Who’s Running for President in 2024?

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This is who is listed that are running for president in 2024. The NY Times has updated this list on April 24, 2023.
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By Martín González Gómez and Maggie Astor
Four years after a historically large number of candidates ran for president, the field for the 2024 campaign is starting out small and looks like it will be headlined by the same two aging men who ran in the general election last time: President Biden and former President Donald J. Trump.
A number of Republicans are expected to enter the race, but most are taking their time to directly take on Mr. Trump, who still holds extraordinary sway with their party’s base. And Democrats are almost universally unwilling to challenge their own incumbent so long as he seems likely to run, no matter their misgivings.
Latest update

President Biden formally declared his bid for re-election in a three-minute video posted online. The video, which comes four years to the day after his 2020 campaign announcement, sets in motion the possibility of a rematch with former President Donald J. Trump.
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This is where we stand as of me posting this thread.
 
It's not very promising, to be honest when you see who there is and who you know will end up running and who will be the ones that are up for the vote. It's a shame, to be honest not having much of a choice, especially after the stunts Trump has pulled in the past.
 
It's not very promising, to be honest when you see who there is and who you know will end up running and who will be the ones that are up for the vote. It's a shame, to be honest not having much of a choice, especially after the stunts Trump has pulled in the past.
I didn't like Trump anyways. He's racist. So it's a blessing in disguise he's pulled at these stunts.
 

DeSantis makes it official, files to run for president in 2024​

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis officially entered the 2024 presidential race Wednesday after months of anticipation, launching a campaign that will lean heavily on culture war battles and a contrarian COVID-19 record that brought him national attention and made Florida a leading laboratory for conservative governing.

DeSantis emerged from the pandemic as one of the Republican Party's top figures and most promising presidential prospects, putting him on a collision course with former President Donald Trump, who began attacking him months ago.

DeSantis enters the presidential race weakened by Trump’s constant attacks and polling well below his peak after a dominant re-election win last year, but still with considerable goodwill among Republicans, a huge amount of campaign cash and much less baggage than the twice-impeached Trump, who is facing 34 criminal charges.
I am not going to quote the whole story.

 

Chris Christie jumps into the 2024 GOP presidential race​

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie on Tuesday jumped into the 2024 presidential race, filing his official paperwork hours ahead of a planned launch event.

Christie has been blunt in his criticism of former President Donald Trump, who remains the Republican front-runner in the polls, and he's likely to continue those lines of attack now that he's in the race.

Speaking as a political analyst on ABC News' "This Week" last month, Christie said GOP candidates can't beat Trump by "cozying up to him."

In 2016, Christie ran against Trump for the GOP nomination, but dropped out after finishing sixth in the New Hampshire primary. The two later became allies, with Christie heading up Trump’s presidential transition team until shortly after the election, and then working on debate preparations against Joe Biden in 2020.

But Christie emerged as a vocal GOP critic after Trump refused to concede his loss in 2020, instead espousing baseless claims of widespread election fraud.

In a recent interview with conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt, Christie knocked Trump for saying he may skip the first GOP primary debates this summer.

"If he really cares about the country, then he’s going to get up there, and he shouldn’t be afraid," Christie said.


"I’m sorry to see that Donald Trump feels like if he gets on the stage, he’s at risk of losing his lead," he said. "If, in fact, his ideas are so great, if his leadership is so outstanding, then his lead will only increase if he gets on the stage, not decrease."

Christie has also aired his grievances with the former president during several town hall meetings in the early primary state of New Hampshire in the past few months.

During a town hall meeting there in April, Christie devoted his entire opening remarks to excoriating Trump.

“Tonight is the beginning of the case against Donald Trump,” Christie said. “You’re not going to beat someone by closing your eyes, clicking your heels together three times and saying, ‘There’s no place like home.’ That’s not going to work.”

“Donald Trump is a TV star, nothing more, nothing less,” he added. “Let me suggest to you that in putting him back in the White House, the reruns will be worse than the original show.”

At another town hall in March, at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics at Saint Anselm College, Christie suggested that Trump’s 2024 challenger must have the “skill” to debate him, predicting that such a scenario is “not going to end nicely” for Trump.

Christie served two terms as New Jersey governor from 2010 to 2018. His tenure came under scrutiny during the so-called Bridgegate case, a political scandal in 2013 involving lane closures at the George Washington Bridge as alleged retaliation against a Democratic mayor who refused to endorse Christie's re-election.

Following a federal investigation, Christie allies were sentenced to short prison terms in 2017 after a jury determined that they had shut down two of the three lanes leading to the bridge, resulting in a monumental traffic jam in Fort Lee, New Jersey. (The Supreme Court later threw out the convictions.)

Before being elected governor, Christie served as U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey from 2002 to 2008 under President George W. Bush.

Christie joins a field of at least eight candidates for the 2024 GOP nomination, including Trump, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy. Former Vice President Mike Pence is expected to announce a potential bid on Wednesday.
 
We're at a place within the election where we have 11 months left. Republicans have a couple weeks to really understand who will be their nominee. Let's be honest, it's going to be Trump again. The base of the Republican Party cannot let go of Trump, regardless of his proposed 2025 polices (aka installing loyalists EVERYWHERE) and the **** he pulled on January 6.

Biden will be the Democratic nominee. Biden and Trump are similar in age. Biden unfortunately has become forgetful of some things. I'm wholeheartedly saying that the people who say "he's not all there" or "he can't even speak" are clearly exaggerating. He's President for a reason and has speech issues, we know that. He's made some remarkable achievements within his first term, including the covid relief and infrastructure act. The other day he pardon those who were convinced of marijuana crimes. He's doing good things and unfortunately the media focuses on the bad.

It's going to come down to Trump versus Biden. And I don't want to hear from the people "I don't want to vote, they are both bad." I'm sorry, who tried to overthrow the United States Capitol and encouraged his followers to disrupt the constitution? Who was the one who has been convicted of raping E. Jean Carol? Who's the one that stole thousands and thousands of top-secret government records and stored them while not being President? Who spread provably false disinformation about the voting process and the COVID-19 virus?

HINT: It was not Joe Biden.
 
It would be interesting to see how things unfold in the coming times. We still have few months before the actual election. I am not from the US. But then US election is watched and followed by every country as it is the economic power and does have global impact.
I totally agree that it's not a very nice picture at present. The choices are limited and people have to choose from what options they have. Let's see whom the US votes for
 
I am not from the US but the election is being seen here and candidates are being watched out for. Maybe because whoever wins has the impact of who will work with the leaders of each nations, like in the Philippines. I think Biden has a chance at snatching this year's poll if not may be some others need to step up.
 
Biden has really messed with the economy. Inflation is at an all time high in the United States. Even core Biden supporters in the last election have regretted making that choice. I have so many American friends and they are not happy with Biden. But who is the alternative? Trump? For the first time, Americans are torn in between two unpopular choices.
 
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