



President Joe “Big Guy Corruption” Biden seems to be increasingly in trouble with respect to clinching the 2024 presidential nomination of the Democratic Party.
Most Democratic voters seem to be eager to see a televised debate between him and rebel candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., according to a new poll.
Sleepy Joe is still considered a certain winner in the race, but with more than a year to go before the party convention, his seeming senility and cognitive acuity issues, among other things, cannot be ruled out.
Biden has been challenged by only two other candidates – self-help writer Marianne Williamson and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a long-time environmental lawyer and anti-vaccine activist.
While Williamson can be deemed harmless to Biden’s nomination prospects, however, RFK Jr., with his dissenting views and the weight of the Kennedy political dynasty behind him, is certainly not toothless.
A new public opinion survey by Trafalgar Group and Convention of States Action found four out of five US voters, along with more than half of Democratic voters, wish to see a debate between Big Guy Joe and the nephew of President John Kennedy.
Thus, the results from the poll show 78% of likely voters in the 2024 election hope for a Biden-Kennedy debate, as coted 92.8% of Republicans, 80.1% of independents, and 57.5% of Democrats, The Tampa Free Press reports.
Yet, much to Biden’s benefit, the Democratic National Committee made the decision not to hold any debates in the 2024 primaries.
A polling average compiled by RealClearPolitics for the 2024 Democratic primaries – using polls from May 17 to June 15 – has Biden’s support among Democrats at 62%, while RFK polls at 15.6%, and Marianne Williamson at 6.1%.
The report notes that Robert Kennedy Jr. keeps gaining momentum nationwide. He was most recently endorsed by Jack Dorsey, the billionaire co-founder of Twitter.
Dorsey thinks RFK is the Democratic presidential candidate capable of defeating former President Trump or Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, the two most prominent contenders for the GOP nomination.