Texarkana Gazette

Know what will happen in 2024? Of course not

- Carl Leubsdorf TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Just hours after the news broke that Mitch Landrieu would manage the administra­tion’s new infrastruc­ture program, the first 2024 presidenti­al speculatio­n emerged about the former New Orleans mayor.

“Add another name to the 2024 roster,” tweeted The New York Times’ Jonathan Martin, adding that an unnamed Democrat had texted him, “Mitch succeeds at this job and he becomes a strong player down the field.”

As Joe Biden begins his second year as president, media speculatio­n about the next election is in full sway, spurred in part by his age and poor poll ratings. Here’s some advice: Take most of it with a grain of salt. History tells us the 2024 contest won’t unfold like it looks three years out. In fact, it will probably differ from how it looks one year out.

After all, who thought in November 2015 Donald Trump would be the next president or, in November 2019, he’d lose to Joe Biden? Who foresaw a Chinaspawn­ed virus paralyzing the nation and transformi­ng the 2020 landscape?

But that hasn’t stopped anyone.

In recent weeks, numerous analyses of Kamala Harris’ first year as vice president have concluded her inconsiste­nt showing in the nation’s No. 2 office has damaged her future political prospects.

Another favorite subject: the possibilit­y that Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg, like Harris a 2020 Democratic also-ran, would challenge her if Biden retires.

Other prospectiv­e Democratic candidacie­s are also being floated in the press.

“Will Ocasio-Cortez challenge Biden or Harris in 2024?” asked Douglas McKinnon in The Hill, a Washington political newspaper. It noted that the second-term New York congresswo­man, a rising leader of Democratic progressiv­es, will reach the minimal presidenti­al age of 35 three weeks before the 2024 election.

Most Democratic speculatio­n assumes Biden won’t run again at age 82. The president has tried to knock that down, telling ABC’s David Muir last month, “If I’m in the health I’m in now — I’m in good health — then in fact I would run again.” If Donald Trump runs, he said, “that increases the prospect of running.”

But even if Biden does run, the progressiv­es he beat in 2020 could challenge him again.

Still, Democratic speculatio­n pales alongside the incessant analyses of the likelihood that Trump will seek to regain the presidency in 2024 and how that might affect other Republican­s already making moves toward running.

Trump, who attracted thousands to an Arizona rally last Saturday, has been pretty open about his intentions.

“I am certainly thinking about it, and we’ll see,” he said in a recent Fox News interview. “I think a lot of people will be very happy, frankly, with the decision, and probably will announce that after the midterms.”

If he runs, Trump would be the first president since Theodore Roosevelt seeking a return to the White House after a four-year absence and the first since Grover Cleveland to do so four years after losing.

But though he dominates the GOP like no former president in modern times, that has not stopped speculatio­n about other potential candidates, mostly Trump allies but also critics like Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney and Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan.

In a recent Vanity Fair article, Mike Pence’s biographer, Tom Lobianco, called the former vice president the “putative front-runner.” A busy speaking schedule and the loss of 90 pounds have fueled speculatio­n about former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s intentions.

Other potential aspirants from Trump World include former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, and Sens. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, Ted Cruz of Texas, Josh Hawley of Missouri and Tim Scott of South Carolina.

Most indicate they won’t challenge Trump. But Christie said the former president’s entry wouldn’t keep him out.

The out-of-control speculatio­n even included a Marc Caputo Politico article, discussing potential Trump running mates, ranging from former acting National Intelligen­ce Director Ric Grenell to Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds.

Most have visited Trump at Mar-a-Lago and, according to an anonymous adviser quoted by Politico, Trump says “They’re all begging me.”

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