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The Memo: 2024 chatter reveals Democratic nervousness | TheHill


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SOURCE: http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/589862-the-memo-2024-chatter-reveals-democratic-nervousness
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Summary

But the early chatter itself reveals the nervousness that permeates the party.In the past week alone, New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman held out the possibility of anti-Trump Republican Rep. Liz CheneyElizabeth (Liz) Lynn CheneyThe Memo: 2024 chatter reveals Democratic nervousness GOP's McCarthy has little incentive to work with Jan. 6 panel The fates of the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump MORE (Wyo.) being added as President BidenJoe BidenCarville advises Democrats to 'quit being a whiny party' Wendy Sherman takes leading role as Biden's 'hard-nosed' Russia negotiator Sullivan: 'It's too soon to tell' if Texas synagogue hostage situation part of broader extremist threat MORE’s 2024 running mate.A Wall Street Journal column by Douglas SchoenDouglas SchoenJudge sets July trial date in Bannon case Winners and losers in the mini-war between Israel and Hamas Sunday shows - Focus shifts to Judiciary impeachment hearing MORE and Andrew Stein posited the possibility of a third Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonA year into his presidency, Biden is polling at an all-time low The Memo: 2024 chatter reveals Democratic nervousness Second gentleman Emhoff acts as public link to White House MORE presidential candidacy. And a thinly source suggestion that Sen. Kyrsten SinemaKyrsten Sinema​​Democrats make voting rights push ahead of Senate consideration Sunday shows - Voting rights legislation dominates Voting rights, Trump's Big Lie, and Republicans' problem with minorities MORE (D-Ariz.) might make her own quixotic run lit up social media Friday.All those ideas were met with ridicule from many quarters.But more serious discussions are simmering in Democratic circles, especially if Biden does not seek a second term.Would Vice President Harris be too flawed a candidate? It’d be pretty chaotic.”In that hypothetical, Democrats would face an agonizing choice: go with a nominee about whom they have serious misgivings or allow someone else to wrest away the nomination from the nation’s first Black female vice-president.Amid the early speculation, some voices urge a look at the bigger picture.Strategist Joe Trippi, who has worked on presidential campaigns for Democrats for several decades, argued that the fate of the next election would be determined by the big, underlying trends more than by the identity of the party’s candidate.“2024 will be decided by one question: Was Joe Biden’s presidency successful?” Trippi said.

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