The 2022 midterm campaign season is heating up, but this week it seems like 2024 speculation has taken the spotlight on both sides of the aisle and we can hardly keep up.
On Thursday, former President Trump, who continues to hint at a 2024 run, suggested that he would be open to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) being his running mate if he launches a presidential bid.
"Well I get along with him," Trump told Newsmax's Rob Finnerty when asked about the possibility of a Trump-DeSantis ticket. "I was very responsible for his success, because I endorsed him and he went up like a rocketship."
A DeSantis surge? Trump has led most hypothetical 2024 GOP primaries, but DeSantis normally trails him. But last week, a University of New Hampshire survey showed the Florida governor leading the former president 39 percent to 37 percent among likely New Hampshire Republican primary voters. Of course, most other polls nationally and other states tend to show Trump leading, but it's proof that DeSantis's star continues to grow among Republican voters.
The two men have insisted they have a good relationship and were seen chatting at a wedding in Palm Beach back in April. Still, Trump has reportedly complained privately about DeSantis's political ambitions, and DeSantis has declined on multiple occasions to rule out a presidential run.
Making the early-state rounds: As the Trump-DeSantis chatter continues, other Republicans are making campaign moves in early states. The Hill's Mychael Schnell reports that former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley is slated to attend a fundraiser in Iowa with Gov. Kim Reynolds (R). Haley is also slated to make an appearance at the Feenstra family picnic, hosted by Iowa Rep. Randy Feenstra (R) on Thursday.
And Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin's (R) is also being thrown into the mix less than a year after he won his first even political bid in Virginia's gubernatorial election. The Washington Post reports that Youngkin has been meeting Republican mega donors and has plans to headline a Nebraska GOP event.
Now onto the Democrats…
While President Biden and Vice President Harris have repeatedly said the president has plans to run in 2024, speculation is still growing about what many critics say is the thin Democratic bench going into the next presidential election.
Biden is facing pushback over his handling of the economy as inflation and gas prices hit record levels, with his approval rating sitting just above 40 percent. On top of that, the president is turning 80 this year.
Pritzker draws speculation: Some Democrats, particularly those in the party's progressive flank, have voiced frustrations that those in the party's establishment (i.e. Biden) acted too late on issues like abortion in the wake of the Supreme Court's overturning of Roe v. Wade.
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said on Thursday that Biden could stand to face a primary challenger if he decides to run again in 2024.
"That's not something I'm encouraging, but it's certainly possible. We've seen it in the past," Pritzker said. The governor was recently in New Hampshire, an early-voting state, which drew immediate speculation he could be planning his own run.
And there's even been renewed chatter of a potential run from none other than former 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton.
The Hill's Amie Parnes reports: "The overturning of Roe v. Wade by a Supreme Court that includes three judges nominated by Donald Trump, along with devastating Tuesday testimony to the Jan. 6 panel about the former president's temper tantrums as a mob attacked the Capitol, have Clinton and her allies seeing new vindication in her 2016 warnings about the mistake of electing Trump."
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