Article Two of the
United States Constitution states that for a person to serve as president, the individual must be a
natural-born citizen of the United States, be at least 35 years old, and have been a United States resident for at least 14 years. The
Twenty-second Amendment forbids any person from being elected president more than twice. Major party candidates seek the nomination through a series of
primary elections that select the delegates who choose the candidate at the party's national convention. Each party's national convention chooses a vice presidential
running mate to form that party's
ticket. The nominee for president usually picks the running mate, who is then ratified by the delegates at the party's convention.
The general election in November is an indirect election, in which voters cast ballots for a slate of members of the
Electoral College; these electors then directly elect the president and vice president.[28]
Election offices are dealing with increased workloads and public scrutiny, so officials in many key states have sought for more funds to hire more personnel, improve security, and extend training. This demand emerges at a moment when numerous election offices are dealing with an increase in retirements and a flood of public record demands, owing in part to the electoral mistrust planted by former President Donald Trump's loss in the 2020 election. Both Biden and Trump are presumptive nominees for president in 2024, suggesting a rematch of the 2020 election, which would be the first presidential rematch since
1956.[29] If Trump is elected, he would become the second president to win a second non-consecutive term, joining
Grover Cleveland who did so
in 1892.[30]
Donald Trump has made false claims of
voter fraud in the
2020 presidential election, and has continued denying the election results as of February 2024[update].[36][37] Election security experts have warned that officials who deny the legitimacy of the 2020 presidential election may attempt to impede the voting process or refuse to certify the 2024 election results.[38]
Current and former U.S. officials have stated that foreign interference in the 2024 election is likely. Three major factors cited were "America’s deepening domestic political crises, the collapse of controversial attempts to control political speech on social media, and the rise of generative AI."[39] On April 1, 2024, The New York Times reported that the Chinese government had created fake pro-Trump accounts on social media "promoting conspiracy theories, stoking domestic divisions and attacking President Biden ahead of the election in November."[40] According to disinformation experts and intelligence agencies, Russia spread disinformation ahead of the 2024 election to damage Joe Biden and Democrats, boost candidates supporting isolationism, and undercut support for Ukraine aid and NATO.[41][42]
This will be the first U.S. presidential election to occur after the
reapportionment of votes in the
United States Electoral College following the
2020 United States census.[43][44] If the results of the 2020 election were to stay the same (which has never occurred in the history of presidential elections) in 2024, Democrats would have 303 electoral votes against the Republicans' 235, a slight change from Biden's 306 electoral votes and Trump's 232, meaning that Democrats lost a net of 3 electoral votes to the reapportionment process. This apportionment of electoral college votes will remain only through the 2028 election. Reapportionment will be conducted again after the 2030 United States census.[45]
In recent presidential elections, most states are not competitive due to demographics keeping them solidly behind one of the major parties. Because of the nature of the
Electoral College, this means that the various
swing states — competitive states that "swing" between the Democratic and Republican parties — are vital to winning the presidency. As of now, these include states in the
Rust Belt, such as
Wisconsin,
Michigan, and
Pennsylvania, and states in the
Sun Belt, such as
Nevada,
Arizona, and
Georgia.[46]North Carolina may also be considered a battleground state, due to the close result in the
previous presidential election, in which Trump only won by 1.34%.[47] Due to gradual demographic shifts, some former swing states such as
Iowa,
Ohio and
Florida have shifted significantly towards the Republicans, favoring them in future statewide and local elections. Meanwhile, states like
Colorado,
New Mexico and
Virginia have moved noticeably towards the Democrats, and the party has become the dominant political force there.[48][49][50]
The Democratic electoral coalition, securing the "blue states" for Democratic presidential candidates, performs
best among Jewish and
Black voters;[51][52]Whites who have attended college[53] or live in
urban areas.[54]Working class voters were also a mainstay of the Democratic coalition since the days of the
New Deal, but since the 1970s, many have defected to Republicans as the Democratic Party moved significantly to the left on cultural issues.[55] Conversely, the traditional Republican coalition that dominates many "red states" is mainly composed of rural White voters, evangelicals, the elderly, and non-college educated voters.[56] Republicans have also historically performed well with
suburban,
middle class voters since the 1950s, but this bloc has drifted away from them in recent years due to the rise of the
Tea Party movement and later the
Make America Great Again movement.[57] The acceleration of this trend has been credited with tipping the
2020 presidential election in favor of Democrat
Joe Biden, because the incumbent Trump was historically unpopular in the suburbs for a Republican candidate, underperforming there significantly.[58]
Some polling for this election has indicated that Democratic strength among
Hispanic,
Asian,
Arab, and
youth voters appears to have somewhat eroded, while Republicans' durability with Whites and voters over the age of 65 also appears to be slipping.[59][60][61][62][63] However, some political analysts[64] have argued that these apparent trends in polling are not representative of the actual electorate, and are a polling mirage resulting from poor sampling months before the election, large numbers of voters who do not think the election will be between Biden and Trump,[65] and heavy non-response bias.[66][67][68][69] Other pollsters, such as YouGov, have shown no statistically significant generational or racial depolarization among the electorate.[70][71]
Abortion access is expected to be a key topic during the campaign. This is the first presidential election to be held in the aftermath of two major court rulings that affected access to
abortion. The first is the 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision, in which the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, leaving abortion law entirely to the states, including bans on abortion.[72] The second is the 2023 Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. U.S. Food and Drug Administration, in which a federal judge in northwest Texas overturned the
FDA's approval of
mifepristone in 2000, which could potentially pull the medication from the market if upheld by higher courts.[73] Both rulings have received strong support from
Republican politicians and lawmakers.[72][73]
Biden has called on Congress to codify abortion protections into federal law, and held many rallies on the issue.[76][77] Trump has claimed credit for overturning Roe but has criticized Republicans pushing for total abortion bans.[78][79]
Polling has shown that border security and immigration are among the top issues concerning potential voters in the 2024 presidential election.[80][81] In 2023 and 2024, a surge of migrants entering the country through the United States' border with Mexico occurred.[82] In response to the influx of migrants, Republican controlled states such as Texas and Florida have been busing migrants to major sanctuary cities controlled by Democrats such as New York and Chicago.[83][84]
Donald Trump has stated that if elected, he would increase deportations, send the U.S. military to the border, expand ICE detentions, deputize local law enforcement to handle border security, increase Customs and Border Patrol funding as well as finish building the wall on the southern border.[83] The Biden administration has undertaken a policy of punishing migrants who enter the country illegally and providing temporary protections to migrants from certain countries such as Venezuela, Ukraine, Nicaragua, Cuba and Haiti. This has resulted in a total increase in migrants legally arriving at points of entry, and a decrease in migrants attempting to illegally cross the border.[83] In February 2024, Biden and congressional negotiators reached a bipartisan agreement on a bill to secure the border that included many conservative demands and also unlocked aid to Ukraine and Israel, but the bill was opposed by Trump who claimed it would hurt Republican's ability to run on immigration as a campaign issue.[85][86][87][88][89] Biden has pushed back on Republican claims that he could secure the border without Congress.[90]
Kennedy has stated that he supports securing the border, including efforts like
Operation Lone Star by states in the absence of federal action.[91]
Climate change is expected to be an issue in the 2024 presidential election.[22]
Biden has stated he believes in human-caused
climate change.[92] Biden previously strengthened environmental protections that had been weakened during the Trump administration. Biden passed the
Inflation Reduction Act, the largest investment in addressing climate change and clean energy in US history.[93] Biden has also overseen a record in US crude oil production with over 13.2 million barrels of crude per day beating the 13 million barrels per day produced at the peak of Trump's presidency. Biden has previously stated his intention to lower prices at the gas pump, which experts believe is key to his 2024 reelection campaign.[94] Biden's first term dealt with supply shocks caused by the
2021-2024 global energy crisis due to the
COVID-19 pandemic and
Russian invasion of Ukraine.[95]
Trump is running on a
climate change denial platform.[96][97][98] Trump has repeatedly referred to his energy policy under the mantra "
drill, baby, drill,"[99] has promised to increase oil drilling on public lands and offer tax breaks to oil, gas, and coal producers. Trump has stated his goal for the U.S. to have the lowest cost of electricity and energy of any country in the world.[100] Trump has promised to rollback electric vehicle initiatives, proposed leaving the
Paris Climate Accords, and rescinding several environmental regulations.[100][101]
Joe Biden has been framing the election as a battle for democracy, which was similar to his framing of contemporary geopolitics as "the battle between democracy and autocracy."[102] Biden's rhetoric previously cited democracy and "a battle for the soul of our nation" as the key message of his 2020 presidential campaign, and uses it as a recurring element in his rhetoric since the 2020 presidential election.[25]
Polling before the election has indicated profound dissatisfaction with the state of American democracy.[103][104][105]Liberals tend to believe that
conservatives are threatening the country with
autocratic tendencies and their attempts to overturn the 2020 election.[106] Many Republicans are concerned that Trump's former
impeachment and
four criminal indictments are attempts to influence the election and keep him from office.[107]
Democracy is expected to be a large issue in the 2024 election. An AP-NORC poll of 1,074 adults conducted between November 30 to December 4, 2023, found that 62% of adults said democracy could be at risk depending on who wins the next election.[126]
Women were particularly affected by the economic downturn in the wake of the pandemic, particularly those who left their work for childcare responsibilities.[134] Temporary childcare measures, including an expanded
child tax credit as part of the
American Rescue Plan, were introduced as methods designed to help the economic situation of parents, but these would expire before the 2024 election.[135]
Biden has dubbed his economic policy "Bidenomics" and has promised to create middle-class jobs and reject
trickle-down economics.[145] Biden's trade agenda has been noted to reject traditional
neoliberal economic policies and the
Washington Consensus in favor of de-risking supply chains from China and reverse neoliberal policies that resulted in the offshoring of manufacturing and thus resulted in increased
populist backlash.[146] Trump's stated trade policy involves the United States decoupling from the global economy and having the country become more self-contained and exerting its power through individual trade dealings. This would be accomplished through a universal baseline tariff[147] of "perhaps 10%" on most foreign goods, with increased penalties if trade partners manipulate their currency or engage in unfair trade practices. Trump stated his plans to urge Congress to pass a "Trump Reciprocal Trade Act" to bestow presidential authority to impose a reciprocal tariff on any country that imposed one on the United States.[100]The Washington Post reported in January 2024 that Trump had discussed with advisors imposing a 60% tariff on all Chinese imports and was preparing for a massive trade war.[148] Trump's trade policies have been described as
neomercantilist or
autarkist.[147][149]
Under the Biden administration, several rounds of
student loan forgiveness have been issued, totaling over $132 billion. The forgiveness has largely focused on public servants, people who were defrauded, and people in repayment for long periods of time.[150] In August 2022, Biden announced he would sign an executive order that would forgive large amounts of student debt, including $10,000 for student loan debt for single graduates making less than $125,000 or married couples making less than $250,000 and $20,000 for recipients of
Pell Grants.[151][152] In June 2023, this plan was overturned in the Supreme Court decision Biden v. Nebraska.[153][154] In the aftermath of the decision, Biden has continued with more limited student loan forgiveness.[150] His plans have been criticized by Republicans as irresponsible spending.[155] Biden stated that offering universal pre-kindergarten services as well as caregiver support would be a priority of a second term.[156]
Some Republican candidates saw education as a winning campaign issue. Dozens of states have created laws preventing the instruction of
critical race theory, an academic discipline focused on the examination of racial inequality. Supporters of the laws claim that conversations about racial identity are not appropriate for a school environment.[157][158][17] Critics of the laws against critical race theory claim they
whitewash American history and act as
memory laws to rewrite public memory of U.S. history.[159] Trump has pledged to terminate the
Department of Education,[100] claiming it has been infiltrated by "radical zealots and Marxists."[160]
The United States has provided
significant military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine throughout the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[162][163][164] Biden has made strengthening the
NATO alliance and preparing for great power competition a cornerstone of his first term in office,[165] and has promised to defend the NATO alliance during his second term.[166] Donald Trump claims that Ukraine and suppressing Russian intervention should not be a significant interest to the United States, and that the plan should be more limited.[167] Trump previously stated he would potentially recognize
Russia's illegal annexation of Crimea,[168] and made suggestions that he could have prevented the war by ceding parts of eastern Ukraine to Russia.[169] Trump's 2024 campaign has reiterated its
isolationist "
America First" foreign policy agenda,[169] and has promised to "fundamentally reevaluate"
NATO's purpose and mission.[100] Trump has stated he would encourage Russia to "do whatever the hell they want" to countries that did not contribute enough to NATO.[170]
During the Israel–Hamas war, Biden announced "unequivocal" military support for
Israel, and condemned the actions of
Hamas and other Palestinian militants as terrorism.[171] Biden has requested 10.6 billion dollars of aid for Israel to Congress.[172] Biden's support for Israel has been criticized by progressives and Muslim leaders, many of whom have indicated they will not vote for Biden over the war.[173] By March 2024, Biden has become increasingly critical of Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and the
humanitarian crisis in Gaza, and has authorized air drops of aid and announced the construction of a military port to facilitate the delivery of aid to the enclave.[174][175] Kennedy condemned Hamas' attacks on Israeli civilians and declared support for aid to Israel.[176] Trump has given mixed messages on the war, pledging to support Israel and take a tough line on
Iran, while also criticizing Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and praising
Hezbollah as "very smart."[177][178]
Polling has indicated a significant divide between government policy on the Israel–Hamas war and the views of the general public.[179] A November 2023 poll had 68% of Americans agreeing with a statement that "Israel should call a ceasefire and try to negotiate" and a plurality opposed
military aid to Israel, favoring the United States as a neutral meditator.[179] A February 2024 Associated Press poll found that 44% saw Israel as "a partner that the U.S. should cooperate with, but doesn't share its interests and values", while 35% saw Israel "as an ally that shares U.S. interests and values". 50% of Americans believed Israel had "gone too far" in its response, 31% thought Israel had "been about right" and 15% thought Israel had "not gone far enough".[180] Young Americans are significantly less supportive of Israel than older generations.[181][182]
Healthcare issues
Trump has made repealing the
Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare, a key issue of the 2024 election.[16] The issue of
healthcare and
drug policy, including whether the United States should shift to a
universal healthcare system,[183] and the
COVID-19 pandemic is expected to play a key role in the 2024 presidential election.[184] Kennedy has been a prominent anti-vaccine advocate, but according to Deseret News, he has attempted to moderate his anti-vaccine position before the election, stating that he is not against all vaccines.[185] West is running on a platform of
Medicare-for-all.[186] Biden has touted the
Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, which expanded the Affordable Care Act and included provisions to reduce prescription drug prices for people on Medicare.[187]
In recent years, conservative politicians in state legislatures have introduced a large and growing number of bills that restrict the rights of LGBT people, especially transgender people.[188][189]
In his term as president, Biden signed the
Respect for Marriage Act, which codified protections for same-sex and inter-racial marriage into law. Additionally, he has endorsed the
Equality Act, legislation aiming to extend the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 to offer protection on the basis of gender identity and sexual orientation across various domains such as in the workplace, housing, and health care sectors. In 2023, Biden directed the federal government to provide strategies to states on how to enhance access to healthcare and suicide prevention resources for the LGBT community.[190]
In a February 2023 campaign message, Donald Trump said that if reelected, he would enact a federal law that would recognize only two genders and claimed that being transgender is a concept made up by "the radical left."[191]
On April 25, 2023, President
Joe Biden announced his run for re-election, keeping Vice President
Kamala Harris as his running mate.[192][193] Consequently, Republicans have intensified their criticism of Harris since Biden declared his intention to run for office.[194] During late 2021, as Biden was facing low approval ratings, there was speculation that he would not seek re-election,[195] and some prominent Democrats (
RepresentativesCarolyn Maloney,
Tim Ryan and former Representative
Joe Cunningham) publicly urged Biden not to run.[196][197][198] In addition to Biden's unpopularity, many are concerned about his age; he was
the oldest person to assume the office at age 78 and would be 82 at the end of his first term. If re-elected, he would be 86 at the end of his second term.[199] According to an NBC poll released in April 2023, 70 percent of Americans—including 51 percent of Democrats—believe Biden should not run for a second term. Almost half said it was because of his age. According to the FiveThirtyEight national polling average, Biden's current approval rating is 41 percent, while 55 percent disapprove.[200] There was also speculation that Biden may face a primary challenge from a member of the
Democratic Party's progressive faction.[201][202] After Democrats outperformed expectations in the
2022 midterm elections, many believed the chances that Biden would run for and win his party's nomination had increased.[203]
Author
Marianne Williamson announced her candidacy in February 2023, before Biden announced his own candidacy for re-election. Williamson had previously sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020.[204] In April 2023,
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced his candidacy for the nomination.[205] Then on October 9, 2023, Kennedy announced that he would be dropping out of the Democratic primary and would instead run as an independent candidate.[206] Representative
Dean Phillips announced his run against Biden on October 26.[207]
On March 6, 2024, Philips suspended his campaign after failing to win any primaries the previous night on
Super Tuesday. Biden, Palmer, and Williamson remain the only major candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination.[208]
On March 12, 2024, Biden officially became the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.[209]
Donald Trump, the then-incumbent president, was defeated by Biden in the 2020 election and is not term-limited to run again in 2024, making him the fifth ex-president to seek a second non-consecutive term. If he wins, Trump would be the second president to win a non-consecutive term, after
Grover Cleveland in
1892.[210] Trump filed a statement of candidacy with the
Federal Election Commission (FEC) on November 15, 2022, and announced
his candidacy in a speech at
Mar-a-Lago the same day.[211][212] Trump is considered an early frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination, following his
2024 campaign announcement on November 15, 2022.[213] Trump announced in March 2022 that if he runs for re-election and wins the Republican presidential nomination, his former vice president
Mike Pence will not be his running mate.[214]
In March 2023, Trump was
indicted over his
hush money payments to adult film actress
Stormy Daniels.[215] Trump was again indicted in June over his handling of classified documents which contained materials sensitive to national security. Trump has pleaded not guilty to all the charges related to these indictments.[216][217]
Florida Governor
Ron DeSantis was seen as the main challenger to Trump for the Republican nomination; he raised more campaign funds in the first half of 2022 and had more favorable polling numbers than Trump by the end of 2022.[218][219][220]
On May 24, 2023, DeSantis announced his candidacy on Twitter in an online conversation with Twitter CEO
Elon Musk. "American decline is not inevitable—it is a choice...I am running for president of the United States to lead our great American comeback", DeSantis added. His campaign stated to have raised $1 million in the first hour following the announcement of his candidacy.[221] Speaking on Fox & Friends, he stated that he would "destroy leftism" in the United States.[222] At the end of July 2023, FiveThirtyEight's national polling average of the Republican primaries had Trump at 52 percent, and DeSantis at 15.[223]
Following the
Iowa caucuses, in which Trump posted a landslide victory, DeSantis and businessman
Vivek Ramaswamy dropped out of the race and endorsed Trump, leaving the former president and
Nikki Haley, the former South Carolina governor who served in
Trump's cabinet, as the only remaining major candidates.[224][225] Trump continued to win all four early voting contests while Haley's campaign struggled to gain momentum.[226] On March 6, 2024, the day after winning only one primary out of fifteen on
Super Tuesday, Haley suspended her campaign. Trump became the only remaining major candidate for the Republican presidential nomination.[227]
On March 12, 2024, Trump officially became the presumptive Republican presidential nominee.[228]
Third-party and independent candidates have also announced presidential runs. They include socialist activist and intellectual
Cornel West, who announced a campaign as an independent after initially announcing a run as a
People's Party and later a
Green Party candidate.[186]Centrist political organization
No Labels intended to field a third-party "unity ticket", before abandoning their efforts in April 2024.[229] Some established third parties, such as the
American Solidarity Party, the
Prohibition Party, and the
Party for Socialism and Liberation have announced presidential nominees, while others, such as the
Libertarian Party, the
Green Party and the
Constitution Party, have begun their primaries. While independent/third-party candidates often do better in opinion polls than actual election performance,[11] third-party candidates, as of April 2024, have the strongest showing in polls since
Ross Perot's high poll numbers in the 1990s.[230]
Notable party nominations
The following individuals have been nominated by their respective parties to run for president.
With partial ballot access
These parties have ballot access in some states, but not enough to get 270 votes to win the presidency, without running a write-in campaign.
Elections analysts and political pundits issue probabilistic forecasts to give readers a sense of how probable various electoral outcomes are. These forecasts use a variety of factors to determine the likelihood of each candidate winning each state. Most election predictors use the following ratings:
"tossup": no advantage
"tilt" (used by some predictors): advantage that is not quite as strong as "lean"
"lean" or "leans": slight advantage
"likely": significant, but surmountable, advantage
To qualify for the debates, candidates must appear on enough ballots to be able to win a majority of the electoral votes, must be constitutionally eligible, and poll an average of at least 15% in national polls from organizations selected by the commission.[271]
^
abcCalculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
^
abcUnlike the other 48 states and Washington, D.C., which award all of their electors to the candidate who receives the most votes in that state, Maine and Nebraska award two electors to the winner of the statewide vote and one each to the candidate who receives the most votes in each congressional district.
^The boundaries of Nebraska's 2nd congressional district have since changed due to redistricting.
^Balz, Dan (January 6, 2024).
"Three years after Jan. 6 attack, the political divide is even wider". The Washington Post.
ISSN0190-8286. Retrieved April 14, 2024. Three years on, there is no escaping the impact on American politics of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Other issues will significantly influence the 2024 presidential election, but few define more clearly the contrasts, stakes and choice that will face voters in November than Jan. 6.
^Nuzzi, Olivia (November 22, 2023).
"The Mind-Bending Politics of RFK Jr". Intelligencer.
Archived from the original on March 6, 2024. Retrieved March 6, 2024. The general election is now projected to be a three-way race between Biden, Trump, and their mutual, Kennedy, with a cluster of less popular third-party candidates filling out the constellation.
^
abBenson, Samuel (November 2, 2023).
"RFK Jr.'s big gamble". Deseret News.
Archived from the original on November 21, 2023. Retrieved November 21, 2023. Early polls show Kennedy polling in the teens or low 20s
Edsall, Thomas B. (April 12, 2023).
"How The Right Came To Embrace Intrusive Government". The New York Times.
ISSN0362-4331.
Archived from the original on April 12, 2023. Retrieved April 12, 2023. Republicans in states across the country are defiantly pushing for the criminalization of abortion — of the procedure, of abortifacient drugs and of those who travel out of state to terminate pregnancy... According to research provided to The Times by the Kaiser Family Foundation, states that have abortion bans at various early stages of pregnancy with no exception for rape or incest include Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, West Virginia and Wisconsin.
^Levitz, Eric (October 19, 2022).
"How the Diploma Divide Is Remaking American Politics". New York.
Archived from the original on October 20, 2022. Retrieved October 21, 2022. Blue America is an increasingly wealthy and well-educated place. Throughout the second half of the 20th century, Americans without college degrees were more likely than university graduates to vote Democratic. But that gap began narrowing in the late 1960s before finally flipping in 2004... A more educated Democratic coalition is, naturally, a more affluent one... In every presidential election from 1948 to 2012, white voters in the top 5 percent of America's income distribution were more Republican than those in the bottom 95 percent. Now, the opposite is true: Among America's white majority, the rich voted to the left of the middle class and the poor in 2016 and 2020, while the poor voted to the right of the middle class and the rich.
^Munis, Kal; Jacobs, Nicholas (October 20, 2022). "Why Resentful Rural Americans Vote Republican". The Washington Post.
Archived from the original on October 20, 2022. Retrieved October 21, 2022. ...that the disproportionately White, older, more religious, less affluent and less highly educated voters who live in rural areas are more likely to hold socially conservative views generally championed by Republicans. Meanwhile, urban areas are filled with younger, more racially diverse, more highly educated and more affluent people who hold the more socially liberal views generally championed by Democrats.
^Charen, Mona (November 9, 2018).
"Who Votes Republican". RealClearPolitics.com. Real Clear Politics.
Archived from the original on November 16, 2018. Retrieved May 25, 2023.
^Cost, Jay.
"Losing the Suburbs". AEI.com. AEI.
Archived from the original on February 21, 2020. Retrieved May 25, 2023.
Edsall, Thomas B. (April 12, 2023).
"How The Right Came To Embrace Intrusive Government". The New York Times.
ISSN0362-4331.
Archived from the original on April 12, 2023. Retrieved April 12, 2023. Republicans in states across the country are defiantly pushing for the criminalization of abortion — of the procedure, of abortifacient drugs and of those who travel out of state to terminate pregnancy... According to research provided to The Times by the Kaiser Family Foundation, states that have abortion bans at various early stages of pregnancy with no exception for rape or incest include Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, West Virginia and Wisconsin.
^Leonhardt, David (January 17, 2024).
"A 2024 Vulnerability". The New York Times.
Archived from the original on January 26, 2024. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
^Bordoff, Jason (December 2022).
"AMERICA'S LANDMARK CLIMATE LAW". International Monetary Fund.
Archived from the original on January 18, 2024. Retrieved January 16, 2024. The Inflation Reduction Act is the most significant piece of climate legislation in the history of the United States.
^Lindsay, James M. (December 1, 2023).
"Campaign Roundup: The Republican Presidential Candidates on Climate Change". Council on Foreign Relations.
Archived from the original on December 12, 2023. Retrieved December 11, 2023. Donald Trump hasn't said how he would approach climate change if he returns to the White House. But during his first term in office, he withdrew the United States from the Paris Agreement and regularly ridiculed the idea of man-made climate change.
^Ibrahim, Nur (December 5, 2022).
"Did Trump Say Election Fraud Allows for 'Termination' of US Constitution?". Snopes.
Archived from the original on May 31, 2023. Retrieved December 9, 2023. In sum, Trump posted on Truth Social that, what he believed to be, election fraud in the 2020 presidential election allows "for the termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution." For that reason, we rated this claim "Correct Attribution."
^Feuer, Alan; Haberman, Maggie (April 13, 2024).
"Inside Donald Trump's Embrace of the Jan. 6 Rioters". The New York Times.
ISSN0362-4331. Archived from
the original on April 13, 2024. Retrieved April 14, 2024. Recently, however, his celebrations of the Capitol riot and those who took part in it have become more public as he has promoted a revisionist history of the attack and placed it at the heart of his 2024 presidential campaign ... Mr. Trump hasn't always embraced Jan. 6 — at least not openly ... Mr. Trump's embrace of Jan. 6 not only has meant describing the attack in which more than 100 police officers were injured as a "love fest." It also has led him to tell a journalist that he wanted to march to the Capitol that day but that his team had prevented him from doing so.
^Benson, Samuel (November 2, 2023).
"RFK Jr.'s big gamble". Deseret News.
Archived from the original on November 2, 2023. Retrieved November 3, 2023. He's shared a number of controversial theories relating to school shootings and COVID-19 vaccines. In more recent interviews, however, he's taken a more measured approach... Early polls show Kennedy polling in the teens or low 20s — a major underdog, but enough to put both major party nominees on edge...
^Silver, Nate (January 28, 2021).
"How Popular Is Joe Biden?". FiveThirtyEight.
Archived from the original on January 28, 2021. Retrieved June 16, 2023.
Oshin, Olafimihan (January 23, 2022).
"Auschwitz Memorial says RFK Jr. speech at anti-vaccine rally exploits Holocaust tragedy". The Hill. Archived from
the original on January 24, 2022. Retrieved January 27, 2022. During a speech at the rally, Kennedy, a conspiracy theorist and prominent anti-vaxxer, warned of a massive surveillance network being created with satellites in space and 5G mobile networks collecting data.
"Cheryl Hines Blasts Husband RFK Jr. for Holocaust Remark". The Wrap. January 25, 2022. Archived from
the original on January 25, 2022. Retrieved January 27, 2022. Cheryl Hines has publicly condemned a statement made by her husband Robert F. Kennedy Jr. at a rally on Sunday, in which the environmental lawyer and conspiracy theorist likened COVID regulations to the Holocaust.
"Guests urged to be vaccinated at anti-vaxxer Robert F Kennedy Jr's party". The Guardian. December 18, 2021. Archived from
the original on December 18, 2021. Retrieved January 27, 2022. The younger Kennedy has campaigned on environmental issues but is also a leading vaccines conspiracy theorist and activist against shots including those approved to combat Covid-19, which has killed more than 805,000 in the US and more than 5.3 million worldwide.
"Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s Conspiracy Theories Go Beyond Vaccines". The New York Times. July 6, 2023.
Archived from the original on October 11, 2023. Retrieved October 12, 2023. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an environmental lawyer, is a leading vaccine skeptic and purveyor of conspiracy theories who has leaned heavily on misinformation as he mounts his long-shot 2024 campaign for the Democratic nomination.