Donald Trump appears alarmingly capable of being elected

Donald Trump appears alarmingly capable of being elected



Donald Trump looks terrifyingly electable

WHAT MIGHTY armour⁣ Donald ⁤Trump wears. It is undented ​by a​ post-presidential impeachment ⁤trial, ⁢four ongoing criminal trials for 91‌ alleged felonies and all the attacks of the ⁣Republican challengers for⁣ the party’s nomination ‌in 2024.⁣ Mr Trump’s ‍hold‍ over his party looks ironclad. His challengers appear quixotic as the first ballots of the primary,⁣ to be cast in Iowa ⁤in January, draw nearer.‌ Shy to criticise the popular former president, his ‍rivals⁣ have repeatedly argued that Mr Trump would be ​unable to defeat President Joe Biden. Democrats,​ who refused to even entertain the idea of persuading the octogenarian⁣ president to stand aside, seemed to share this ⁣analysis.⁢ Both‌ have gravely⁣ underestimated Mr Trump. He has a considerable chance of being elected president—fair and square—in one year’s time on the first ⁤Tuesday⁣ in ​November 2024. If ⁤the election were to be held tomorrow,⁤ he ⁣would even ‍be considered the ‍favourite.

Even‌ among Biden fans, doubt is creeping ⁤in. Over the weekend the New York Times released a series of polls conducted with Siena College in the ​six swing states that will almost certainly decide the ‌result of the 2024 elections (see map). To sleepwalking Democrats, ⁤who believe⁢ that Mr Trump has been rendered unelectable after his shameless attempt to overturn the previous election, the results were ‍like ‌a bucket⁢ of cold water in‌ the face.

In‌ Arizona, Georgia,⁤ Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania they found Mr Trump to be leading among registered voters by ⁢a margin ​of at​ least four points. They found a lead ‌for Mr Biden only in Wisconsin, by⁢ a margin ⁤of two points. Below the disappointing toplines,‍ the crosstabs contained⁤ more worrying findings. In ‍these critical states 42% of Hispanic and 22% of African-American voters said they would vote for Mr‌ Trump, which,‍ if true, would⁤ mark the collapse of the⁢ minority support that⁣ Democrats had⁤ relied on for decades.

2023-11-07 07:14:02
Post‌ from www.economist.com
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