Washington Examiner

2024 GOP field: Is anyone, other than Trump, prepared for prime time?

If Trump Skips ‍the⁤ Debate, Can Any GOP‍ Candidate Thrive in His Absence?

If former President Donald Trump doesn’t ‍join​ the other​ major Republican presidential candidates at the first debate next week, the‌ spotlight will still shine on one of ‌the ‍biggest ‍stories of the 2024 race.

The prevailing ⁤storyline is Trump’s continued dominance,⁤ despite​ a slew of legal problems. But the ⁤subplot​ of​ the race is⁤ the ⁣failure of the other GOP candidates to⁢ launch.

DeSantis’s Struggle to ⁣Compete

Nowhere is that clearer than in the case of Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL), now nearly 40 points​ behind Trump in the national ‌RealClearPolitics polling average and ‌below 20% in the⁢ critical ⁢early states.

DeSantis was supposed to compete⁢ with Trump on something like even‌ terms. He was ‍one of the few Republican leaders who came out of the midterm elections​ stronger than he entered, presiding over an actual ‍red​ wave in the ⁣erstwhile battleground state of Florida, once ‍known for ​its ‌hanging chads. But after a long buildup ⁢to​ his campaign announcement as‌ he waited ​for the Sunshine State legislative session to conclude, much of that momentum ‌has been lost.

Now he ⁢has Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) nipping at his heels in Iowa, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie​ doing the same in ⁢New Hampshire,⁤ and Vivek Ramaswamy​ closing in on him in at least ‌some national polls.

Trump makes fun of DeSantis as a standard line in his stump speech even in⁢ staid settings ‌like state Republican fundraising dinners. ​The partisan crowd ⁣laughs ​along as Trump tells the tale of endorsing a ⁢Florida congressman ‍for governor in 2018 only to have⁣ “that son of a bitch”‌ turn around and ⁤run against him.

DeSantis’s⁢ team on ⁣Friday likened this ‍stage of the race to the second inning of a baseball game. If so, the⁣ rest of the field ⁣will need this one to go into ⁤extra innings.

Can Any Candidate Thrive Without Trump?

Former Vice President Mike Pence, former U.N. Ambassador‌ Nikki Haley,​ Christie, ‌and Gov. Doug Burgum (R-ND) are all reliably in the single‌ digits, ⁣candidates who might be‌ in the top tier in a‌ normal cycle. The⁢ latest Fox News poll ​has as many primary contenders‌ at 0% as in ‌double digits.

If Trump follows through on skipping the Republican National Committee ‌debate, the ‍key will be ‌whether ⁢any of these candidates can thrive in his ‍absence. Trump suspects that without the ⁤oxygen only ​he ​can​ provide by getting on that stage in Milwaukee, ‍they will all suffocate.

A second or third candidate becoming competitive is not sufficient to defeat Trump, based on the past history of other strong front-runners. George ⁢H.W.​ Bush lost Iowa in 1988 but‍ recovered to win the nomination. Bob Dole and George W. Bush both lost ⁤New Hampshire. John McCain, Mitt Romney,​ and Trump in 2016 all lost⁤ Iowa and rebounded.

So⁤ even if⁤ one of the candidates in Milwaukee can make it a race, ⁣there⁢ is no guarantee they would beat Trump. They ⁣are trying to erase a larger‌ deficit than‌ any winning candidate has⁤ ever overcome.

President Joe Biden came back ⁣from a near-death political experience to win ‍the Democratic⁤ nomination in‍ 2020. But the candidates ahead of him ⁣didn’t have the type of lead Trump has, nor had they led the party for​ eight years.

McCain ​came​ back from a similarly precarious position to win in 2008. But Rudy Giuliani’s lead‍ was smaller, ⁢and he bypassed the early‌ states because unlike Trump, he wasn’t winning them. McCain, Giuliani, ‍Romney, ‌and Fred Thompson were ⁢all top-tier candidates who ​were seen as having⁤ a chance to win going into the⁣ primaries.

Bill Clinton was originally a second-tier candidate in 1992.⁢ But⁢ the entire‍ top ​tier ahead​ of him took a pass​ on the race, assuming‌ the Persian Gulf War victory made Bush unbeatable.

Jimmy Carter came back after trailing Ted Kennedy in ⁢1980. But​ he was the incumbent president.

Trump is attempting to‌ run as a‌ quasi-incumbent. So far, it is working.

Another candidate is going to have to show ​between the first debate‌ and when the first ⁤votes are cast that they can alter that dynamic.

Yes, it is early. But if Trump wasn’t⁢ facing⁣ indictments ‍in four⁢ separate cases, it might already be too late.

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A candidate other⁣ than Trump is‍ going to need to show they are ready to launch.

If not in Milwaukee, it is hard to see ⁣when.



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