20 Community Kitchens Serve Meals To IDPs, Support Staff In Negros Occidental

20 community kitchens sa Negros Occidental ang nagbibigay ng pagkain sa mga naapektuhan ng pagputok ng bulkan upang matulungan ang kanilang sitwasyon.

Antique IP Encourages Community Gardening For Herbal Medicine

Pinapahalagahan ng LAIPO ang mga community gardens bilang daan sa pagpapalakas ng produksyon ng mga halamang gamot. Tara at magtulungan tayo.

DBM Oks Guidelines On PHP7 Thousand Medical Allowance For Government Workers

Magiging posible na para sa mga government workers na makatanggap ng PHP7,000 medical allowance. Sinusuportahan ng DBM ang kanilang pangangalaga sa kalusugan.

DHSUD To Release More 4PH Units To Beneficiaries In 2025

Ang DHSUD ay nagsasaad ng kanilang layunin na makapagbigay ng mas maraming yunit para sa 4PH beneficiaries sa darating na 2025.

Biden Predicted To Win The Democratic Nomination

By The Visayas Journal

Biden Predicted To Win The Democratic Nomination

0
0

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

The latest report by The Economist Intelligence Unit (The EIU) highlights the dramatic shift in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination–which has become a head-to-head competition between Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders.

* The upcoming March primaries will be extremely tight, but the EIU forecasts Mr Biden to gain critical momentum in Michigan, Florida and Georgia, putting him in the best position to win the nomination.

* Mr Biden’s campaign was resurrected by his win in the South Carolina primary on February 29th, which changed the narrative around his electability and confirmed his commanding lead among African American voters, a crucial demographic.

* The race for the Democratic nomination will be a fierce battle between moderates and progressives, which currently looks likely to strengthen Donald Trump’s hand.

* As the race currently stands, Mr Trump is likely to draw on his solid support base and the benefits of incumbency to narrowly win a second term in November

DEMOCRATIC RACE TIGHTENS

Following Super Tuesday, public opinion polls have swung in Mr Biden’s favour, putting him in the best position to take the Democratic nomination. However, it is still too soon to count Bernie Sanders out entirely. Until recent days, he held sizeable leads in several key states that will vote later in March, including Michigan–a swing state that was critical to the narrow electoral college victory of the Republican candidate, Donald Trump, in 2016–Ohio and Washington. Mr Biden, meanwhile, has a firm lead in some other key states, including Florida and Georgia, which he is set to win by large margins.

DEMOCRATS COULD FACE MESSY END TO CAMPAIGN

Mr Biden has the strongest base among African-American voters and is best placed to appeal to moderate voters, which will allow him to expand his support base as the race goes on. On the downside, however, he appears to be the “compromise” candidate, which will work against him at a time when many Americans are looking to anti-establishment figures.

Mr Sanders has an extremely strong, mobilised grass-roots support base, similar to Mr Trump’s. Moreover, Mr Sanders appeals to the widespread sense of dissatisfaction with institutions that carried Mr Trump–and indeed, his predecessor, Barack Obama–into office, and which is still prevalent today. However, Mr Sanders’ far-left policy agenda is likely to unite Republicans against him and turn off some moderate voters, who will be less willing to consider radical policy changes at a time when the US economy is on a record-long growth streak.

MR TRUMP HAS NARROW, BUT CLEAR PATH TO VICTORY

As the race currently stands, Mr Trump is likely to win a second term in the election in November. Unemployment in the US is at an all-time low of 3.5%. Although the coronavirus and recent oil-price shocks pose risks to the economy, Mr Trump will still be able to campaign on his promises to ease constraints on businesses and keep the economy growing. Second, the benefits of incumbency are also significant, particularly when paired with a strong economy. Only three of the 12 presidents elected since 1945 have failed to secure a second term (Lyndon B. Johnson, Jimmy Carter and George H. W. Bush). Finally, Mr Trump also benefits enormously from his uniquely solid support base. His approval rating has held around 40%-44% for almost the entirety of his first term–by far the most stable rating of any president in modern history. That base, while too small to ensure his re-election alone, has been galvanised by the impeachment process, which Mr Trump survived.

Says Cailin Birch, The EIU’s global economist, “_In order to defeat Mr Trump’s highly mobilised base, the eventual Democratic nominee will have to unite the fragmented Democratic electorate and present policies that are moderate enough to appeal to centrist Republicans and undecided voters. Mr Biden stands the best chance of doing this, but it is still a hard road ahead.”

Photo Credit: facebook.com/joebiden