The candidates proliferate – but Donald Trump, running both as former president and insurgent, is far ahead of them

Donald Trump has an excess of companions in the race for the Republican nomination for 2024, but a paucity of rivals. The quantity of candidates in the presidential primary so far appears in inverse relationship to the threat they pose to him. The main question prompted by several recent declarees is not how they might win or what they might offer, but simply “why?” (Mike Pence, Chris Christie), or even “who?” (Perry Johnson).

No one can predict what will happen in this race, and upsets do happen. Large fields and long shots positioning politicians for a future bid or the vice-presidential slot on the ticket are nothing new in primaries. Nor are improbable, often self-funded entrants. But the current flurry of activity – Mr Pence, former New Jersey governor Mr Christie and North Dakota’s governor Doug Burgum all announced runs this week – seems to be prompted less by the belief that Mr Trump is beatable than by the belief that Ron DeSantis isn’t the man to beat him. The Florida governor surged in polls after winning by a landslide in the midterms, while Trump-backed candidates fell short. It did not last.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Nursery trainer complains of racist abuse after Tory MP calls work ‘brainless’

Liz Pemberton says she has received offensive emails after John Hayes criticised…

Liz Truss plan to cut £11bn in Whitehall waste ‘ludicrous’

Unions and experts attack Tory leadership candidate’s proposals for civil service savings…

Tory MPs at risk of losing seats allowed to stand in other constituencies

Several MPs who had shock wins in 2019 will be able to…

Falklands cleared of nearly all landmines, 38 years on from war

Tens of thousands mines and bombs removed as part of UK-funded programme…