Looks like Biden/Trump replay in 2024

Nothing much has changed

Washington Watch

A 2024 Biden-Trump presidential campaign rematch may not be the contest that most Americans want. But in all likelihood, it will be the contest they’ll get.

President Joseph Biden’s situation is complicated. Polls show that Democrats have a favorable attitude of the president and approve of his job performance. But, largely due to concerns about Biden’s age, the polls also show that nearly one-half of his own party would like someone else to be their standard bearer in 2024. That might have posed a problem for the president’s reelection, except for four factors.

First, as Biden has had a successful and drama-free two and a half years in office, no serious Democrat is willing to challenge his reelection. Second, the most likely successor to Biden might be Vice President Kamala Harris, but her favorable ratings are so low that Democrats see Biden, despite his age, as a much safer bet in a general election contest against any Republican. Third, other Democrats who might have emerged as serious Biden alternatives all come from the same centrist wing of the party, meaning any challenge to the incumbent successful president would be based on personal, not policy, differences, and would be frowned upon by the party establishment.

The final factor that makes a challenge unlikely is the way the Democratic Party leadership has changed its presidential primary schedule to better suit Biden’s chances to win. A few months ago, the Democratic National Committee, the party’s governing body, voted to end decades of Iowa and New Hampshire being the first states to hold contests in the election process, replacing them with South Carolina, which is now mandated to go first.

Both Iowa and New Hampshire have long been viewed as problematic by the Democratic establishment. These two states have frequently catapulted insurgent candidates into the national spotlight, upsetting or making it more difficult for the establishment’s favorites to coast to victory. This is what the anti-Vietnam candidacy of Eugene McCarthy did to Lyndon Johnson in 1972; what Ted Kennedy’s progressive challenge did to Carter in 1980; what the charismatic Barack Obama did to Hilary Clinton in 2008; and what Bernie Sanders’ progressive populist campaign almost did to Clinton in 2016.

With Iowa and New Hampshire—both of which handed Biden defeats in 2020—out of the way and replaced by South Carolina which Biden easily won in 2020 and proved to be a turning point in his campaign, the party establishment feels confident that they have paved the way for a Biden repeat in 2024.

At this point, 2024 looks like a replay of 2020, but with a difference. Both candidates are older. Biden has become more cautious and less gregarious than he was in the past. But he continues to appeal to a broad sector of the electorate with both his record and his “working class Joe from Scranton” appeal. Trump, on the other hand, is still harboring the delusional and dangerous notion that the last election was fraudulent and using that grudge to incite his faithful. His behaviour will guarantee that 2024 will be even uglier and potentially more dangerous than the 2020 contest.

Even with these factors in Biden’s favo4r, his current polling numbers aren’t strong. In national matchups against a variety of Democratic opponents, Biden rarely breaks 40 percent.  While the Democrat rank and file may have reservations, their concerns have been overruled by their party’s establishment.

The Trump story is almost the exact reverse. As was the case in 2016— when Donald Trump won the Republican presidential nomination and went on to win the White House— the GOP establishment appears uncomfortable with his 2024 bid to return to office. But their efforts to find an alternative are being upended by the powerful hold Trump continues to have over a substantial plurality of the Republican rank and file.

Since Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’ decisive reelection victory in November 2022, the GOP establishment have been hoping to elevate him as their standard bearer. But not only has DeSantis continued to lag in the polls, in the last two weeks more than one-half of Florida’s Republican congressional delegation have publicly endorsed Trump’s candidacy, with most of that state’s remaining members of Congress not yet endorsing anyone. Republican elected officials are eager to support Trump simply because they fear the wrath of alienating both him and his fervent supporters.

Trump’s base is firm in its attachment to him. He can be indicted or exposed in any number of scandals— financial, sexual, or otherwise, including inciting violent insurrectionary acts by his supporters—  but they continue to be with him, condemning those who attack him whether it’s the media, law enforcement, or Democrats. Trump’s base will even strike out against other Republicans who oppose him, accusing them of traitorous behaviour. Trump once famously said that he could shoot someone in public on New York City’s 5th Avenue and still retain the support of “his people.” He is daily proving that continues to be the case.

Trump’s leadership is a result of not only his cult-like hold over his base, into whose alienation and anger he has so successfully tapped, but also his ruthless and relentless attacks against those who dare to challenge him. And so, as DeSantis’ star fades— in part, as a direct result of Trump’s attacks and the fear other Republican elected officials have of crossing him— though unlikely, a few others may yet emerge as claimants to the throne. But, like 2016, though some of these aspirants may be heralded for a time as the new “flavour of the month,” they will be no luckier than DeSantis.

At this point, there are only two scenarios that would prevent Trump from emerging as the Republican nominee: if he decides to step aside and cast his support for someone else (which is almost inconceivable) or if he is incapacitated and unable to run. If, in the unlikely event, Trump were to lose what would be a bruising primary battle, the victor would emerge bloodied and without the support of many of Trump’s faithful followers.

And so, at this point, 2024 looks like a replay of 2020, but with a difference. Both candidates are older. Biden has become more cautious and less gregarious than he was in the past. But he continues to appeal to a broad sector of the electorate with both his record and his “working class Joe from Scranton” appeal. Trump, on the other hand, is still harboring the delusional and dangerous notion that the last election was fraudulent and using that grudge to incite his faithful. His behaviour will guarantee that 2024 will be even uglier and potentially more dangerous than the 2020 contest.

Dr James J Zogby
Dr James J Zogby
The writer is President, Arab American Institute.

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