Trump focuses on Biden, largely ignoring GOP rivals in Fox News town hall
Roughly 40 days before the Iowa caucuses, Donald Trump is reserving most of his ire not for his GOP primary challengers but instead for President Joe Biden, his presumed 2024 rival should the former president secure the Republican nomination.
During a Tuesday night town hall with Fox News, Trump repeated perfunctory attacks against his two closest rivals Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) and former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, but spent more time focused on slamming Biden, the latest sign that the former president has moved his focus towards a general election campaign.
GOP SENATORS LOOK TO CRACK DOWN ON FOREIGN ESPIONAGE WITH TOUGHER REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
In one of his few attacks against his GOP foes, Trump hit at DeSantis and Haley for wanting to “play around” with voter’s social security.
“We have more wealth than anybody, but we don’t use it,” Trump said. “And then guys like DeSantis and guys, like many of the Democrats, but guys like DeSantis and to a lesser extent Nikki Haley, they want to play around with your social security.”
Trump also attacked Haley over a New York Times report on Tuesday that Reid Hoffman, a Democratic billionaire co-founder of LinkedIn, gave $250,000 to a Haley super PAC. “I just found out that Democrats are funding Nikki Haley’s campaign,” Trump mused before also attacking DeSantis. “I hear that Democrats are contributing to Ron DeSanctus’s or Ron DeSanctimonious, to Ron DeSanctus’s campaign.”
Largely, though, Trump spent the majority of the town hall contrasting his administration to Biden’s presidential record. The former president slammed Biden over the U.S.’s 2021 Afghanistan withdrawal, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and the deadly Oct. 7 Hamas attack against Israel.
He also slammed Biden over domestic problems the nation is facing including Biden’s handling a growing migrant population at the southern border, inflation increasing the price of groceries and gas, and the 91 criminal indictments Trump is facing. In his harshest critiques, the 77-year-old Trump attacked the 81-year-old Biden’s mental and physical capabilities.
“I personally don’t think he makes it, OK,” Trump said when host Sean Hannity asked if Biden would remain the Democratic nominee in 2024. “I think he’s in bad shape physically.”
“Do you remember when he said I’d like to take him behind the barn? If he took me behind the barn and I went like this,” Trump said while pretending to blow on Biden, “I believe he’d fall over. … Who knows?”
Poll after poll shows the American public is largely put off by another Trump v. Biden rematch in 2024. But for Biden, voters are more likely to say his age makes me less eligible for the White House compared to Trump. An August Associated Press/NORC poll showed 77% of participants said Biden is too old for another term while only 51% said the same for Trump.
It increasingly appears that Biden and Trump will faceoff again in 2024, as Trump leads his rivals by double digits in state and national polls. Trump currently polls at 61.3% in a RealClearPoltics poll average while DeSantis polls at 13.2% and Haley polls at 10.2%.
The former president will skip the fourth GOP primary debate Wednesday night in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, as he did the first three. This time, however, Trump is bypassing holding a competing event, opting instead to hold a private fundraiser in Florida. Trump is hoping for a strong showing at the Jan. 15 Iowa caucuses to simultaneously cement the inevitability of him winning the GOP nomination and stymieing any other rival from gaining momentum heading into the New Hampshire primary eight days later.
The Alabama debate is ostensibly one of the last moments in front of a national audience DeSantis, Haley, biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie will have to convince GOP voters to back their campaign.
Trump, however, is largely looking ahead to how a second term would play out for him — including reversing Biden’s policies. “We are going to make our country greater than ever before,” Trump during the town hall. “Day one the border gets closed. And day one and a half we drill. You know we drill baby drill drill, drill drill. And probably … on day two, we’ll get rid of this ridiculous electric car mandate.” The crowd loudly clapped in support of Trump’s plans.
What recent comments and actions indicate that Trump is considering running for president in 2024?
His hands. “He’d be in serious trouble, OK? Serious trouble.”
Despite his attacks on Biden, Trump still faces a crowded field of potential primary challengers should he choose to run for the Republican nomination in 2024. However, his focus on Biden during the town hall suggests that he sees the current president as his main opponent in the upcoming election.
Trump’s criticisms of Biden’s presidency have been a staple of his political rhetoric since leaving office in January. He has consistently criticized Biden’s handling of various issues, such as the withdrawal from Afghanistan and the crisis at the southern border. By continuing to attack Biden, Trump is not only positioning himself as the alternative to the current president but also solidifying his own support base within the Republican Party.
It is still uncertain whether Trump will ultimately decide to run for president in 2024, but his recent comments and actions indicate that he is seriously considering it. Reserving most of his ire for Biden rather than his GOP primary challengers shows that Trump is already thinking ahead to a potential general election campaign. This early focus on Biden as his rival suggests that if Trump were to secure the Republican nomination, he would prioritize challenging Biden and his administration rather than engaging in intra-party fighting.
As the Iowa caucuses draw near, the political landscape is becoming more intense, with candidates jockeying for position and trying to gain an edge. Trump’s targeting of Biden in his recent town hall signals a shift in his strategy and priorities. Whether it is a calculated move to shore up his support base or a genuine indication of his intentions for 2024, only time will tell.
For now, the spotlight is on Trump as he continues to make headlines with his attacks on Biden and his potential bid for the Republican nomination. With roughly 40 days until the Iowa caucuses, all eyes are on the former president to see how he navigates the path to 2024 and whether he will indeed challenge Biden for the presidency once again.
" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."