Forget the 2020 election. Let’s talk about 2024


US President Donald Trump has been fighting for his political career, but his political successors are being shaken by a victory or defeat in November. Whenever it comes, in the post-Trump period, between “America First” and the more traditional ideological rhetoric and the possible resurgence of Atlanticism, the G.O.P. Will be a battle of the soul.

The logic suggests that potential Republican candidates would suck a president who is below points in the polls, and who is seen by more than half of the country as an agent of chaos.

But former UN ambassador Nikki Haley and South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Arkansas Sen. Tom Catton all ran for the audit of Republican primary voters at this week’s convention. He is moving forward with a shrewd political skill of his party: Richard Nixon.
In 1964, four years ago, John F. Nixon was in the political jungle after losing Kennedy’s presidency. But like other party dignitaries, he accepted the party’s radical nominee, Barry Goldwater, who even then looked lucky for a catastrophic defeat.

Later, in a convention speech seen as a launchpad for his own 1968 campaign, Nixon called for party unity. It is understood that the delegates who picked up Goldwater will decide the following nominees – who will win on the way to the White House.

It is the same today. With the exception of jokes about the third or fourth condition, Trump will not be on the ballot in 2024. But his supporters are not going anywhere.

Knowing that the Republican nominee will need him, Pompeo makes it clear that he is one of Trump’s most trusted lieutenants. The PKT of Iraq and Afghanistan is now serving in Trump’s culture war and will shine the elite even though he himself participated in Harvard. Haley has been particularly adept at creating her profile and foreign policy credentials alongside Trump, and her reputation has escaped an administration-enhancing one – her rare Oval Office fee from the president will announce a great campaign.

That’s the balancing act for these Republican rising stars. Trump will get angry at any sign of exit and hate sharing the limelight. But that U.S. Can’t even deny the inappropriate march of the presidential election calendar.

In a video statement to the RNC from Jerusalem on Tuesday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo praised Trump's foreign policy initiative - also describing the futile court of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un as a victory.

Postcard from Big Easy

As teachers, politicians and parents, the debate over reopening schools around the world, meanwhile, has moved on to producer Shelby Rose’s New Le Reliance Grade School. We asked her what Kovid-19’s famous first hell of a low school year was like. He writes:

“Utilitarian” is not a term associated with ivory towers, but these days, even universities must accept the coronavirus epidemic. At Tulane Law School, U.S. At one of the few well-known universities in which classes are offered individually, students like me may try to stay with the higher idea – but here every movement is determined by practical rules and guidelines issued by disease control centers.

At the Balmy New Orleans campus, Tulane students run a file on a separate path, sit apart for one or two seats, and answer the professors behind the almost soundproof Plexiglass ield. And he’s just in school. Outside, Tulan’s green and gold face masks are a new mandatory fashion item. Comrades ’parties change to six-foot sitters.

Many of us have traveled hundreds of miles to get here, yet law students are limited to interacting on social media and messaging portals. Instead of editing cases in libraries all at once or exchanging profiles, we talk online for unity and support. But with elections approaching and the spread of the coronavirus continuing, discussions of contracts and agreements have quickly become a venture.

Unable to build personal relationships during this unprecedented year, we are not just living a life of the mind, we are limited in it – and stress is being shown.

‘Chuan Jianguo’

Which presidential candidate will Beijing choose? Although U.S. intelligence says China “likes” that Trump loses the November vote, the U.S. president has given a nickname on Chinese social media: “Chuan Jianguo,” or “Build up country Trump” – a joke or his chaotic ways. Exciting is China’s standing. CNN’s Selena Wang reports that the Chinese Communist Party sees dangers and benefits in every man. While Trump has weakened the U.S. alliance, clearing the way for China on the world stage, it is a volatile X-factor in his plans. The more traditional candidate, Biden, on the other hand, could build stronger global and regional alliances to counter China’s influence.

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