US politics: Public will pick the least-worst Presidential candidate
The best President, or the least worst? Exactly a year before the 2024 US election, the Jupiter Merlin team analyses a likely Biden/Trump rematch.
Not as literally but potentially as politically explosive, November 5th, 2024, will be the date America goes to the polls to elect its next President. We are almost exactly a year away from that; but the primaries to select the presidential candidates and their running mates begin in only two months. Iowa is scheduled to be first out of the traps with its electoral caucus on 15 January. Dominating the runners and riders is one significant personality: Donald Trump.
‘Unprecedented’ is hyperbolically, liberally and inaccurately applied these days. While this election will be extraordinary, it is certainly not unprecedented as many commentators would have us believe. According to the New York Times, it is true that Donald Trump is the first ever US president to be indicted on criminal charges; however, there seems to be no shortage of presidential candidates in US electoral history who had already been charged or convicted of crimes before standing for office entirely legally and within the Constitution. As recently as 2016, Rick Perry, a Republican candidate, stood against Trump in the primaries having been indicted in a corruption case.
However, on few occasions has the electorate trooped dutifully into the polling booths with such misgivings for both the incumbent president and the most likely challenger. It can be summed up in the most recent ‘approval rating’ polling data which has been remarkably stable for some months: 53.2% of all Americans polled disapprove of Joe Biden, only 41.9% have a favourable view of him; 54.6% of the same sample disapprove of Donald Trump and only 40.7% approve of him. The implication is that most Americans therefore do not much want either again as their president.
The Republican conundrum: damned if they do, damned if they don’t
The emergence of Trump as a contender ahead of the 2016 election was divisive enough. The division today is even greater given the antics of his term, how it ended and the pending criminal proceedings against him. It is a statement of the obvious about Trump: people either love him or loathe him; neutral is not an option. Despite four criminal indictments (two of which are federal), ranging from corruption and vote-rigging to inciting sedition, in four different states (New York, Florida, Washington D.C., and Georgia) so far encompassing 92 separate felonies, he is nevertheless easily the dominant Republican contender for the Presidential nomination. It is not so far from the truth that for every additional indictment, up went his poll rating! The leading US pollster, Five Thirty Eight, currently has 57.1% of Republican voters backing Trump; his nearest rival, Ron De Santis trails at 13.9% and the remainder in single digits. Three of the criminal trials are already scheduled, beginning on March 4th in Washington with the federal indictment for trying to overturn the 2020 election result. While the Georgia trial (state vote-rigging) has no start-date, the other two will also take place during the primaries with no clear guide as to the duration of each (but some will overlap; he’ll need his Tardis to be in multiple docks at the same time). These are all on top of the current civil case in New York against Trump’s son, Donald Jr, in which his father has already appeared, as to whether he knowingly signed off on fraudulently inflating the value of the corporation’s assets.
/br> Legally, under the Constitution, there is no impediment to being President even if a convicted felon. There are only three conditions to be satisfied for the Presidency: that he/she is a natural born citizen of the United States; is over the age of 35; and has been resident in the US for a minimum of 14 years. Nowhere is there any condition that the candidate must be of good character or committed to upholding standards and responsibilities in public life. That is for the electorate to judge.
Politically, therein lies the rub: less a case of can Trump be president, than do Americans and even the Republicans really want him in the White House again? Trawling through the interweb, one can find any number of polls which tell the inquirer what they want to hear about his chances. The key political problem for senior Republicans, seeking not only a Republican presidency but also control of the House and the Senate (where one third of the seats will be contested) is simply this: they cannot afford to deny Trump the ticket, risking losing the millions of votes directly attributable to him and killing their electoral chances stone dead in the process; but in the absence of any credible alternatives, what is the Plan B? They may just have to grit their teeth and see what happens whether he is the winner or not.
What does not help the Republicans’ appeal is that internally, they give all the signals of being in chaos. And it’s not just about Trump. In the House, since their success regaining a wafer-thin majority in the mid-terms last November, their history of electing and keeping a Speaker has been an embarrassing joke. When they are having such demonstrable difficulties managing their own party’s domestic affairs, somehow, in very short order with the clock formally ticking from mid-January, they must convince the electorate that they are a party fit to govern.
The Democrats and Biden: to dump or not to dump?
But for Biden, it is not just about his competence as President. Being President of the United States is one of the most difficult and punishing jobs on earth. Bluntly, is someone who by the election will be 82 years old, and 86 when he leaves office, fit to do the job. According to a recent CNN poll, 67% of Democrats say Biden should not run for a second term; 47% cite his age as the specific reason. Biden is publicly committed. However, he does face opposition. A week ago, Dean Phillips, a Minnesota member of the House of Representatives, formally announced that he is standing against Biden. He has virtually no chance of success given that convention says a sitting president aspiring for a second term does not participate in primary debates; none is scheduled so he will get no Democrat sponsored airtime. On the other hand, there are enough senior Democrats, particularly on the left wing of the party who have been vocal that Biden should stand down in January 2025, and are queuing up to take his place. Hardly a vote of confidence, what they are in effect questioning is: is Biden an electoral asset or a liability?
Increasing polarisation and nastiness in a two-party system
/br> For an outsider, what will unfold will be morbidly fascinating to watch. It will be dirty and vicious, full of smears and accusations of fake news and conspiracy theory. Will the Russian, Chinese, North Korean and Iranian dirty tricks asymmetric warfare wings cheerfully stir the pot and take an active and disruptive role; or will they sit back happy to let the Americans tear lumps out of each other with no help needed? Whoever is the winner, the process of getting there is unlikely to reflect well on the United States as the leader of the free world.
“The world is still turning. It’s just got a little crazier”.
Moscow, Beijing, Tehran and Pyongyang, and others, will all be recording the changes recently as the direct conflict in the Middle East between Israel and Hamas dominates the western media and political agenda. They will have noted the much wider rippling effect, causing political divisions both between and within western capitals and most notably in the UN. In the past month, Ukraine has been almost entirely absent from the news coverage in the West. For Zelensky and his worst fears, there is growing boredom in the Western camp with the Ukrainian conflict, as admitted in the unfortunate entrapment interview given this week to two Russian pranksters (and believed to have links with the FSB) by Italy’s Georgia Meloni. In the US, the Republicans are refusing to increase funding to Zelensky beyond current expenditure; on the far-right wing of the party where commentators and agitators such as former Trump strategy guru Steve Bannon are vocal and active, the strong narrative is that the US has no business now or in future “being involved in foreign wars”. To those who would do the West harm, the smoke signals are obvious.
Adding to the uncertainty in Western solidarity, and highly unusually, the next UK general election and the US Presidential election are virtually simultaneous events. So far, among the western alliance and particularly in NATO, the UK and the US have been in virtual lockstep, particularly when confronting Putin. Will that joint gravitational pull at the centre of NATO be dissipated in 14 months’ time?
The investment perspective
Specifically regarding the US and UK elections, these are binary events; on the Jupiter Merlin team we take the simple view that to prejudge the outcome is the equivalent of betting on black or red at the tables and keeping everything crossed that the punt works. That is something we do not do. While there may be volatility in the immediate aftermath of the results, we prefer to see the lie of the land after and adjust accordingly. But the analysis and preparation ahead of such events is still invaluable, particularly if quick action is needed.
The Jupiter Merlin Portfolios are long-term investments; they are certainly not immune from market volatility, but they are expected to be less volatile over time, commensurate with the risk tolerance of each. With liquidity uppermost in our mind, we seek to invest in funds run by experienced managers with a blend of styles but who share our core philosophy of trying to capture good performance in buoyant markets while minimising as far as possible the risk of losses in more challenging conditions.
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