Every week I curate a set of “Top Notes” of media coverage on the 2020 presidential elections. Read it to keep up to date on latest developments.
– Sarah Lyons, Director of Communications, Independent Voting
January 23 – 30, 2019
Trump – Amid chatter of a potential Republican primary challenger, the Republican National Committee (RNC) has sent a message to party members: get behind Donald Trump in 2020. On Friday, the RNC unanimously voted to give Trump “undivided support”ahead of the 2020 presidential election. Although largely symbolic, the vote comes as the longest government shutdown in U.S. history sinks the president’s approval rating. But it’s worth noting that, as The Washington Post pointed out, the resolution passed by the RNC isn’t an official endorsement of a Trump 2020 campaign. According to the paper, such an endorsement was discussed by some RNC members. Ultimately, however, concerns over whether such an endorsement would force the RNC to abide by Federal Election Commission rules well before the 2020 election kicked off kept the political committee from offering more than Republicans’ “undivided support.” (Bustle, 1/26/19)
Howard Schultz – “I can’t think of anything that is a more quintessential expression of our democracy than providing the American people with a choice that doesn’t have to be binary between the Republican and the Democrat,” Schultz said. “Why should the American people not have the choice of someone who is saying, ‘I’m not embedded with either party’?” Schultz has hired two veteran political strategists to aid him with his potential run â Steve Schmidt, a onetime Republican who worked on the White House campaigns of President George W. Bush and 2008 GOP nominee John McCain, and Bill Burton, who worked for President Obama’s 2008 campaign and later served as deputy White House press secretary. (NPR, 1/28/19)
Naysayers
Sources: Salon (1/28/19) , CNN (1/23/19)
Booker – Cory Booker is finalizing the leadership of a potential Iowa campaign team â an indication the New Jersey senator is moving closer to announcing a run for president. According to a source familiar with the process, Booker will hire, should he run, a team of high-profile Iowa staffers that includes Mike Frosolone, Haley Hager, Joe O’Hern and Tess Seger. Frosolone directed the Iowa House Democratsâ political operation, leading the recruitment of 95 Democratic candidates to run in the Houseâs 100 districts â the most in 30 years. Hager was the Iowa state director for NextGen America, the organization funded and created by billionaire activist Tom Steyer. She has a background in organizing and field work. OâHern‘s resume includes work for the Iowa Democratic Partyâs coordinated campaign in 2014 and as Martin OâMalleyâs caucus director in the 2016 cycle. Seger has been the communications director for the Iowa Democratic Party for the last year and a half. Booker’s national campaign manager would be Addisu Demissie, who also has Iowa ties. Booker has long been expected to enter the 2020 presidential race, and on Twitter last week told his followers, “I will let you know soon” about a decision. (DesMoines Register, 1/28/19)
Bloomberg â Speaking at a Friday gathering of the Democratic Business Council of Northern Virginia, the former New York City mayor flayed the president for triggering chaos in Washington. Bloomberg vowed to make sure the president doesnât serve another term. âThe presidency is not an entry-level job,â Bloomberg said. âThere is just too much at stake.â âAnd the longer we have a pretend CEO who is recklessly running this country, the worse itâs going to be for our economy and for our security. This is really dangerous.â He then panned Trumpâs White House with a film reference, suggesting there wasnât much separating the president from a villain. âItâs like the government version of a bad horror movie, but instead of Freddy Krueger and the âNightmare on Elm Street,â weâve got Donald Trump and the âNightmare at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.ââ Following his appearance at the business councilâs event, Bloomberg made a stop at the U.S. Conference of Mayors in Washington, D.C., where he echoed his previous sentiments and laid out a strong condemnation of the shutdown. (Huffington Post, 1/26/19)
Iowa
New Hampshire
Sanders – Three years after fighting a surprisingly competitive Democratic primary race against Hillary Clinton, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is making another run for the White House. Two sources with direct knowledge of his plans told Yahoo News that Sanders, an independent and self-described âdemocratic socialist,â plans to announce his presidential bid imminently. While Sanders has been mulling a bid for months, one of the sources said he was emboldened by early polls of the race that have consistently showed him as one of the top candidates in a crowded Democratic primary field. In particular, the source said Sanders was heartened to see numbers indicating he is one of the leading candidates among African American and Latino voters, two groups he was perceived as struggling with in 2016. (Huffington Post, 1/25/19)
OâRourke – Beto OâRourke said Friday that it could take him months to decide whether to run for president, adding that he does not want to âraise expectationsâ about a 2020 bid. OâRourke told POLITICO after a speaking engagement here that he has no timetable for making a decision, which he said could âpotentiallyâ be months away. âThere are people who are smarter on this stuff and study this stuff and are following this and say youâve got to do it this way or get in by this point or get in in this way if you were to get in,â OâRourke said of his timing. âI think the truth is that nobody knows right now the rules on any of this stuff. I think the rules are being written in the moment.â
Bill Weld â The former Republican governor of Massachusetts, is weighing a challenge to Mr. Trump as a small-government moderate, people who have spoken with him said. Mr. Weld, 73, who was the Libertarian Partyâs vice-presidential nominee in 2016, has discussed either opposing Mr. Trump in the Republican primaries or seeking the Libertarian presidential nomination. Mr. Weld declined to comment on his deliberations⌠(NYT, 1/26/19)
Daphne Bradford – entrepreneur, nationally recognized educator, #MeToo survivor and former EURweb columnist is a FEC (Federal Election Commission) registered 2020 presidential candidate. Daphne has spent her career fighting for high quality education, health care for all, school/community safety, comprehensive gun control and for a womanâs right to work without being sexually harassed. The Daphne for a Reunited America (DRA) 2020 presidential campaign will âUnite USâ around these universal issues.
McAfee – United States entrepreneur and serial cryptocurrency advocate John McAfee has fled the country to conduct his 2020 presidential campaign, he said in a video statement Jan. 22.  McAfee claims he has been indicted by U.S. tax authorities and plans to run his campaign from a boat in international waters.
Out of the Running
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