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US Presidential Election 2024
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‘Republicans ... increasingly want Trumpism without Trump’: Photo: AP

Trump trails DeSantis by 23 per cent in Republican primary poll, would lose to Biden in 2024

  • Republican support for another Donald Trump bid for the White House has significantly eroded
  • Poll suggests almost two-thirds of Republican Party voters want Florida Governor Ron DeSantis to run in 2024

Former US president Donald Trump trails Florida Governor Ron DeSantis as the favoured Republican presidential nominee by a 23 per cent margin among Republican voters – and would lose to President Joe Biden in a 2024 general election, a new poll finds.

Burdened by flagging support after the midterm elections, Trump has the backing of just 33 per cent of Republican voters compared to 56 per cent for DeSantis in the Suffolk University/USA Today poll released on Tuesday.

Trump would get just 40 per cent compared to 47 per cent for Biden in the poll of all registered 2024 voters. DeSantis, on the other hand, leads Biden by 47 per cent to 43 per cent in the same poll.

“Republicans … increasingly want Trumpism without Trump,” David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center, told USA Today.

Only 31 per cent of Republicans want Trump to run for president again, while 60 per cent say he should not, the poll said.

Trump’s poor performance, coupled with DeSantis’ rising popularity, reflects the widespread perception on both sides of the partisan divide that the former president is largely responsible for the Republican Party’s disastrous underperformance in the just-completed midterms.

Republicans believed they were on track to score a landslide “red wave” win over Biden’s Democrats in the midterms. Instead, they barely retook control of the House of Representatives and lost a seat in the Senate.

Most analysts blame Trump’s hand-picked Republican candidates for flopping in battleground states like Pennsylvania, Arizona and Georgia, where Republican Herschel Walker lost in a run-off to Senator Raphael Warnock.

While Republicans struggled nationwide, DeSantis engineered a remarkable landslide in Florida up and down the ticket. He swept to a nearly 20 per cent victory to win re-election and tipped the scales in Congress with an audacious and successful gerrymander.

Trump’s poor polling numbers are all the more eye-popping because he is the only announced candidate in the 2024 presidential election.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. Photo: AFP

His campaign launch speech last month drew poor reviews and Trump has raised eyebrows by failing to follow up with any rallies or other active campaigning.

But some warn that DeSantis and other possible Republican presidential candidates remain relatively untested and may find it difficult to topple Trump once any campaign begins in earnest.

The Suffolk University/USA Today poll of 1,000 registered voters, conducted Wednesday through Sunday, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points. The sample of 374 Republicans and Republican-leaning independent voters has a margin of error of 5.1 points.

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