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Former President Donald Trump has for some time suggested that he may announce a third bid for the White House, including some Republicans who have opposed another election from Trump. Republicans suggest that announcements may come earlier than late, as Republican voters weigh heavily on them, their best option for 2024 candidates.
Most candidates have announced that they will run for president about a year before the election, but the New York Times and the Associated Press reported that some Republican strategists were in conflict with many Republicans. With an idea that suggests that Trump is eager to announce his candidacy, even though he feels he is.
Republican strategist Scott Jennings said Trump’s announcement could be made before Republican voters began to consider other candidates.
“There is some evidence that some Republican voters are trying to walk slowly from Donald Trump,” Jennings said. Told the Times.. “If you are in his position, you have to try to put out the fire, because it burns.”
Other Republicans have signaled that it’s time to move out of Trump in hopes of regaining the White House in the next presidential election.
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Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie following a recent hearing on the January 6 Parliamentary protest Told the Associated Press Voters are “concerned” about whether Trump will be able to win the election in 2024. Christie said.
Similarly, Maryland Governor Larry Hogan, who is rumored to be considering running for president in 2024, suggested that Trump could lose the election.
“His approval in the Republican primary has already declined somewhat,” Hogan said in an interview with the Associated Press. “Trump was the least popular president in American history until Joe Biden.”
Also reflecting comments from Hogan and Christie is Marc Short, chief of staff for former Vice President Mike Pence, who many consider to be a Republican candidate for 2024.
“Republican activists believed that Donald Trump was the only candidate who could beat Hillary,” Short told The Associated Press. “Now the dynamics are reversed. He is the only one who lost to Joe Biden.”
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Georgia Republican State Commissioner and former Newt Gingrich aide Jason Sheppard said voters could choose a wide range of candidates in the 2024 election, and Trump won the full nomination. It suggests that you may have a hard time doing it.
“There will be many Republicans who feel that not only will many Republicans unite the party, but they will govern with strong and conservative policies,” Shepherd told the Times.
Trump, who is likely to face a lot of opposition within the party over the 2024 presidential election, should have the support of some prominent Republicans.
Senator Lindsey Graham (RS.C.) may look at Trump and repel the remarks of the former president who opposed it, and whether Trump should run depends on his remarks and methods. Insisted. action. Graham said the economic situation a few years ago must be weighed against what Americans are witnessing today.
“It’s up to him to run,” Graham said in an interview shared by the Times. “But the key to his success is to compare his policy agenda and policy success with what is happening today.”
Some candidates for 2024, including former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley, who served as UN Ambassador under Trump, have vowed not to object if Trump runs for reelection. .. But now, everything that happened after Trump left the White House, Haley hinted to reporters that she might reconsider.
“If there seems to be a place for me next year, I’ve never lost a race. I’m not going to start now,” Haley said. “I’ll put in 1,000% and finish. If I don’t have a place, I’ll fight for this country until the last breath.”
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Haley told host Harris Faulkner in “Faulkner Focus” that he would make a decision on whether to take office early next year.
A Harvard CAPS / Harris Paul Announced Friday, 64% of registered voters show that President Biden believes that “he is too old to be president,” and another 71% said Biden. He said the White House should not seek another term. Sixty-one percent of voters surveyed cited his role in the division between Americans, his role in the January 6 Parliamentary protest, and his unpredictable behavior, and Trump returned to public office. He said he shouldn’t run.