The Ukiah Daily Journal

Trump, Biden ride wins to 2024 rematch few want

- By Justin Sink, Jordan Fabian and Nancy Cook

President Joe Biden and Republican front-runner Donald Trump are set for a rematch in a general election race that few Americans are excited about and that Wall Street donors tried in vain to avert.

Both Biden and Trump prevailed or led in nearly every Super Tuesday nominating contest as of 11:30 p. m. Eastern time, with early declared victories in Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee demonstrat­ing their respective holds over their political parties.

GOP challenger Nikki Haley managed only a token victory in Vermont — a deeply liberal state Republican­s haven't carried in 36 years — despite backing from billionair­es including Stan Druckenmil­ler and Charles Koch.

And a viable alternativ­e to Biden never emerged: Primary opponent Dean Phillips didn't stand a chance, no matter how many times investor Bill Ackman said he did.

Yet the dominant performanc­es by both Biden and Trump disguise deep anxiety and reservatio­ns among the electorate.

For Democrats, the choice of Biden is a risky gamble that voters in November will put aside their concerns about the ability of an 81-year- old man to continue to lead the free world, particular­ly at a time when foreign wars are raging and economic angst persists despite a strong postpandem­ic recovery.

On the Republican side, Trump's myriad legal woes, inflammato­ry statements about minorities and immigrants and what his critics say are his authoritar­ian plans for a second term threaten to alienate moderate voters key to recapturin­g the White House.

Trump's political efforts must compete for his time, resources, and attention as he mounts a defense against 91 criminal charges in four separate cases. He is just four years younger than Biden, but recently has made verbal stumbles on the campaign trail that are making it somewhat harder to strike a contrast with the president on the question of whether they are too old to effectivel­y do the job.

Trump, casting himself as a de facto incumbent despite losing in 2020, consolidat­ed GOP support following his indictment­s, with the party's drift toward populism leaving little room for Haley to get traction. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Trump's other main challenger, stumbled before he even started.

Democrats rallied around Biden, with no big-name politician­s willing to challenge a sitting president even as party figures whispered fears about his age.

Divergent approaches

In foreign capitals, the prospect of a rematch between the two men has already sown disbelief that the United States refuses to move on to a new generation of leaders, and leaves bureaucrat­s to gird for two wildly divergent approaches to diplomacy, economics and governance.

The vision of a second Trump term is clear: substantia­l new trade protection­s, a sharp crackdown on immigratio­n, lower taxes, an isolationi­st foreign policy bent, and a campaign of retributio­n targeting progressiv­es, federal bureaucrac­y and a news media he blames for alienating his base against the ruling class.

An extension of Biden's presidency would guarantee the implementa­tion of his first- term legislativ­e achievemen­ts aimed at reviving domestic manufactur­ing, improving infrastruc­ture and battling climate change. Biden would also aim to raise taxes on the wealthy and strengthen foreign alliances, though his subdued, technocrat­ic approach has done little to inspire the electorate.

In remarks Tuesday night to supporters, Trump cast the stakes of the matchup with Biden as existentia­l.

“We're going to win this election because we have to win,” Trump said. “If we lose the election we're not going to have a country left.”

Age worries

Polls suggest age worries are a major obstacle to a second Biden term. Eight in 10 swing- state voters said Biden was too old in a Bloomberg News/ Morning Consult poll released in February.

That poll also found that a majority of respondent­s said Trump was dangerous. Biden's team sought to underscore those perception­s Tuesday night.

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