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Donald Trump and Joe Biden in 2020 debate. Screenshot photo by Elvert Barnes Photography, from Flickr. Published under Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0).

Can Anyone Beat Biden Or Trump In 2024 Primaries? I&I/TIPP Poll

It’s April but, with just 10 months to go, the clock is ticking down to January when the first two states (Iowa and New Hampshire) pick their favorites for president. The clear favorite for the Democrats is President Joe Biden, and for Republicans, former President Donald Trump. But neither contender can take their lead for granted, the latest I&I/TIPP Poll shows.

Look at the Democrats, for example. Biden is favored by 39% of Democrats and Democrat-leaning voters. That’s a four-point drop from 43% in March, according to the April online I&I/TIPP Poll of 662 Democrats/independents who lean Democrat, taken from March 29-31. The poll has a +/-4.0 percentage point margin of error.

Who’s No. 2? Well, it’s not a person. It’s “Not sure/Someone else,” which received 11% of the responses. The only other “challenger” within even sniffing distance of double digits is Michelle Obama, at 8%, the same reading as March.

What about Vice President Kamala Harris? Unable to reverse her flagging popularity, she actually fell in the latest poll, from 9% backing in March to just 7% in April.

Only Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has increased his tally, going from 3% support to 5% in April, a gain that’s still within the margin of error.

The Democrats’ two progressive possibles, Vermont socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders (7% support) and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren (4%) are little changed from the month before.

A handful of other potential challengers, including Hillary Clinton and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (both at 4%), California Gov. Gavin Newsom (3%), Virginia senator and former vice presidential candidate Tim Kaine and Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar both trail badly at just 2%.

Meanwhile, a number of other possibilities pick up only 1%: New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, and Colorado Gov. Jared Polis.

So while Biden might be slipping somewhat in his overall support, none of the likely challengers in the I&I/TIPP Poll show any real progress in cutting into his overall lead, which is nearly five times his nearest competitors’ total.

In fact, Biden has more support than his next six challengers combined.

As for the Republicans, former Trump dipped a bit to 47% support within his own party, down from 51%, perhaps affected by the media leaks and rumors of his indictment. A total of 456 Republicans/independents who lean Republican answered the GOP primary question. The margin of error is +/-5 percentage points.

His nearest challenger, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, garnered 23% support in April, up a bit from 22% in March. Though it might not seem like a lot, it closed the point gap between him and Trump by 17%.

So DeSantis, at least for now, is clearly in the game. The same can’t be said for the other potential presidential candidates.

Trump’s former Vice President Mike Pence gathered 5% support in our April poll, but that was down from 7% in both March and February. Former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley is in fourth with 4% backing, the same as in March, but up from just 1% in February.

Another former Trump official, ex-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, collects 3% of GOP support. Meanwhile, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie trail at 1%.

Meanwhile, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem and New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu both tallied just a single vote apiece. That’s effectively 0%.

So far, with perhaps the exception of the popular Florida governor DeSantis, the GOP race seems to be shaking out to be Trump vs. everyone else. And right now, Trump wins hands down.

So what could change this picture?

Biden, it is widely agreed, at age 80 is suffering the infirmities of age, including frequent mumbling, lack of mental focus, confusion, trouble walking and stumbling, and now has tight limits imposed on the length of his work days in the White House.

It’s not partisan; it’s even become an issue among Democrats. Biden himself has said that it’s a “legitimate question to ask anybody over 70 years old whether or not they’re fit” to be president.

But age isn’t all. He faces a number of major issues with his presidential performance that could cost him primary votes against a potential challenger: A 6% inflation rate; soaring energy prices; the unraveling of American influence across the globe; renewed challenges from China and Russia; the botched withdrawal from Afghanistan which led to 12 American deaths and left military equipment worth $7 billion in the hands of the Taliban.

And many in his own party criticized Biden’s response to COVID-19, including favoring lockdowns that knocked the wind out of the economy but still let the disease claim hundreds of thousands of people. He has also taken direct shots in the media from liberal economists for the estimated $10 trillion in spending and trillions more added to our debt, now at $31 trillion and rising, during his presidency.

Many members to his left in the party have grown hostile to Biden. So have some in the left-media. A piece in the liberal Atlantic recently argued “The Case For A Primary Challenge To Joe Biden.”

OK, but what about Trump?

It’s clear that DeSantis looms as a major potential challenger. He easily raised a record $218 million last year for his re-election campaign as governor, and his super PAC dragged in another $30 million earlier this year. So, while Trump has the name recognition and strong GOP base support, DeSantis should be well-funded to challenge the former president, should he choose to do so.

As for the rest of the group, it’s highly unlikely that any will be able to knock Trump from his perch as the leading GOP candidate. Even so, it’s not impossible. A recent report on polling trends noted that in the 2016 Republican race, Trump won only 3% support on average in polls taken in the first half of the year before the primaries. That support jumped to 28.7% in the second half of the year.

So, yes, today’s 47% poll support for Trump looks unassailable. And our own February I&I/TIPP Poll found that, by 61% to 23%, Republican-leaning voters want Trump and DeSantis to fight it out during the 2024 GOP primaries. Right now, that looks like what it’ll be.

Based on name recognition and a very respectable track record as president, Trump would seem to have a lock on the nomination. His recent indictment on disputed charges by New York District Attorney Alvin Bragg likely will only solidify Trump’s hold on his base.

Can anyone beat him? At least one former Trump insider says yes.

“There’s one other person who could beat him – which is himself,” former Trump Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney told CNN last year. “Donald Trump is sometimes his own worst enemy when it comes to campaigning.”

I&I/TIPP publishes timely, unique, and informative data each month on topics of public interest. TIPP’s reputation for polling excellence comes from being the most accurate pollster for the past five presidential elections.

Terry Jones is an editor of Issues & Insights. His four decades of journalism experience include serving as national issues editor, economics editor, and editorial page editor for Investor’s Business Daily.

 

 

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Terry Jones

Terry Jones was part of Investor's Business Daily from its inception in 1983, working in a variety of posts, including reporter, economics correspondent, National Issues editor and economics editor. Most recently, from 1996 to 2019, he served as associate editor of the newspaper and deputy editor and editor of IBD's Issues & Insights. His many media appearances include spots on the Larry Kudlow, Bill O’Reilly, Dennis Miller, Dennis Prager, Michael Medved and Glenn Beck shows. He also served as Free Markets columnist for Townhall Magazine, and as a weekly guest on PJTV’s The Front Page. He holds both bachelor's and master's degrees from UCLA, and is an Abraham Lincoln Fellow at the Claremont Institute

16 comments

  • What happened to RFK Jr.? IMO, he is the only half-normal, sane, capable Democrat running today and he is the only one who has officially announced.

    •  “RFK Jr.? IMO, he is the only half-normal, sane, capable Democrat running today”
      That is all very true. And yet RFK Jr makes his living as a personal injury attorney claiming that all vaccines are harmful. No matter your opinion of the Covid jab, the Salk vaccine and many others are life savers.

  • In a sane world Biden would have never even run in 2020. Never accused of being ‘smart’ Biden is a dishonest, corrupt, incompetent buffoon. A serial plagiarist, liar, braggart, grifter, and fraud, Biden is also a truly creepy person with a history of inappropriate touch, hair sniffing, groping, and taking inappropriate showers with his teenage daughter. Today he’s clearly a diminished version of the awful human being he’s been for the last 50 years. He should be kept from the levers of power and, really, anyone who can dog a mirror should be able to beat him.

    The fact that he garners nearly 40% after perhaps the worse Presidential performance in the last century (he basically sucks at everything and then lies about it) should be cause for great concern.

    • Democrats seem to prefer zombie candidates. See for example Sen. John Fetterman (D, PA).

  • Biden would have trouble if anyone decides to run against him in the primaries. He could not successfully debate anyone in the condition he is in.

    • Probably true. Though they will only pitch him softball questions at the beginning.

      • True, but the other candidates would have the opportunity to raise questions and make allegations that Joe would either have to try to answer or ignore and look out of touch.

  • Unless the argument changes, then no, it’s not clear that anyone can beat Trump. Biden on the other hand is a maybe. He represents the status quo, so anyone who does well enough can beat him and probably should. He’s not really very competent, so it’s unsafe not to challenge him.

  • The way the Democrats harvest ballots and resort to various trickeries, I believe, sadly, that a winning ticket could be: BIDEN/FETTERMAN ’24

  • The teleprompter and numbers may give dopey Joe a few fits. In addition, truth and facts have never been friends of Joe.

  • Both parties are doing a disservice to the nation with Biden and Trump. We continue to get the same recycled garbage in different suit. Condoleezza Rice, if she could be coaxed to run, would be a powerful contender.

    • Ms. Rice would be a great president,but she has no interest in running.
      I would hardly call what Trump accomplished “recycled garbage”. We had record low unemployment for minorities, much better relations with other countries than we have now, energy independence and were on the way to a secure border.

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