What does Biden think of Trump’s rematch in 2024

What does Biden think of Trump's rematch in 2024

What does Biden think of Trump’s rematch in 2024

President Biden said on Wednesday that he plans to run for president again  in 2024 if he is still in good health, mocking a possible revenge against former President Donald Trump as an additional reason to run.

So this is actually how to do this morning President Biden did that interview overnight with ABC. David, your main ally. When asked what his plans for 2024 Listen do you plan to run for election he has intervened in my life many,

many leads 11 That’s the quote the common good helpless.

And that means a rematch against Donald Trump trying to tempt me. Sure, why would I not run as Donald Trump’s nominee that increases the prospect of running? Joining me now senior political analyst senior editor for The Atlantic Ron Brown, D Ronnie was that the creme de Graaff answered answer on Donald Trump you know, I think it’s allowed, I think economic dynamics can see a scenario that encourages exactly the type of rematch.

I was talking about the midterm elections. The first midterm election was always the party like the White House Republicans on the House. Floor when the party out of the White House. So if Republicans have a good day, next November, you can certainly imagine Trump taking credit for it making that big and easier.

And then the economy grows over the second half of my first term, the position that’s driving him more likely to run, by the way, that’s the trajectory that we saw with Reagan, Clinton and Obama. They came in at a moment of economic turbulence. The economy didn’t turn around fast enough in the eyes of voters.

They had a very bad first midterm, but then you know when the trendline sort of pointing up and years three and four, deposition is removed, and they all ultimately won re-election. I think Biden is he is clearly on that track, but it is entirely possible that six or eight months after the midterm, he will look significantly stronger than he does on the morning after an interview on a top interview for him last night was what David asked him.

To by doing to get voting rights. The past asked well that’s a valid bit of concrete but I avoid completely at ease put the focus where Joe Manchin will get there there’s nothing was said about the need for homelessness. On a party-line in the construction of these models, more acids are giving Republicans more work to get to the survey has made on this run.

Does it put the focus should be Are they expense of voting rights? In so many states that are moving more aggressively than we’ve seen since the Voting Rights Act of 65 on their tail, the right to what they calculated and to make is getting this publican might do to them, if and when they get control of the Senate, which could be sooner rather than later.

On that note, Ron, Mitch McConnell has consistently now been talking in public about trying to get Joe Manchin to switch parties listen up the suggestion and a good solution to his problem would be to come across the aisle and join us for a drink respect. You recall the White House as you can call it, our Sunday.

Trader workers back then find themselves in agreement with a party. He was caucusing with most of the time it’d be a lot more comfortable on our side but that’s a better question for you to ask. First of all, every time McConnell talks about this he gets an ambitious look on his face it would be malpractice for him not to try to do this however every time McConnell talks about Iran he also says I don’t think it’s going to happen.

Yeah, I think you waiting for somebody to do a mash-up of Darth Vader beckoning. The Empire Strikes Back for one of these McConnell alleles to imagine anything could happen. Certainly, the disease enters which parties before but there isn’t a lot of logic. I think switching to the Republican Party to potentially a position of less leverage and more risk.

I mean, he says he would be more comfortable. Joe Manchin is a conservative Democrat. He usually says Jackson Democrat wields many of those any limits or not voted twice to get and remove Donald Trump as he voted me and Amy Cornbury voted against the Trump tax cut. He voted for preserving ACA cities want to take that record into a Republican Senate primary in West Virginia is far greater.

I think it was odds of losing a Democratic primary to a challenger to his lap in West Virginia. And in terms of his leverage, he is now the 50th vote on everything. He is all roads as we have seen last week. He the Joe Manchin through this version of the Senate, he would be the 51st Republican, it would still have leverage because he said No, you’d have a tie and our Harris breaking in favour of the Democrats but each time he said no on Republican priority, he wouldn’t have point number one any more riskless TV.

idea because we’re about to get the conclusion, but still practising with either switching. Joining me now Jonathan Martin, the senior political analyst at national political correspondent for The New York Times, Jonathan, I want to clinical dissection of that paper from Joe Biden.

What do you see?

As Joe Biden himself would say, God law because once again says out loud what has been widely talked about a private job in Democratic circles, which is a shirt that he runs again, what he probably is more likely to go in to run because he sees himself on a mission. First to beat Trump to keep out of the office and then to keep them out of office. So I think he’s just saying out loud,

what’s the old Kinsley line?

Morale was good?

Yes, he told him. Exactly. There you go.

Any reporting on this?

Is there any If not him, discussion out? There is like a bridge to this because he has finished his first year yet also because he’s still barely popular. So the question is, what about versus buying does not yo, there’s a lot of errors ever seen before John?

Vice President, Secretary What does Biden think of Trump’s rematch in 2024

So this is actually how to do this morning President Biden did that interview overnight with ABC. David, your main ally. When asked what his plans for 2024 Listen do you plan to run for election he has intervened in my life many,

many leads 11 That’s the quote the common good helpless.

And that means a rematch against Donald Trump trying to tempt me. Sure, why would I not run as Donald Trump’s nominee that increases the prospect of running? Joining me now senior political analyst senior editor for The Atlantic Ron Brown, D Ronnie was that the creme de Graaff answered answer on Donald Trump you know, I think it’s allowed, I think economic dynamics can see a scenario that encourages exactly the type of rematch.

I was talking about the midterm elections. The first midterm election was always the party like the White House Republicans on the House. Floor when the party out of the White House. So if Republicans have a good day, next November, you can certainly imagine Trump taking credit for it making that big and easier.

And then the economy grows over the second half of my first term, the position that’s driving him more likely to run, by the way, that’s the trajectory that we saw with Reagan, Clinton and Obama. They came in at a moment of economic turbulence. The economy didn’t turn around fast enough in the eyes of voters.

They had a very bad first midterm, but then you know when the trendline sort of pointing up and years three and four, deposition is removed, and they all ultimately won re-election. I think Biden is he is clearly on that track, but it is entirely possible that six or eight months after the midterm, he will look significantly stronger than he does on the morning after an interview on a top interview for him last night was what David asked him.

To by doing to get voting rights. The past asked well that’s a valid bit of concrete but I avoid completely at ease put the focus where Joe Manchin will get there there’s nothing was said about the need for homelessness. On a party-line in the construction of these models, more acids are giving Republicans more work to get to the survey has made on this run.

Does it put the focus should be Are they expense of voting rights? In so many states that are moving more aggressively than we’ve seen since the Voting Rights Act of 65 on their tail, the right to what they calculated and to make is getting this publican might do to them, if and when they get control of the Senate, which could be sooner rather than later.

On that note, Ron, Mitch McConnell has consistently now been talking in public about trying to get Joe Manchin to switch parties listen up the suggestion and a good solution to his problem would be to come across the aisle and join us for a drink respect. You recall the White House as you can call it, our Sunday.

Trader workers back then find themselves in agreement with a party. He was caucusing with most of the time it’d be a lot more comfortable on our side but that’s a better question for you to ask. First of all, every time McConnell talks about this he gets an ambitious look on his face it would be malpractice for him not to try to do this however every time McConnell talks about Iran he also says I don’t think it’s going to happen.

Yeah, I think you waiting for somebody to do a mash-up of Darth Vader beckoning. The Empire Strikes Back for one of these McConnell alleles to imagine anything could happen. Certainly, the disease enters which parties before but there isn’t a lot of logic. I think switching to the Republican Party to potentially a position of less leverage and more risk.

I mean, he says he would be more comfortable. Joe Manchin is a conservative Democrat. He usually says Jackson Democrat wields many of those any limits or not voted twice to get and remove Donald Trump as he voted me and Amy Cornbury voted against the Trump tax cut. He voted for preserving ACA cities want to take that record into a Republican Senate primary in West Virginia is far greater.

I think it was odds of losing a Democratic primary to a challenger to his lap in West Virginia. And in terms of his leverage, he is now the 50th vote on everything. He is all roads as we have seen last week. He the Joe Manchin through this version of the Senate, he would be the 51st Republican, it would still have leverage because he said No, you’d have a tie and our Harris breaking in favour of the Democrats but each time he said no on Republican priority, he wouldn’t have point number one any more riskless TV.

idea because we’re about to get the conclusion, but still practising with either switching. Joining me now Jonathan Martin, the senior political analyst at national political correspondent for The New York Times, Jonathan, I want to clinical dissection of that paper from Joe Biden.

What do you see?

As Joe Biden himself would say,because once again says out loud what has been widely talked about a private job in Democratic circles, which is a shirt that he runs again, what he probably is more likely to go in to run because he sees himself on a mission. First to beat Trump to keep out of the office and then to keep them out of office. So I think he’s just saying out loud,

what’s the old Kinsley line?

Morale was good?

Yes, he told him. Exactly. There you go.

Any reporting on this?

Is there any If not him, discussion out? There is like a bridge to this because he has finished his first year yet also because he’s still barely popular. So the question is, what about versus buying does not yo, there’s a lot of errors ever seen before John?

Vice President, Secretary Buttigieg you run for president appoints to running it to think about the different factions of the Democratic Party right now and it hasn’t been easy for him. But he does it in ways that also get them hard. you run for president appoints to running it to think about the different factions of the Democratic Party right now and it hasn’t been easy for him. But he does it in ways that also get them hard. I think of anyone else.

Why Joe Biden may want a Trump rematch in 2024

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