Altair
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 717
- Points
- 1,110
Are they?I really don't think there is much chance of that.
First: he's 74. Yes, I know Joe Biden in 78 but he was a compromise candidate, almost the last man standing for those Democrats who are actually more frightened of Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez than they are of Donald Trump.
Second: the GOP now has three years to reform itself and I suspect that by 2022 they will have some very attractive young conservatives ~ America First types ~ without much or Trump baggage.
My guess ~ waaaay too early, I know ~ is that in 2024 we see Kamala Harris vs Nikki Haley.
The Trumps, perhaps in the person of Ivanka Trump, are NOT dead and gone, but they are, for now, a spent force. I think that President Trump honestly believes that he should have won. I suspect that belief led him over the morally/politically acceptable edge and makes him toxic for a majority of Republicans. Most GOP legislators are not "rats deserting a sinking ship," thy are practical men and women who can see the future clearly ... and it is a future without Donald J Trump.
Governor Haley gave a good speech to the RNC the other day. She highlighted the several good things President Trump did in four years and asked Republicans to remember them and build on them; but, she said, in just a few days President Trump had nullified his legacy. He is, in effect, she suggested, damaged goods ~ too damaged to be rebuilt. Now, of course, she is positioning herself to be his successor so her remarks are self-serving ... but that doesn't make them wrong.
It seems to me that 'Trumpians' (the ones in Canada, too) must find a new champion.
How many trump supporters are going to come out and vote as a solid bloc in the republican primaries? 2024 is going to depend on how crowded the field is, again, because if it is a big one, the support for non trump types are going to split while whatever trump or trump acolyte is running is going to probably still get 35-40 percent of the vote.