homeworld NewsUS Presidential Election | Voters say neither Joe Biden nor Donald Trump should run

US Presidential Election | Voters say neither Joe Biden nor Donald Trump should run

US Presidential Election | Voters say neither Joe Biden nor Donald Trump should run
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By Reuters Apr 25, 2023 5:19:20 PM IST (Updated)

The three-day opinion poll showed an American public unenthused by the prospect of a rematch between President Joe Biden and his predecessor and current leading Republican rival Donald Trump. The Reuters/Ipsos poll gathered responses from 1,005 adults including 445 self-described Democrats and 361 Republicans.

About half of US Democrats say President Joe Biden should not seek re-election next year and that he is too old to run, a worrisome sign for the 80-year-old, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found.

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The three-day opinion poll completed on Monday, a day before he announced his re-election bid, showed an American public unenthused by the prospect of a rematch between Biden and his predecessor and current leading Republican rival, Donald Trump, with about two-thirds of respondents overall not wanting either to run again in 2024.
Among their own parties, 44 percent of registered Democratic respondents said Biden should not seek a second term, compared to 34 percent of Republicans who said Trump should not run again, according to the national poll.
Since taking office in January 2021, Biden has been dogged by high inflation and low approval ratings. Just 41 percent of poll respondents - including 74 percent of Democrats and 10 percent of Republicans - approved of his performance as president.
His re-election campaign faces the challenge of sparking enthusiasm among Democrats to ensure they come out to vote in November 2024.
Biden is expected to face scant opposition in Democratic presidential nomination contests after he was credited with helping the party do better than expected in the 2022 congressional elections. Democrats lost control of the House of Representatives but retained a Senate majority, thanks in part to voters fired up by the Supreme Court decision ending the national right to abortion.
Biden is the oldest person to have occupied the White House and would be 86 at the end of a second four-year term. Sixty-one percent of registered Democrats in the poll said he was too old to work in government.
Biden beat Trump in 2020 by winning the Electoral College 306 to 232. He won the swing states of Pennsylvania and Georgia, and he bested Trump by more than 7 million votes nationally, capturing 51.3 percent of the popular vote to the Republican's 46.8 percent.
Trump is the frontrunner for the Republican nomination and was the pick of 50 percent of registered Republicans in the poll, trailed by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who was favoured by 24 percent of the party though he has not yet declared his candidacy.
In a hypothetical one-on-one contest, Biden led Trump 43 percent to 38 percent among registered voters, a lead for the Democrat that was just outside the poll's 4 percentage point credibility interval for registered voters. Biden also led among independent voters.
In another hypothetical two-person match up, DeSantis trailed further behind, with 34 percent to Biden's 43 percent.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll gathered responses from 1,005 adults across the United States, including 445 self-described Democrats and 361 Republicans.
 
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