United States elections 2024: Donald Trump Wins

Trump leads Haley by a more than 2-to-1 margin in South Carolina: poll​


 

'There is a reason' for Nikki Haley to stay campaigning: George Will | On Balance​


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 

Black people are not feeling Biden: Ex-Democratic Party Chair Scott Bolden | On Balance​


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 

Trump praises Illinois election board for protecting citizens from 'Radical Left Lunatics'​


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 

YIKES: this Fox News stunt may cost Republicans the election!​


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 

Gender gap expands between Biden and Trump, new poll shows​

Biden holds a slight lead over Trump in Wednesday’s poll from Quinnipiac University.
Joe Biden boards Air Force One.


President Joe Biden boards Air Force One, at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., on Jan. 27, 2024. | Jacquelyn Martin/AP
By CHRISTINE ZHU
01/31/2024 04:10 PM EST

The gender gap is growing between supporters of President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, according to a new Quinnipiac University poll of registered voters.
And that’s good news for the Democratic incumbent: Biden holds a slight lead over Trump in Wednesday’s 2024 presidential election poll, 50 percent to 44 percent. The same matchup was “too close to call” just a month ago.

More women said they would support Biden over Trump in this latest survey, with 58 percent backing Biden and 36 percent backing Trump. Last month, the Quinnipiac poll found 53 percent of women supported the incumbent Democrat, compared to 41 percent for the Republican challenger.

The numbers were relatively unchanged for men — 53 percent of men said they’d vote for Trump and 42 percent chose Biden in the latest poll, compared to 51 percent for Biden and 41 percent for Trump in December.
“The gender demographic tells a story to keep an eye on,” Quinnipiac University polling analyst Tim Malloy said in a statement. “Propelled by female voters in just the past few weeks, the head-to-head tie with Trump morphs into a modest lead for Biden.”
It’s a different story for former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who trails far behind Trump in the Republican primary. The poll found Haley would do better than Trump in a general election, with 47 percent of respondents supporting Haley and 42 percent supporting Biden.
Haley’s support comes largely from independents, with 53 percent saying they’d vote for her. Another 37 percent would back Biden. In the same poll, 52 percent of independents said they’d support Biden over Trump, who’d have the support of 40 percent of respondents.

“In a head-to-head matchup against Biden, Haley outperforms Trump, thanks to independents,” Malloy said. “Add third party candidates to the mix and her numbers slip in part because of her weakness among Republicans.”
The poll surveyed 1,650 self-identified registered voters nationwide from Jan. 25 to 29, with a margin of error of plus-or-minus 2.4 percentage points. Surveys conducted by Quinnipiac University are based on random sampling.
 

Biden tops Trump in new poll, but lead shrinks against third-party candidates​

November showdowns: Biden tops Trump but trails Haley in hypothetical matchups in new poll​

Paul Steinhauser
By Paul Steinhauser Fox News
Published January 31, 2024 4:01pm EST

Who could be Donald Trump’s choice for number 2?: Greg Gutfeld

Fox New host Greg Gutfeld and guests discuss whom former President Trump could choose as running mate on ‘Gutfeld!’
President Biden holds a six-point lead over former President Donald Trump in a likely November election rematch, a new national poll suggests.
But the Quinnipiac University survey released on Wednesday indicates that the president's advantage over Trump shrinks in a multi-candidate general election field that also includes independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The poll also shows Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley topping Biden by five points in a hypothetical November showdown, but Biden with a slight edge over the former South Carolina governor and former U.N. ambassador in a crowded field of contenders.

The survey also indicates that Biden and Trump are the overwhelming favorites to win the Democratic and Republican presidential nominations.
HALEY ARGUES TRUMP AND BIDEN ARE ‘GRUMPY OLD MEN’
Joe Biden campaigs in South Carolina ahead of Democratic presidential primary

President Biden speaks at the First in the Nation Celebration held by the South Carolina Democratic Party at the State Fairgrounds, Saturday, Jan. 27, 2024, in Columbia. (AP Photo/Artie Walker Jr.)
According to the poll, which was conducted Jan. 25-29, Biden leads Trump 50%-44% among registered voters nationwide, up from a razor-thin one-point edge in Quinnpiac's December survey.
But a compilation by Real Clear Politics of all the most recent national surveys polling a Biden-Trump rematch indicates the former president with a 2.5-point margin over the White House incumbent.
The new Quinnipiac survey indicates Biden with a 96%-2% margin among Democrats and a 52%-40% advantage among independents, while Trump enjoyed 91%-7% support among Republicans.
HEAD HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS POLLING IN THE 2024 RACE
The survey also spotlights a widening gender gap, with women backing Biden 58%-36%, up 10 points from December, and men supporting Trump 53%-42%, which is mostly unchanged from last month.
placeholder

"The gender demographic tells a story to keep an eye on. Propelled by female voters in just the past few weeks, the head-to-head tie with Trump morphs into a modest lead for Biden," Quinnipiac University polling analyst Tim Malloy said.
Trump New Hampshire victory speech

Former President Donald Trump delivers remarks alongside supporters, campaign staff and family members during his primary night rally on Jan. 23, 2024, in Nashua, New Hampshire. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)
But Biden's lead shrinks in a potential five-candidate November showdown.
The poll indicates the president at 39%, Trump with 37%, Democrat turned independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 14%, progressive independent candidate Cornell West 3%, and Green Party candidate Jill Stein 2%.
Haley has repeatedly argued on the campaign trail that she would be a stronger GOP presidential nominee than Trump to face off with Biden in the general election, and the new poll gives Haley further ammunition.
She tops Biden 47%-42% in a hypothetical two-person November showdown, according to the poll.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
But in a five-candidate field, Biden stands at 36%, with Haley at 29%, Kennedy 21%, West 3%, and Stein 2%.

Trump, the commanding frontrunner for the GOP nomination as he makes his third straight White House run, won this month's Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary – the first two contests in the Republican presidential nominating calendar – by double digits.
Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley

Nikki Haley speaks after results came in for the primary during a watch party in Concord, New Hampshire, on Jan. 23, 2024. (Joseph Prezioso/AFP via Getty Images)
Haley faces a steep uphill climb for the nomination as the race moves to her home state, which holds the next major contest in the GOP schedule on Feb. 24.
The poll indicates Trump crushing Haley 77%-21% among GOP and Republican-leaning voters.
 

Trump loses to Biden by six points in new poll​

Women voters swing towards Biden following Trump’s E Jean Carroll ruling, new poll finds​

Gustaf Kilander
Washington, DC
31 minutes ago


Joe Biden leads Donald Trump by six points among registered voters – 50 to 44 per cent – up from a one-point lead in December, according to a new poll.
The president is getting stronger among women voters in the Quinnipiac University poll released on Wednesday, leading his predecessor by 58 to 36 per cent. In December, Mr Biden’s lead was significantly smaller among women, 53 to 41 per cent.

“The gender demographic tells a story to keep an eye on. Propelled by female voters in just the past few weeks, the head-to-head tie with Trump morphs into a modest lead for Biden,” Quinnipiac University Polling Analyst Tim Malloy said in a statement.

The same hypothetical 2024 general election poll released on 20 December was considered too close to call as Mr Biden led by only 47 to 46 per cent.
Partisanship remains strong, as 96 per cent of Democrats back Mr Biden while two per cent support Mr Trump, while 91 per cent of Republicans support the former president and seven per cent back his successor. Among independents, Mr Biden leads 52 to 40 per cent.

The poll surveyed 1,650 self-identified registered voters nationwide between 25 and 29 January.
Mr Biden’s increasing lead among women voters comes after Mr Trump was ordered to pay writer E Jean Carroll $83.3m in damages in the second defamation trial brought by the writer against the former president.

Ms Carroll accused Mr Trump in her 2019 memoir of having raped her in a Manhattan department store dressing room in the mid-1990s. Mr Trump forcefully rejected the allegations and repeatedly personally insulted Ms Carroll.
In an initial defamation trial, Mr Trump was found liable for sexual abuse. Judge Kaplan ruled that the decision from the first jury would apply also to the second defamation trial, which wrapped up last week, meaning that the second jury only had to decide on damages.

Among men, 53 per cent back Mr Trump while 42 per cent support Mr Biden. In December, those figures were 51 to 41 per cent.
In a hypothetical race including independent and third-party candidates, the new poll shows Mr Biden receiving 39 per cent, Mr Trump getting 37 per cent, former Democrat, now independent candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr getting 14 per cent, independent Cornel West getting three per cent, and Jill Stein of the Green Party getting two per cent.

Meanwhile, the poll has Mr Trump’s last remaining challenger for the Republican nomination Nikki Haley beating Mr Biden by five points in a possible matchup – 47 to 42 per cent.
Looking at the Republican primary, the poll has Mr Trump at 77 per cent and Ms Haley at 21 per cent. Mr Biden leads on the Democratic side with 78 per cent to author Marianne Williamson’s 11 per cent and Minnesota Rep Dean Phillips’s six per cent.
Mr Biden got the highest approval rating since June last year, but most voters still view him negatively – 41 per cent approve and 55 per cent disapprove.
On his handling of the economy, 42 per cent approve and 57 per cent disapprove.
“As inflation fears cool and the bruising campaign heats up, President Biden rides a welcome small uptick in confidence in his handling of the economy,” Mr Malloy said.
Regarding the Russian invasion of Ukraine, 47 per cent of Mr Biden’s handling of the situation, while 46 per cent disapprove.
On foreign policy in general, 37 per cent approve of Mr Biden and 57 per cent disapprove.
Two of Mr Biden’s weakest points are the war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas and the situation on the border between the US and Mexico.
Thirty-four per cent approve of Mr Biden’s handling of the war in Gaza, while 56 per cent disapprove, while 28 per cent approve of his handling of the border – 63 per cent disapprove.
After a strike in Jordan that killed three US troops, 84 per cent of voters are worried that the US will be drawn into a conflict in the Middle East.
“Are the winds of war swirling in the sands of the Middle East? As American troops take deadly fire from terrorist proxies, the conflict footprint is broadening and with it, the concerns of a large majority of voters are solidifying,” Mr Malloy said.
The surveyed voters were given a list of 10 issues and asked which was the most important for the country – 24 per cent said preserving democracy, 20 per cent answered the economy, and 20 per cent said immigration.

The gap between the parties is only growing – 12 per cent of Republicans and 39 per cent of Democrats listed democracy as their top issue, while 38 per cent of Republicans listed immigration as their most important issue – among Democrats only the economy (12 per cent) and democracy reached double digits.
Among independents, 23 per cent said preserving democracy was the most important, 19 per cent said immigration, while 18 per cent said the economy was the most important.
 

JAN. 30, 2024

If Trump Falls, Nikki Haley Won’t Be the GOP’s Plan B​

Portrait of Ed Kilgore
By Ed Kilgore, political columnist for Intelligencer since 2015
714160bd26182deef4a5923b95fe2b2b9f-nikki-haley.rsquare.w400.jpg

Photo: Allison Joyce/Getty Images
Barring some fresh polling from South Carolina showing that Nikki Haley has significantly reduced Donald Trump’s massive lead in her home state, which holds its GOP presidential primary on February 24, the case for Haley’s ultimate victory depends on a very hazy scenario. There’s no real evidence that Haley has a prayer against Trump in any, much less all, of the 28 states that will hold nominating contests in March. This is especially true in delegate-rich places like California, where Trump leads by 68 points in the FiveThirtyEight polling averages; Florida, where Trump is up by 69 points; and Texas, where Trump is up by 64 points. So Haley is by necessity playing a very long game, as the Washington Examiner explains:
While Haley’s pathway to the presidency faces long odds, polls suggest the Republican Party is open to an alternative if Trump is convicted as he faces 91 indictments across four criminal cases. If Haley has enough funding to keep up her White House run, public sentiment could shift more in her favor.

“The Republican Party is facing the possibility that former President Trump could be convicted before Election Day,” said David Darmofal, a professor of political science at the University of South Carolina. “If he is and is sentenced to prison, the Republican Party could face a situation that no major party has faced and that a prominent party hasn’t faced since the Socialist Party’s Eugene Debs ran for president from prison in 1920 while serving a 10-year sentence for violating the Sedition Act of 1918. From this perspective, it might be helpful for the Republican Party to have an alternative candidate in Haley.”
Let’s be clear about this: The odds are very high that Trump will win the 1,215 pledged delegates necessary to clinch the nomination in March, before there’s any chance of him being convicted of a crime, much less marched off in leg-irons to the penitentiary (which won’t happen soon anyway because of the appeals he will have available in both federal and state proceedings). After March 15, winner-takes-all primaries will be common, allowing Trump to quickly augment his majority.

Sign up for Dinner Party​

A lively evening newsletter about everything that just happened.

Yes, it is possible that the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee could take the extraordinary, unprecedented action of “de-pledging” Trump delegates, as the Associated Press has explained:
Bound delegates must vote for a particular presidential candidate at the convention based on the results of the primary or caucus in their state. As in past years, every state party must bind its delegates to vote for their assigned candidates during at least the first round of voting at the national convention, with limited exceptions for a small number of delegates. A candidate wins the nomination if they clinch a majority, which is 1,215 delegates.

At next year’s convention, which starts July 15 in Milwaukee, there will be opportunities to tweak the rules when they are adopted or to suspend them, which can require two-thirds of delegates to approve on a vote.
And even the convention cannot override the laws in 14 states that require delegates on penalty of criminal indictment to vote for the candidate to which they are pledged, sometimes for multiple ballots.
But here’s the real death knell for Haley ’24: Virtually all of these pledged delegates will be Trump supporters. Even if they become convinced that they have to dump their lord and master to avoid a general-election apocalypse, or (even less likely) that he won’t be available to campaign because he’s incarcerated, they are not going to turn to Nikki Haley — whom Trump calls “Birdbrain” and who is currently the darling of Never Trumpers — as a plan B. The convention will be stuffed with politicians who have been loyal to Trump for years. Some might even be attractive general-election candidates in a pinch. None of them will have lost a long list of caucuses and primaries to Trump unless Ted Cruz or Marco Rubio attempts a 2024 convention comeback.

The bottom line is that Haley is going to have to force herself on the GOP as a nominee by beating Trump in a significant number of primaries and caucuses. A respectable but losing showing like she posted in Iowa and New Hampshire won’t cut it, nor will she become plan B for the GOP if her appeal is mostly limited to independents and Democrats. Yes, going forward, her immediate problem is to convince donors to keep bankrolling a campaign with no viable path to the nomination, which is likely why she is currently running around the country raising money when she really ought to be mending fences in South Carolina, where it’s hard to find Republican elected officials who are supporting her despite all her boasts about her gubernatorial tenure there. But Trump’s party will look far and wide for a substitute leader if somehow the 45th president abruptly succumbs to his many excesses.
 

Taylor Swift involved in US election conspiracy​


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 

GOP invents Taylor Swift conspiracy theory instead of facing reality about unpopular policies​


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 

Marianne Williamson Speaks with Brian Harris, Founder of Independent Black Voters​


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 

Marianne Williamson: A Message to South Carolina​


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Pakistan Defence Latest

Latest Posts

Back
Top