Trump and Biden may face off again next year on the ** election!
On December 19, it was reported that the Trump campaign team believes that the former Trump will be expected to win the Republican nomination by March next year, and has begun to deploy in advance, aiming for another showdown with Biden in 2024.
According to the report, a senior executive of the Trump campaign told ** on the 18th that through a comprehensive internal and external poll assessment, by "Super Tuesday" on March 5 next year, that is, the day when the multi-state primaries are held at the same time, Trump is expected to win 973 party representative votes, and by March 19, this number will increase to 1,478 votes.
According to the Republican primary, in order to be nominated as a ** candidate, the 1,215 party delegate votes must be crossed.
Trump is leading the Republican primaries ahead of the 2024 White House race. A Reuters IPSOS poll completed last week showed that 61% of Republicans said they would vote for Trump in the primary.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former South Carolina Gov. Nicky Halley are his closest rivals, each with 11 percent of voters.
Although Harley and DeSantis fared better in some state-level polls, neither came close to Trump's lead.
The campaigns of DeSantis and Harley did not immediately respond to requests for comment, although both said they would be in the race for the long term and were expected to have a chance to beat Trump once the roster was put together.
The Trump campaign team estimates that by 2024, Trump and Biden will face off again, and the state territory of the decisive battle will be further expanded. The Trump campaign director said that in addition to the major swing states that decided the outcome in 2016 and 2020, Michigan, New Hampshire, and Virginia, which have always supported the Democratic Party, will become key territories for the two parties to fight.
According to the analysis of the Washington Post, federal special prosecutor Jack Smith (Jack Smith) filed a lawsuit against Trump on suspicion of interfering in the 2020 election. If Trump wins the Republican nomination in March next year, it could conflict with the ** schedule. Trump asserts immunity from prosecution and has appealed to the Supreme Court, putting Smith's indictment on hold pending the Supreme Court's ruling.