Authored by Janice Hisle via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
Even after being indicted in two separate criminal cases, former President Donald Trump has maintained a commanding lead over his Republican rivals in national polls of registered voters.
But those same polls are showing that if Trump were to run head-to-head against the presumed 2024 Democratic nominee, President Joe Biden, the two candidates would be in a statistical dead heat.
Although much could change between now and the presidential election, political insiders and analysts told The Epoch Times that current polling provides valuable insights into how the 2024 contest is taking shape.
They also say this election campaign already has secured a prominent place in U.S. history. Both major parties’ leading candidates are embroiled in unprecedented controversies, reducing the visibility of their primary election challengers.
Those simmering scandals will ultimately affect not only polling but also could greatly influence who wins the 2024 election. Many voters believe the result will prove pivotal for the future of democracy in America, regardless of partisan politics.
Turning Point
“In my wildest dreams, I would have never thought that, in the year 2023, we’d be dealing with what we’re dealing with,” Mike Allen, an attorney, former prosecutor and judge in Cincinnati, Ohio, told The Epoch Times.
Allen, a conservative who hosts a popular political talk show on radio station 700 WLW, said he senses that House Republicans’ recent revelations about Biden’s alleged foreign influence-peddling are starting to break through to average citizens.
“We may have reached a turning point,” Allen said on June 23.
That was just after House Republicans revealed IRS whistleblowers’ allegations that the Department of Justice (DOJ) put up roadblocks during an investigation of Biden’s son, Hunter Biden.
The president’s son allegedly failed to properly report millions of dollars in income from foreign sources but later paid taxes on that income.
The president has declined to answer reporters’ questions on this topic, but Attorney General Merrick Garland denies that the DOJ interfered with the IRS’s probe.
But following last week’s plea deal that could allow the younger Biden to avoid time behind bars, many people now perceive that the U.S. justice system appears to be “weaponized” for the persecution of political enemies such as Trump, Allen said. In contrast, free passes seem to be given to people such as the Bidens, who have powerful political connections.
“I do federal criminal work … and almost no one who ends up in federal court does not go to prison,” Allen said. “The feds don’t indict anyone unless it’s tied up in a pretty yellow bow … and they’ve got ya.”
But you don’t have to be a lawyer to see that Hunter Biden appears to have been offered a “sweetheart deal,” Allen said.
“People are angry about the two-tiered system of justice we have in this country. And that’s never happened here before,” Allen said. “People are mad.”
They don’t like seeing that the Biden family has been reaping millions of dollars “for no apparent reason,” Allen said.
He and others think that Trump is doing well in the polls partly because of backlash against the perceived injustices.
Solidified Views Drive Polls
But New York-based Democratic strategist David Carlucci sees the polls as indicators of dual forces: Trump’s unshakable appeal to his most loyal supporters, as well as the unflinching disdain of his detractors.
“With little change in the national polls post-Trump’s indictment, it is clear that most Americans have already pledged allegiance to or against the former President,” Carlucci told The Epoch Times. “Even after being the first federally indicted president in U.S. history, Donald Trump’s base stands firmly behind him.”
According to the RealClear Politics (RCP) average as of June 24, Trump was outpacing his nearest Republican challenger, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, by more than 30 percentage points. All other GOP presidential hopefuls ranked in the single digits.
Likewise, RCP shows Biden is the clear frontrunner for his party’s nomination. The Democrat president holds a whopping 50-point margin over environmental lawyer Robert F. Kennedy Jr., even though his family’s name carries considerable cachet. His father was an attorney general, and his uncle was President John F. Kennedy; both were assassinated in the 1960s.
Kennedy, DeSantis and all the other 2024 presidential hopefuls are having difficulty getting much notice thus far. That’s because the Biden and Trump controversies are consuming all of the political “oxygen.”
Politics ‘Frozen’ in June?
Conservative commentator Dick Morris, in a Newsmax column, wrote: “American politics have stopped, frozen by the indictment of Trump for no good reason and the deterioration of Joe Biden.”
But Special Counsel Jack Smith has said that federal prosecutors followed the highest ethical standards as they pursued the Florida case against Trump.
Meanwhile, Morris was referring to continuing concerns about Biden appearing disoriented at times during public functions; Biden’s supporters counter that his physician has declared he is physically and mentally fit for the rigors of the presidency.
Still, concerns over both Trump and Biden have overshadowed the normal political cycle, Morris said.
“In theory, this week should have been when the nominating process in each party heated up as candidates took to the runway to launch their campaigns,” Morris wrote on June 24. “But there was zero energy for them.”
He argues that circumstances have paralyzed challengers to both Trump and Biden.
All current or potential Democrat candidates “will have to swear that they simply love the emperor’s new clothes. No one can step out and say that he doesn’t have any. Anyone who dares speak these words will be cast out and be doomed,” Morris said.
On the Republican side, “there is room for only two viewpoints: That Trump is guilty or that he is innocent,” Morris said.
“DeSantis [and others] can’t split the difference and say, ‘Trump is the innocent victim of the Deep State and is being persecuted by the Democrats, but I’m running against him anyway,’” Morris wrote.
This leaves Trump’s GOP opponents with nowhere to stand, he said.
DeSantis Could Climb
Allen said it’s a shame that DeSantis’ campaign has not soared; he likes what DeSantis has accomplished as Florida’s governor. “You have to keep in mind that it’s really early,” Allen said.
DeSantis’ biggest weakness: “He’s not real good on the stump. He just doesn’t seem real comfortable. But I’m sure that he’ll probably grow into that,” Allen said.
Most callers to Allen’s talk show are pro-Trump. But Allen thinks DeSantis has an opportunity to appeal to Trump supporters who oppose “woke” social policies.
DeSantis is “the epitome of anti-wokeness,” Allen said, “and people are fed up with all of that garbage. They see DeSantis isn’t afraid to stand up against it…I think people admire that. I know they admire that.”
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Tyler Durden
Tue, 06/27/2023 – 09:45