to then-Gov. Terry Brandstad and current Gov. Kim Reynolds, noted that “Trumpβs numbers arenβt budging.”
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“At some point the rest of the field has to make a stronger and more compelling argument as they why them. Why are we changing horses from the former president. Heβs been indicted four times, but heβs only getting stronger,” Centers stressed. “They have to speak more directly to that point and start doing it soon.”
Pointing to evangelical voters in Iowa, Kochel noted that they tend “to move as a groupβ¦ and they move late.”

Trump is one of the handful of GOP presidential candidates who won’t be attending Saturday’s Faith and Freedom Coalition cattle call, although the former president returns to Iowa next week.
Schlinger, who’s well-connected to the social conservative community, said that Trump’s “track record on issues concerning life is extremely good,” and that “itβs not surprising that there hasnβt been much change” when it comes to his large double-digit lead in the Iowa polls.
But she added “I think thereβs a path open for another candidate or two to perform well and exceed expectations in Iowaβ¦ The doorβs open but someone needs to walk through it and that hasnβt happened yet.”
But the strategists all stressed that now’s the time for Trump’s rivals to make a move.
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“This is where the rubber meets the road. Weβre past Labor Day. Weβre into debate season,” Kochel highlighted. “If youβre not firing on all cylinders now, and you donβt have the money to see your way through New Hampshire, itβs best to step aside and get out of this thing, so we can really determine who might be able to take Trump on one-on-one.”

The Iowa Caucuses display at the State Historical Museum of Iowa, on Jan. 15, 2020 (Fox News)
And Centers noted that “this is not a primary. It takes organization. Campaigns need to be holding events, using those events to build an organization, and then follow up with those folks that theyβve recruited, either through door knocking, through phone banking, to build out a robust organization.”
“It doesnβt build itself. If youβre not starting it now, itβs too late,” he stressed.