Posted on 12/12/2018 9:15:06 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
No one knows when President Trump will leave office. Possibly January 2021 when his first term ends; possibly not before January 2025 when a second term would end. Ultimately, however, he will leave office sometime to be succeeded by the next president.
But who will that be? That intriguing question increasingly occupies the attention of politicians from both parties. Already there is conjecture he may be challenged from within the GOP an action always fraught with peril for the incumbent party.
Even more speculation has centered on a formidable list of Democratic aspirants. At least two dozen potential Democrats are cautiously assessing their chances in 2020.
But what do we really know about next presidents who they are likely to be, where they come from, their typical backgrounds, and so on.
There are some typical profiles to draw upon. Presidents usually come from among the nations business or political elites, and a majority (26) have had legal training. They have always been males, and only once nonwhite, and on average about 55 years old when assuming office. The youngest elected was 43, the oldest 70.
But we can do better. A general consensus prevails that the next president is likely to differ from the current president in a host of ways, including personality, career background, temperament, and policy preferences.
Think back just to our last 10 or so chief executives. Trump differs from Obama dramatically on those attributes, but Obama and George W. Bush were hardly soulmates, nor were George W. Bush and Bill Clinton or Clinton and George H. W. Bush. Ronald Reagan differed from Jimmy Carter strikingly as did Carter from Gerald Ford, Ford from Richard Nixon and Nixon from Lyndon Johnson, ad infinitum. The next president is a reaction to the last president, if not an opposite type. Voters often look for the anti-incumbent.
One way to identify Trumps anti-type is to identify the traits voters dislike about him, knowing voters will especially be looking for opposite traits in the next president. For Trump, thats easy to do since the media has produced a virtual cottage industry seeking to identify the things voters most dislike about him.
A number of national polls have focused on quantifying the reasons people dont like Trump. We cite three completed in the last few months as representative, one from Quinnipiac, one from Gallup, and one from Fox News. Their conclusions are similar.
Quinnipiac, surveying Trumps positive /negative ratings on a cluster of character traits, found Trumps net negative ratings highest in traits such as not being level headed, not demonstrating moral leadership, not sharing (their) values, and lack of honesty, compassion and leadership skills.
A second poll from Gallup found most Trump dislike rooted in disapproval of his personality and character, while fewer than one in five disapprovals were because of his policies. Like most other polls, Gallup gave Trump high marks on the economy and several other leading issues.
The third poll from Fox News quantified some of the specific reasons people dislike Trump. Some 22% said Trump was not capable of doing the job / doesnt know what he is doing. Another 20% reported Trump didnt have the temperament to be president. Also,13% said he was divisive, 9% said he was corrupt, and 7% thought he was dishonest. Incompetence, temperament and racism were the leading causes cited for disliking Trump while less than one in seven disliked Trump on policy grounds.
Collectively, all three polls concurred that Trump was widely disliked personally (by as many as 2 out of every 3 voters), but many of his policies are not. Significantly, it is Trumps character, temperament and demeanor that many voters dislike. If his successor is a reaction to him it will be on these character and personality traits more than policy.
This presents Republicans with a baffling quandary. Many voters dislike Trump personally, implying that Trump heading the GOP ticket in 2020 would be a net drag on the national party. Republicans could try replacing him as the nominee, but historically a serious challenge to an incumbent president has almost always produced general election defeat.
This is the GOPs cruel dilemma: they may lose with Trump in 2020; they almost certainly will lose without him.
But 2020 is no free throw for Democrats. They first need to find a candidate sufficiently different from Trump that voters feel they have a choice. Moreover, Democrats cannot run hard to the left or ignore the popularity of many Trump policies. If Democrats forget why they lost in 2016, they will lose again in 2020.
Republicans are running with a flawed candidate; Democrats are running with flawed policies. Historically, these conditions in the past century helped produce four major third party candidacies 1992 (Ross Perot), 1968 (George Wallace), 1924 (Robert La Follette), and 1912 (Teddy Roosevelt).
Will the search for the anti-Trump make 2020 the fifth one?
What or who will replace The Reporter...and when will it happen?
There won’t be anyone.Only President Trump can stand up to the Republican Party, The Democrat Party, and the main stream media nipping at his heels like a pack of hyenas 24 hours a day 7 days a week.
That’s great if so. He’s being useful.
If such is the case, Mr. Pence did not need to be in attendance at that meeting. The president may have wanted some visible support during that outburst of a conference.
Trump knew that most the media would be on Nancy and Chuck’s side.
Who could possibly stack up against the guy who helped open up No. Korea for US?
Besides that, having a bit of leadership at CIA as background doesnt hurt either.
I've been in many a meeting when, somebody either above my pay grade or has taken ownership of the narrative of the meeting, you let them own it and go. VP Mike Pence was doing just that - no need for him to interrupt or add to what PDJT was getting across.
You could be correct.
Maybe Trump sharply corrected Pence in the past for
dipping in when it was not directly called for.
Mike didn’t wish to be barked at again for the same thing.
It was a paraphrase and extraction from memory.
Since WWII, the people have moved the presidency from one major party to the other every 8 years with only 2 exceptions.
Carter was so miserable the people moved early after 4 years, and Reagan was popular enough to help Bush 41 get elected but that wore off in 4 years.
After either 4 or 8 years swing voters tend to want the other party in power. The rest of the electorate changes very little.
Ivanka
The list was formidable not the aspirants.
I think this is interesting:
John Nance Garner was the 32nd VP under FDR and once described the office of the vice presidency as being “not worth a bucket of warm piss.” [This quote was Bowdlerized for many decades to “not worth a bucket of warm spit” by the media. The incorrect version is still used on occasion by writers who say they never heard or read it any other way.
Should he do so, we can only hope and pray he will supply the chosen one a list of “how tos”, goals, strategies, and one liners. Might some scientist be bold enough to attempt to clone our VSG POTUS?
I could see Pence serving for one term like 41’. He’d have to take himself out in 28’ and turn it over to the voters. The pendulum does swing and it would take a lot more than 41’ was willing to do to give us 16 years. A lot can happen, especially in the next 2 years.
Yup. It reminds me of this supposedly true anecdote ...
Bess Truman being interviewed ...
“Mrs Truman, could you get the President to stop saying ‘manure’ so much?”
“Hon, it took me thirty years to get him to say ‘manure’!”
LOL, that is EXACTLY what I was about to post, word-for-word!
If Trump does run in the 2020, these marginal challengers will mostly all drop out by the 5th state primary.
It’s a learning process for Vice President Spence, who is already conservative enough. *And I don’t care who gets the old girls excited.* If they want to help save our nation, they need to be more analytical (logical) and less intuitive (emotional).
That would be like asking “Who will succeed Elvis?” Impossible to know. Both permanently disrupted their respective domains. Both changed their respective landscapes beyond recognition. Who can know what comes next?
From 2016 to 2020....
(1) About 3 million new naturalized citizens. They vote 80% for the Democrat Party.
(2) About 11 million deaths - net loss of at least 1 million Republicans.
(3) About 16 million new voters in the 18-22 year old age group. A majority will be non-white, and they vote 80% Democrat. Young white voters are about 55% Republican.
(4) In Florida, about 1 million felons will have their voting rights restored. Since a majority of them are Black and Hispanic, that is not good news for Trump.
I don't see how Trump wins in 2020.
The Democrats will be 100% focused on voter turn out.
The good news?
If we lose, we can still blame it on voter fraud.
Sarah Sanders 2024!
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