I wonder if some of the more experienced heads among the Democrats will decide its better to lose the 2024 election and identify suitable talent for 2028. Apart from the zealots who can't bear the thought of losing power everyone else knows that elections go in cycles.
If the Democrats ditch Biden the resultant internal bun fight could potentially cause that much damage as to render the party unviable. None of the potential replacement candidates have much to offer.
Much easier to let either Biden/Harris go to the election and lose. That at least would allow a fresh start.
One thing that is certain is that if elected in 2024, it will be Trump's final term. That means 2028 will be battle between two fresh candidates and maybe that's just what both parties, and the country, needs.
I know the opinion on here is that Biden is now done for, but on a general population level I think it's probably still a close enough race that they'll let Biden continue shuffling along.
538 collated polling data shows Trump +1.3% on the national level right now, which is ahead, but is also the same lead as he had at the start of this month before his own legal drama.
The latest political polls and polling averages from FiveThirtyEight.
projects.fivethirtyeight.com
270towin polling data puts that margin at 1.8%, again, not that different to where it sat at the start of the month.
View the results of 2024 election polls.
www.270towin.com
Either way, Biden vs Trump remains little more than a coin flip, with the winner likely to be decided by voter engagement and the peculiarities of the electoral system. These leads are well within the margin of error for polls (especially with how unreliable they've been in the last couple cycles). It's by no means a landslide.
The same commentary applies here as it did with the impact of Trump's legal battle really. It's only a factor for the true swing voters in true swing states, and there simply aren't many of those in play in today's political climate, nor is the transition from Biden to Trump or vice versa an easy shift.
I agree 100% that some fresh candidates on both sides with fresh policies and more appeal are in this countries best interest. Overall, I can't help but feel that this situation is a pretty comprehensive condemnation of the appeal of both candidates really. Based on Biden's performance, this shouldn't even be close, yet (IMHO) it remains to be seen if Trump can pull it off.
For what it's worth, I
suspect he can, but probably by less than 30 electoral college votes and possibly by a literal handful. The popular vote ultimately doesn't matter, but it could go either way. I also expect voter turn out to be depressed versus the last couple of cycles.
Of course, my crystal ball is just as murky and susceptible to personal bias as everyone else's, so make of that what you will...