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

The 2024 Presidential Election Comes Down to Only Seven States

3/22/24
from The Wall Street Journal,
3/22/24:

America is home to 336 million people across 50 states and the District of Columbia. Yet the 2024 presidential race will be decided by seven states with less than a fifth of the U.S. population. These battlegrounds will get almost all the attention. How most states will vote is already fairly certain. Political pros expect Donald Trump to take 24 states and 219 electoral votes; Joe Biden can likely count on 20 states and the District of Columbia with 226 electoral votes. (This assumes the same outcome as in 2020 in the two states that award votes by congressional district—Mr. Trump carries Maine’s rural Second District and Mr. Biden Nebraska’s Omaha-area Second District.) That leaves seven key states with 93 votes: Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Mr. Trump carried all of them except Nevada in 2016. In 2020, he took North Carolina by 1.34 points; Mr. Biden carried the other six by between 0.23 and 2.78. To prevail, Mr. Biden needs 45 of these states’ electoral votes; Mr. Trump, 51. Reaching either threshold will require winning at least three of the states.

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