Hamilton Journal News

Biden-Trump would be a rare presidenti­al rematch

- Dirk Q. Allen is a former opinion page editor of the JournalNew­s. He lives in Oxford.

Who can predict what will happen when the Republican primary election season revs up, but a presidenti­al rematch between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump is shaping up to be the first such battle in more than 60 years.

Not since Republican incumbent Dwight Eisenhower defeated Democrat Adlai Stevenson in 1956 have two candidates squared off in a rematch.

Polls show that the public would prefer not to see Biden/Trump II — it’s not like an exciting Ali/ Frazier heavyweigh­t boxing rematch — by a fairly significan­t margin. Some 75% of voters polled by the Associated Press in late November said they did not want Biden to run again, while 69% of voters said they did not want to see Trump back on the ballot.

Other polling data indicates that 19% of voters have an “unfavorabl­e” view of both Biden and Trump. Would they stay home in November 2024 in a country where total turnout for a presidenti­al election has never reached even 70% in the last 100 years? Lack of voter enthusiasm is a big problem in a country that prides itself in being the world leader in democracy.

The last time two presidents faced off was 1912, when President William Howard Taft and former President Teddy Roosevelt split the Republican vote, allowing Democrat Woodrow Wilson to be elected with just 42% of the popular vote.

Of course, Trump is attempting to do what only Democrat Grover Cleveland has done previously: be elected to two nonconsecu­tive terms. Cleveland won in 1884, lost to Miami University graduate Benjamin Harrison in 1888, then beat Harrison in the rematch in 1892.

Trump will be on the ballot for a third straight time, and that happens very infrequent­ly.

Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt ran and won four consecutiv­e times against four different opponents beginning in 1932, which led to the 22nd Amendment limiting presidenti­al terms.

Republican Richard Nixon is the last presidenti­al candidate to lose and then return to win, losing in 1960 and winning in 1968 and 1972. Nixon was on the GOP ticket five times, since he was twice the vice presidenti­al candidate with Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956.

Some think Biden, now age 81, could still decide to pull out of the race due to the indictment of his son, Hunter. The last incumbent to step aside was President Lyndon B. Johnson, who dropped a bombshell announceme­nt on March 31, 1968, saying he would not run for re-election. His unpopular prosecutio­n of the Vietnam War wrecked his reelection chances.

Age is an issue with both

Biden and Trump (age

77). No major candidate has died on the campaign trail, though 61-year-old Horace Greeley (“Go West, young man!”) passed away 23 days after losing to Ulysses S. Grant in 1872.

I file all of these presidenti­al details under the category of “fascinatin­g stuff.” The bottom line: Voting is paramount in our country. I will plan to vote no matter who is on the upcoming ballot. So should you. Why? Because we get to!

 ?? ?? Dirk Q. Allen
Dirk Q. Allen

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