2024 Election
The 2024 Presidential Election will be the polar opposite of 2020. In 2024 we see a long list of Republican candidates as we saw a flood of Democrat candidates in 2020. Donald Trump is the early 2024 Republican front runner by a large margin. But, given the 3 (maybe more to come) indictments, the 'never Trumper' crowd in the Republican party, and growing list of challengers; Gov. Ron DeSantis, former Gov. Asa Hutchinson, former Gov. Chris Christie, Gov. Doug Burgum, Larry Elder, former VP Mike Pence, former Gov. Nikki Haley, Perry Johnson, Sen. Tim Scott, and Vivek Ramaswamy. The 2024 Democrat field, is President Joe Biden and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Election day is November 5, 2024. The first primary date is currently Feb 3rd in SC, though Iowa is still trying to maintain its first in the nation primary status. 2024 primary dates. The Gallup Polls on 2024 presidential preferences and issue. Real Clear Politics latest election polls. Election Integrity Scorecard by state. 2024 Presidential Election Interactive Map

Joe Manchin: Our energy policy is a success. President Biden should be proud.

3/19/24
from The Washington Post,
3/18/24:

I’m going to do something you probably haven’t heard me do much in the past three years: I want to congratulate President Biden for the record-breaking energy production we are seeing in America today. The United States is producing more oil, gas and renewable energy than ever before. We are exporting more fossil fuel energy than we import. Our country has never been more energy-independent than we are today.

This is something to celebrate. ....You won’t hear about our historic energy production on TV, on social media, at Democratic campaign events — or from many administration aides. ...as energy leaders from across the world gather this week in Houston for the annual CERAWeek conference, I bet the rhetoric from White House officials in attendance will be muted.

To me and millions of voters, all of this is something to celebrate — from the mountaintops of West Virginia, where we have seen a natural gas boom, to the wind farms in Iowa, the oil fields in Texas and the solar farms in Arizona. This is the all-of-the-above strategy in action, showing results. But it seems some of the president’s radical advisers in the White House are so worried about angering climate activists that they refuse to speak up about these accomplishments. The result is that a president who was elected as a centrist is being dragged further and further to the left.

I urge Biden to join me in celebrating America’s energy accomplishments and recommit to working in a bipartisan way with Congress to build upon that success this year. Our achievements are worthy of celebration, but there is more work to be done.

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