海角大神

Biden and Trump set for historic, unpopular rematch

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Alex Brandon/Andrew Harnik/AP/File
President Joe Biden (left) speaks Aug. 10, 2023, in Salt Lake City, and former President Donald Trump speaks June 13, 2023, in Bedminster, New Jersey. Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump are now set for a rematch in the 2024 presidential election.

Former President Donald Trump鈥檚 commanding performance on Super Tuesday and Nikki Haley鈥檚 subsequent exit from the Republican race bring to a close one of the shortest, most anticlimactic primary contests in modern U.S. politics 鈥 and kick off a general election campaign that promises to be anything but.

After winning 14 of 15 states yesterday, Mr. Trump stands on the cusp of capturing enough delegates to secure the Republican nomination for the third consecutive time, setting up a November rematch with President Joe Biden, the likely Democratic nominee.

The 2024 general election campaign 鈥 featuring two of the oldest, ever, and a closely divided but deeply polarized electorate 鈥 will make history on a number of levels. For the first time in over a century, an incumbent president will be competing against a former president, both running as lame ducks in a rematch for which few Americans say they are excited.

Why We Wrote This

With Nikki Haley exiting the race, the 2024 U.S. general election contours appear set, but few voters cheer for a rematch of incumbent and former presidents.

Mr. Trump never conceded his 2020 loss, maintaining without evidence that the election was fraudulent and standing by as his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The first former U.S. president to be criminally indicted, he is campaigning for the White House while managing costly legal defenses in four separate cases featuring 91 criminal charges.

Mr. Biden, who entered office promising a return to normalcy amid the disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic, saw his approval ratings plunge as inflation spiked and huge numbers of migrants began streaming across the southern border.聽聽

With such high levels of disapproval for both candidates, experts suggest November鈥檚 election could feature lower turnout than usual, with a higher percentage of votes going to third-party or independent candidates. Ultimately, the presidency may be determined by a relatively small group of voters deciding which major-party candidate they dislike less. This group, often referred to as 鈥渄ouble haters鈥 by pollsters, pushed Mr. Biden across the finish line in 2020, but may not do so this time around.

Chris Carlson/AP
Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley speaks during a news conference, March 6, 2024, in Charleston, South Carolina. Ms. Haley exited the race after being defeated by Donald Trump.

鈥淚t shouldn鈥檛 be on the voters to have to choose between the lesser of two evils,鈥 says John Ruml, a supply chain manager, as he leaves a Richmond, Virginia, high school after casting his ballot in Tuesday鈥檚 Democratic primary. Frustrated by Mr. Biden鈥檚 handling of the Middle East conflict and domestic issues such as health care, Mr. Ruml had planned to vote 鈥渦ncommitted.鈥 But he didn鈥檛 see that option on the ballot, so he voted for self-help author Marianne Williamson instead. Another long shot Democratic challenger, Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips, dropped out of the race Wednesday after failing to win a single delegate.

Recent polling has put Mr. Trump ahead of Mr. Biden, with a New York Times/Siena College poll from late February showing Mr. Trump leading聽. Notably, 40% of registered voters said Mr. Trump鈥檚 policies had 鈥,鈥 compared with just 18% who said the same thing about Mr. Biden. In , on a range of issues from the economy to immigration to crime, Mr. Trump leads Mr. Biden by double digits.聽Mr. Biden leads by a narrower margin on abortion, health care, and the environment.聽

Mr. Biden鈥檚 position in the polls also reflects concerns over the president鈥檚 age 鈥 47% of respondents in the New York Times poll 鈥渟trongly agreed鈥 that the 81-year-old is 鈥渏ust too old鈥 to be effective, compared with 21% who said the same of the 78-year-old Mr. Trump. And the president has been facing sharp criticism from voters on the left, particularly younger Democrats, over the Israel-Hamas war. In last week鈥檚 Democratic primary in Michigan, which has the highest concentration of Arab Americans in the United States, 13% of voters cast a ballot for 鈥渦ncommitted.鈥 And in Minnesota on Tuesday, 鈥渦ncommitted鈥 earned almost 20%.

Biden allies note that the president has actually outperformed the polls in recent primary elections, while Mr. Trump has underperformed them, that the best predictor of voter behavior is how voters actually vote. Indeed, when all is said and done, it鈥檚 possible 2024 could wind up looking a lot like 2020, with a key portion of Mr. Biden鈥檚 support being driven by strong antipathy to Mr. Trump.聽聽

鈥淚f you鈥檙e not 100% for Biden, that鈥檚 OK 鈥 but are you for saving the Constitution?鈥 says Roberto Ventura, an educator, after voting for Mr. Biden in Virginia鈥檚 Democratic primary. 鈥淭here鈥檚 really only one way to vote, and that鈥檚 for Biden.鈥澛

Mr. Trump faces clear political challenges, even beyond his ongoing criminal cases. While he had a victorious night Tuesday, the fact that he lost up to 40% of the vote to Ms. Haley in states across the country signals potential weakness in the fall.聽

Ed Goeas, a Republican strategist who worked on presidential campaigns for both former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and former Ohio Gov. John Kasich, says that 30% to 40% of GOP primary voters 鈥渋s still a substantial group.鈥

鈥淒o they stay home? Do they vote for Biden? Or do they vote for Trump? That鈥檚 a huge question mark,鈥 he adds.

In announcing her departure from the race on Wednesday, Ms. Haley notably did not endorse Mr. Trump and suggested that her voters could wind up in Mr. Biden鈥檚 column if the former president made no effort to win them back.

鈥淚t is now up to Donald Trump to earn the votes of those in our party and beyond it who did not support him, and I hope he does that,鈥 the former South Carolina governor said. 鈥淥ur conservative cause badly needs more people.鈥

Bennett Evans, a law student at Boston College who cast a ballot for Ms. Haley in Massachusetts鈥 Republican primary, says his vote was in part about supporting 鈥渁n alternative to Donald Trump.鈥澛犅

鈥淸Haley]鈥檚 strong on the border and has a certain level of respect for the Constitution,鈥 says Mr. Evans as he leaves an elementary school polling place in Brighton Tuesday evening. A registered Republican, he nevertheless voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016 and Mr. Biden in 2020.

Sarah Matusek/海角大神
Richie Rosenburgh, an unaffiliated voter in Colorado, said that he voted for Donald Trump in the state's primary in Lakewood, Colorado, March 5, 2024.

鈥淩ight now, neither [candidate] is getting the full support of their voters,鈥 says Mr. Goeas, the GOP strategist. For Mr. Biden, the challenge is winning back 鈥淒emocrats who are not happy about the war.鈥 For Mr. Trump, it鈥檚 about persuading 鈥淩epublicans who are not happy about [his] character鈥 to overlook those concerns.

Outside a Lakewood, Colorado, library just west of Denver, Richie Rosenburgh, an unaffiliated voter who distributes forklift parts, says he cast his first-ever ballot for Mr. Trump on Tuesday, 鈥渘ot because he鈥檚 a perfect human being, but because his policies were much better.鈥 The economy seemed to be booming under Mr. Trump, says Mr. Rosenburgh.聽

鈥淭he economy still seems to be booming,鈥 he clarifies. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just 10 times as much to feed my kids.鈥

The economy is one of four central issues in which Mr. Biden will probably need to move voter sentiment in his direction in coming months if he wants to win reelection, says Jim Kessler, founder of the center-left think tank Third Way. The others are immigration, crime, and his age. On the last point, Mr. Kessler suggests Mr. Biden address it directly: 鈥淵ou have to run towards it.鈥

On Thursday, Mr. Biden will have one opportunity to reset, in what could be an unusually high-stakes State of the Union address.

鈥淭he general election begins this week,鈥 says Mr. Kessler. 鈥淓very poll up to this point is meaningless. Most voters haven鈥檛 been paying attention, but they will start to now. The circus has begun.鈥澛

Staff writers Sarah Matusek and Leonardo Bevilacqua contributed to this report from Lakewood, Colorado; and Boston.

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