Tipsheet
Premium

Democrat Panics That a 2024 Biden Run Could Put Trump In the White House

A House Democrat is sounding the alarm that a 2024 re-election run from President Joe Biden could result in former President Trump taking back the White House-- the horror. 

Democrat Rep. Dean Phillips (D., Minn.) has repeatedly put a notice on Biden's poor health and low polling numbers, urging the 80-year-old president not to run again. 

"God forbid the president has a health episode or something happens in the middle of a primary," Phillips told the Washington Post.

As the Left continues to ignore the downward spiraling state of the U.S. brought on by Biden, Phillips is concerned the country is at "grave risk of another Trump presidency." 

However, despite the Biden Administration spending months touting the president's so-called economic "relief" plan, most Americans aren't buying what he is selling. 

An AP-Norc poll found that just 36 percent of American adults approve of Biden's handling of the economy, while only 42 percent approve of his overall job performance-- a significant indicator that Biden won't garner enough votes to beat Trump in the election, which all polls lead to that being a solid reality. 

"I just felt compelled to raise my voice in the face of what I consider to be an unwillingness to confront the truth right now," Phillips said, adding that he had thought about challenging Biden in the race. "I'm doing this to prevent a return of Donald Trump to the White House." 

Phillip's comments come as a Reuter's poll found that many Americans who voted for Biden in 2020 may not vote for him again in the upcoming election. 

Nineteen percent of Biden's 2020 voters said they weren't were still determining who they would vote for or if they would vote for someone other than Biden or Trump. Meanwhile, six percent of Biden 2020 voters said they would support Trump. 

A Rasmussen poll found that Trump continues dominating the GOP playing field. It found that Trump holds 60 percent of support from GOP primary voters and maintains a 47-point lead over his newest nearest rival, Vivek Ramaswamy. 

According to RealClearPolitics, the 45th president is averaging 54 percent nationally, surpassing the 50 percent threshold, which means even if all other candidates got behind a single alternative, Trump would still beat them in a head-to-head matchup.