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

Trump Bets on J.D. Vance

7/15/24
from The Gray Area:
7/15/24:

I was not happy with former President Trump's choice of JD Vance as his VP pick. Not because I don't like him, because I do, very much. But because I think someone else might have offered a plus to the ticket, the way Pence did in 2016. But, not in the same way. This time he needs to counter the false political narratives that he is a racist and against women. He had several very good candidates who would mute those false narratives that i wish he had chosen.

This opinion on The Wall Street Journal mirrors my position very well.

from The Wall Street Journal,
7/15/24:

His choice of the 39-year-old Senator reinforces his base, rather than appealing to a broader coalition.

Vice President J.D. Vance? Donald Trump on Monday named the first-term Ohio Senator as his 2024 running mate, and it’s a curious choice: Mr. Vance isn’t from a swing state, could help boost the GOP ticket’s appeal in Midwest battleground states, and he won’t do much to broaden the MAGA coalition. He opposes free-market policies Mr. Trump will need for economic renewal. And would Mr. Vance be ready to lead the country if the worst happened?

The contrast with his last VP is impossible to miss. When he ran for President in 2016, many Republicans didn’t trust Mr. Trump, a political novice and ex-Democrat. One way Mr. Trump addressed this liability, on both politics and policy, was by selecting Mike Pence, an experienced Reaganite who’d spent 12 years in the House and four as Indiana Governor. Mr. Pence helped Mr. Trump win the White House and then staff his Administration. Mr. Vance could hardly be more different. A Vice President must be ready to sit down at the big desk at a moment’s notice, and a scary reminder came when Mr. Trump survived an assassination attempt by perhaps an inch. Mr. Vance is intelligent and overcame a difficult upbringing that testifies to his work ethic. But the Senator is a 39-year-old who was sworn into his first public office in 2023. Remember how Republicans poked Barack Obama for seeking the Presidency after a mere two years in the Senate?

Mr. Trump’s choice also suggests he’s so confident in his electoral prospects that he didn’t need a running mate to reach swing voters. Perhaps he’s right, though we suspect the White House is relieved he didn’t choose a more experienced and reassuring political figure.

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