Who are the candidates for the presidency of USA? This is a profile of the main candidates for 2024. There are two main Republican candidates left in their party’s race for the presidential nomination in 2024.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis canceled his campaign on Sunday, shortly before Tuesday’s primary election in New Hampshire. The poor results obtained last week in the caucuses in Iowa put an end to the aspirations of biotechnology entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and former Arkansas governor Asa Hutchinson. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie resigned from his campaign earlier this month.
Here’s a look at the top candidates vying for the Republican and Democratic nominations, as well as third-party contenders:
Republicans in the primaries
donald trump

The former president announced his third campaign to reach the White House on November 15, 2022, at his Mar-a-Lago mansion, forcing the party to decide whether to adopt a candidate whose refusal to accept his defeat in 2020 provoked the attack. to the US Capitol and which is still a dominant theme in his speeches.
The leading Republican candidate remains very popular in that party, despite having gone down in history as the first president to be impeached twice and incite the insurrection at the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Referring to himself as “the most pro-life president” of the United States, Trump nominated three conservative justices to the Supreme Court, paving the way to overturn Roe v. Wade, who legalized abortion throughout the United States for almost 50 years. A series of sweeping criminal justice reforms he signed into law in 2019 reduced mandatory minimum sentences and gave judges more sentencing discretion.
In March, Trump became the first former US president to be charged with serious crimes, facing 34 accusations of falsifying business records as part of a bribery scheme. Since then, he has been charged with more than 57 felonies in three more criminal cases, being accused of mismanagement and illegal retention of classified documents, as well as trying to illegally overturn the results of the 2020 election.
His resounding victory in the Iowa caucuses confirmed his dominant position in the race for the Republican nomination.
Nikki Haley

The former U.N. ambassador and former South Carolina governor became Trump’s first major challenger when she kicked off her campaign on Feb. 15 in Charleston. She is the only woman on the Republican side.
The former Trump Cabinet official once said she would not run against her former boss for the White House in 2024. However, she changed her mind, citing the country’s economic problems and the need for a “generational change”alluding to Trump’s age, 77 years old.
Haley came in third in the Iowa caucuses, finishing behind DeSantis.
Democrats in the primaries
Joe Biden

US President Joe Biden formally announced his re-election campaign in a video released on April 25, in which he asked voters for time “to finish their work.”
Biden, the oldest president in US history, would be 86 at the end of his second term, and some of his critics question whether he can serve effectively given his age. A notable number of Democratic voters indicated that they would prefer he not run, although he is expected to easily win the Democratic nomination.
Biden, who promised to “restore the soul of America,” plans to campaign on the work he has done. He dedicated his first two years as president to combating the coronavirus pandemic and pushing important bills, such as the bipartisan infrastructure package, and laws to encourage high-tech manufacturing and climate measures.
Marianne Williamson

Self-help author Marianne Williamson entered the Democratic primary on March 4 in Washington, calling for “a vision of justice and love so powerful that it overcomes the forces of hate, injustice and fear.”
During his unsuccessful 2020 presidential campaign, he proposed the creation of a Department of Peace, and stated that the federal government should pay considerable financial reparations to African Americans in reparation for the slavery and discrimination they have suffered for centuries.
Dean Phillips

The Minnesota congressman was the first elected Democrat to run against Biden for the nomination. After months of calling for a primary challenger to be named, Phillips himself entered the race on October 27 with a speech in front of the New Hampshire state legislature building.
While Phillips has effusively praised Biden, the 54-year-old congressman also says Democrats need younger voices to avoid a nightmare scenario in which Trump wins another election next fall.
Phillips is one of the richest members of Congress and heir to the Phillips Distilling Company, his stepfather’s empire, owner of important brands of vodka and schnapps. He was once president of the company, but he also ran the Italian ice cream factory Talenti. His grandmother, the late Pauline Phillips, was known as the advice columnist “Dear Abby.”
Independent candidates
Robert F. Kennedy JR.

The successful author and environmental lawyer announced on October 9 that he was renouncing his Democratic candidacy to run as an independent candidate.
Nephew of former President John F. Kennedy and son of former Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, he initially launched a risky bid to compete with Biden for the Democratic nomination on April 19 in Boston. In announcing his party change, he said he intended to be a candidate who would reduce the impact of Biden and Trump.
Kennedy has emerged as one of the leading voices of the anti-vaccine movement. Public health experts, and even several members of her family, have described her work as deceptive and dangerous. In recent years, he has also been linked to far-right figures.
Jill Stein

The environmentalist, whose third-party presidential bid was criticized by Democrats — who accused her of helping put Trump in the White House — says she will run again for the nation’s highest office.
Stein announced on November 9 that he will run under the Green Party banner. “I run for president to give people an option outside of the failed two-party system,” he said.
She ran against Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016 as a Green Party candidate and received about 1% of the votes. Some Democrats said his candidacy took votes away from Clinton, particularly in swing states like Wisconsin.
Cornel West

The progressive activist and scholar announced on October 5 that he was renouncing his Green Party presidential bid and would instead run as an independent candidate.
West wrote in X that he would run as an independent for “end the iron fist of the ruling class and guarantee true democracy!” He added that “we need to break the duopoly control and empower the people.”
He initially announced in June that he would run as a member of the People’s Party before switching to the Green Party.
Who abandoned the fight?
Republicans: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former Vice President Mike Pence, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, Christie, Ramaswamy, Hutchinson, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, radio host Larry Elder, businessman Perry Johnson , Representative Will Hurd of Texas, and Miami Mayor Francis Suarez.
Source: Gestion

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