Baltimore Sun

Many alternativ­es to Trump, Biden

- Carl P. Leubsdorf

Donald Trump is reportedly preparing an early announceme­nt of his 2024 candidacy. The White House insists President Joe Biden will seek reelection.

But a lot of prominent figures in both parties are behaving like they don’t believe either will ultimately run — or think they’re eminently beatable.

And the early maneuverin­g suggests both parties could face free-for-all nominating fights like the GOP in 2016 and the Democrats in 2020, starting the day after the Nov. 8 midterm elections.

Among Republican­s, Trump has clearly sought to preempt the field by raising a multimilli­on-dollar war chest, choosing candidates in many GOP primaries and campaignin­g like it already is 2024.

But doubts about his real intentions, continuing threats of legal action and concern about the negative aspects of his prospectiv­e candidacy always made it likely Republican­s would have the kind of contest faced by parties without an incumbent president.

Though polls show the former president starts as the person to beat, his prospectiv­e opponents include many of his former closest aides — including former Vice President Mike Pence and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

They’re hardly the only ones. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, shown in recent polls as Trump’s closest rival, has pointedly refused to say he’d back off if the former president runs. Outgoing Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, an anti-Trump moderate, has not ruled out a race. Nor has Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, perhaps the former president’s most outspoken GOP foe.

And an imposing array of GOP senators and governors have followed the usual path that prospectiv­e candidates make to help fellow Republican­s in such crucial early voting states as Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina.

The Democratic outlook is even more complicate­d: The party has a weak incumbent vowing to seek a second term — and an unsettled nominating calendar.

But Biden’s vows are not deterring other candidates, though most of their moves are more covert than overt.

The reasons are obvious: Biden’s age (he would be 86 at the end of a second term); his unpopulari­ty ( job approval below 40%); and widespread opposition to his running again (a recent New York Times poll showed more than half of Democrats oppose his seeking reelection — though it also showed him beating Trump).

Those making tacit opening 2024 moves include Govs. Gavin Newsom of California and J.B. Pritzker of Illinois — and a

member of Biden’s own Cabinet in Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

Newsom, facing weak reelection opposition in November, recently ran an antiDeSant­is television ad in Florida. It urged Floridians to fight GOP efforts to curb freedom through legislatio­n limiting classroom speech and abortions — or move to California to find it.

DeSantis responded by criticizin­g California’s lockdown policies during the COVID-19 pandemic and accusing Newsom of treating his own state’s citizens “like peasants.”

Pritzker, who recently campaigned for fellow Democrats in New Hampshire and Maine, provided a sharp contrast with Biden’s more restrained response to the recent spate of gun murders, saying he was “furious” and demanding action. He is also heavily favored to win this November.

Any list of potential 2024 hopefuls would also include two other Democratic governors — New Jersey’s Phil Murphy and North Carolina’s Roy Cooper — and a former Rhode Island governor in

Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo.

Pritzker is not the only potential 2024 candidate making the trek to New Hampshire. Two others who ran in 2020, Sens. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Cory Booker of New Jersey, have been there.

Meanwhile, Buttigieg’s current position provides a built-in platform to tour the country, touting the job-creating projects being launched by last year’s massive bipartisan infrastruc­ture law.

The former South Bend, Indiana, mayor also took some political steps. He moved to Traverse City, Michigan, the hometown of his husband, Chasten, ostensibly because the latter’s parents could help provide child care for their recently adopted twins.

Michigan, a swing state that often votes Democratic, might provide a better launching pad for future political endeavors than heavily Republican Indiana.

Buttigieg also reactivate­d his political action committee to help endangered Democratic candidates this year. And he was the highest-ranking Democrat to attend a meeting of the Democratic

National Committee’s finance council this spring in South Carolina.

The most obvious Democratic alternativ­e to Biden is his vice president, former California Sen. Kamala Harris. She had a rough year politicall­y, given the negative stories about staff problems and her lack of influence within the administra­tion. But the Supreme Court’s decision reversing its Roe v. Wade abortion ruling gives her a powerful platform to campaign on this fall.

Still, Democrats expect Harris to face opposition should she run in 2024. And though age could be a factor in deterring Biden’s candidacy, an aide to Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said the independen­t might also enter an open 2024 race, though he is even older than the president.

Until the midterm elections, expect a continuati­on of the shadow 2024 campaign. But once the results are in, it’s likely to emerge openly, in ways unpredicta­ble at present.

 ?? MARIO TAMA/GETTY ?? Pete Buttigieg, currently part of President Joe Biden’s cabinet, could make a second run at the White House in 2024.
MARIO TAMA/GETTY Pete Buttigieg, currently part of President Joe Biden’s cabinet, could make a second run at the White House in 2024.
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