Who would be better for Joe Biden to run against in 2024? Meaning who would be weaker and more likely to lose? It's a hard question to explain, but the idea is... should Democrats (and many Independents, and even some GOP) be rooting for T**** to get the nomination because he is more likely to lose?
Or would a T**** lite candidate like DeSantis, with no national record or personality, be easier to beat? Or is there a plausable other candidate who could win the nomination and get wiped out? Can't see Tim Scott, Vivek Ramaswamy, Chris Christie, Asa Hutchinson or lol Dr. Shiva getting anywhere near it.
It's just a fun poll and a place to discuss how best to crash the GOP to lose its fourth election in a row and help them keep up their "epic losing streak". Democrats have a shot to crash the GOP presidental nominee, and take the down ballots down with them. T**** is really good at that. In PA, they are already nervous as heck about it.
Here were the results of the previous poll, which was "an inartfully collated, defectively stapled, and misordered collection of pages."
New Poll is: Which Republican is More Likely to Be the Nominee & Lose to Biden: Trump or Other GOP Candidate?
- Poll Results.JPG (39 KiB) Viewed 624 times
Note: This topic isn't meant to be about Biden, his health, whether he should be running again, etc... that ship has sailed. Now it's about playing the cards we're dealt. At least, that's the idea.
Concerns about Biden’s reelection swamped by fear of Trump in swing voter focus groups
“Whatever the step above panicked is, that is what I feel about Trump,” said one of the voters, who picked Trump in 2016 then Biden in 2020
By Michael Scherer, Emily Guskin and Scott Clement May 22, 2023 at 5:00 a.m. EDT
Nearly all of the 15 gathered swing state voters described feeling negative emotions when they saw President Biden on a television or computer screens — “confused,” “concern,” “worry,” “sad,” “sorry” and even “panicked.” Every single one said they wished Biden and his old Republican foe Donald Trump were not running for reelection. Several offered dire assessments of Biden’s mental and physical capacities, calling him too old or speculating about the possibility of dementia.
But as the focus group moderator steered the conversation to the possibility of a Biden rematch next year with Trump, the mood clearly shifted among these voters, who had all cast a ballot for Trump in 2016 and then Biden in 2020. Nine of the 15 said they would vote again for Biden, three said they would go back to Trump and three said they would either not vote or find a third-party candidate.
Even a 32-year-old recruiting manager from Phoenix, who had described the panic she felt watching Biden, came back into the fold. “Whatever the step above panicked is, that is what I feel about Trump,” said Felicia, a registered Democrat.
The results of two focus groups conducted for The Washington Post by research firms Engagious and Sago echoed research that Democratic strategists have been doing in recent months in preparation for the 2024 presidential campaign. Public polling has shown clear majorities of the American people — including many Democratic-leaning voters — are concerned about Biden’s health and do not want him to run again. But in both focus groups and polling, concerns about another Trump presidency are even greater, leaving Biden in a much better position if the two men meet in a rematch.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics ... us-groups/
- GOP Losers.JPG (221.69 KiB) Viewed 624 times
- 2022 Election Losers.JPG (52.67 KiB) Viewed 624 times
Here's why I brought this back (and since it's a holiday weekend in the USA)... MAGAts think it's cute to get more on board the more T**** gets indicted, loses in court, or otherwise brings shame on America. JMart just published this long story:
Are The Anti-Trump GOP Forces Starting to Implode?
A mission-control breakdown for DeSantis and smooth launch for Scott bode ill for those hoping to thwart the former president.
‘It turned out to be a mistake’: Botched rollout puts DeSantis on his heels
By JONATHAN MARTIN 05/26/2023 04:30 AM EDT
Jonathan Martin is POLITICO’s politics bureau chief and senior political columnist. His reported column chronicles the inside conversation and big-picture trends shaping politics.
NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. — Will this go down as the week that the grand plan to deny Donald Trump the nomination fell apart? For months, high-level Republican lawmakers, donors and strategists eager to block Trump have described, in separate conversations with me, an endgame to the presidential primary.
When it becomes clear in the early state and national polling who is consolidating support, the most influential figures with ties to the lagging candidates will stage a sort of political intervention and tell them it’s time to quit and rally to the strongest alternative to Trump. Such a plot always struck me as a bit far-fetched, for starters because politicians aren’t known for putting party ahead of self. Yet the appetite among elite Republicans to move past Trump was and is so immense I thought there could at least be a do-the-right-thing effort.
Yet as spring turns to summer, traditionally the period when presidential hopefuls consider whether they’re gaining any traction, this vision seems more fantasy than strategy. In fact, if Trump does emerge as the GOP standard bearer next year we will look back on this week to grasp why, just like in 2016, he was able to take advantage of a divided opposition.
There was Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ muffed launch, the fitting, sad trombone conclusion to a preannouncement period in which his stock sagged, at least among political insiders. Nobody was more thrilled about DeSantis’ decision to begin his campaign on a balky Twitter stream than his current and prospective Republican rivals: Trump sees his fellow Floridian as weaker today than at any point since last year’s midterm, and the other non-Trumps are hardly going to step aside anytime soon, even after DeSantis’ eye-popping first fundraising haul.
And if DeSantis needs any more evidence that his giving the Heisman to the press has earned him only bad will, well, he can just take a look at the headlines from a range of outlets. Don’t discount this: Complain as they may about the media, Republican primary voters are just as susceptible to the tides of coverage as their Democratic counterparts.
More:
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/ ... e-00098934
I'm confident the GOP will fu*k it up again, they are doing beautifully so far. This is just to add a few points to the tally.