Realitybites said:
March 4th 2024: The kangaroo court convenes
March 5th 2024: Super Tuesday
July 15th-18th 2024: Republican National Convention
The democrat plan appears to be to convict and arrest Trump sometime between Super Tuesday and the convention after he has secured the necessary delegates to win the nomination. I'm not entirely sure what the second half of 2024 looks like. Our nation has never had to deal with a blatant political assassination carried out by a corrupt legal system.
I agree that this sounds like a plan the Democrats would like. But if you think it through, there are a lot of dangers for the Democrats in a plan like that.
Consider the point made about RFK. At this moment he's not really moving the needle with most voters, because I believe most voters don't really like the field of candidates on either side, so what we are seeing in the polls is the sentiment of people who
are supporting someone now and intend to vote. The people who are not currently interested in the election but will vote next November, are a mass as yet unknown, and RFK's potential as a wild card may have no effect or great effect, and could benefit or hurt either Trump or Biden.
To see what I mean, consider Houston's recent mayoral election. Seventeen candidates ran to replace outgoing Mayor Sylvester Turner, and they collected between 0.04% and 42.50% of the vote.
https://www.texastribune.org/2023/11/07/houston-mayor-race-2024-results/What is notable is that in a city with a population of 2,264,876
https://worldpopulationreview.com/us-cities/houston-tx-populationonly 251,858 people voted, just about 11% of the population and around 14% of the eligible voting population. Very low participation.
Because no one won more than 49.99% of the vote, there was a run-off election in December between John Whitmire and Sheila Jackson Lee, both long-time politicos with well-known names.
But the December 9th runoff election was a surprise in two ways. First, despite leading Lee by 17,317 votes after the first round (42.5% to 35.6%), Whitmire won the runoff by 57,972 votes (64.4% to 35.6%). Whitmire essentially collected all the support from candidates who did not make the runoff. But the runoff only brought in just over 201 thousand voters, just about a 20 percent drop from the first round. Notably, Whitmire increased his numbers from 107,410 votes in the first round to 129,495 in the runoff, while Lee dropped from 90,093 votes in the first round to 71,523 in the runoff. That is, Lee's support
fell when people were asked to repeat their vote.
I would not be surprised to see something like this happen in the Presidential race as well. Both Biden and Trump are well-known by name, and both have their bases of support. But a lot can change between now and next Spring, and even more may change when it comes down to two basic choices.
This could all benefit Biden, but I don't think so. Trump could implode, but I keep thinking back from the 2016 campaign, and how Trump changed his strategy once he had the GOP nomination secured. The man is annoying and noisy, but he also can be canny and clever. If the Democrats proceed with a strategy clearly intended to make Trump the GOP candidate but smear him just as he becomes the official nominee, then I expect Trump will make his own plans on how to deal with that situation.
The point is, expecting Trump to do nothing different between now and next March when his main opponent has made the opposition strategy plain, would be foolish indeed.