The top 10 GOP presidential candidates for 2024, ranked:
Then the pollster asked an open-ended question of the rest: If not Trump, then who? Fully 60 percent of those who didn’t want Trump just wanted someone else. Another 21 percent named DeSantis. And no other candidate got more than 1 percent.
Needless to say, it’s very early. People clearly haven’t thought about this much. But we will start getting a sense for where the activist wing of the party stands this week at the Conservative Political Action Conference, which will include a straw poll.
With that around the corner, we thought it would be a good time to dust off our quarterly rankings of the 10 people most likely to be the next GOP presidential nominee. Some of them will speak at CPAC; others (such as former vice president Mike Pence) notably won’t.
As usual, this list is in order of the probability of getting nominated — a formula that takes into account how likely each candidate is to run in the first place.
Also mentioned: Sen. Rick Scott (Fla.), South Dakota Gov. Kristi L. Noem, Sen. Josh Hawley (Mo.), Rep. Liz Cheney (Wyo.), Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, Sen. Tom Cotton (Ark.), former New Jersey governor Chris Christie and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott
10. Mike Pompeo: It’s not necessarily a telltale, but dropping a ton of weight and paying big bucks for media training aren’t things you have to do if your goal is merely to be a Fox News pundit. The former secretary of state and Kansas congressman is a good bet to run if Trump doesn’t. (Previous ranking: 10)
9. Chris Sununu: The New Hampshire governor broke some GOP hearts by declining to run for Senate; he would’ve been a major recruit in a key race. And since doing so, he has made some pretty interesting comments about the national GOP. He said he had been close to running, but that he spoke with GOP senators and found them lacking ambition. He suggested they were mostly interested in holding the line against President Biden. He has also suggested the party is overzealous in casting out anti-Trump Republicans. That’s, of course, a helpful thing to say for a guy running for reelection as governor in a swing state. But could it also be a national platform? Sununu in November demurred about presidential ambitions, emphasizing his 2022 campaign comes first. He’d probably be better able to massage the pro-Trump/anti-Trump divide than a lot of others on this list. (Previous ranking: N/A)
8. Glenn Youngkin: The other newcomer on this list is the governor of Virginia. Youngkin’s 2021 win in a blue-leaning state — and the conservative governance that has followed — are going to continue to be cited as a model for the party. And it doesn’t hurt that his move to rescind school mask mandates in Virginia preceded a bunch of blue-state Democrats doing the same (albeit without necessarily banning them, as Youngkin has). Plenty of battles lie ahead in Virginia, though, with a closely divided legislature. What’s next for Youngkin? Tax reform. (Previous ranking: N/A)
7. Ted Cruz: The U.S. senator from Texas finished second in the 2016 contest, and with that often comes something amounting to front-runner status the next time around. Except Cruz badly miscalculated (or, perhaps, he said what he felt) when he tried to make an anti-Trump scene at the 2016 GOP convention. He has since tried real hard — perhaps a little too hard — to appeal to the Trumpian wing of the party. But Cruz struggles from the fact that people just don’t seem to like him. And you have to wonder whether Trump supporters will believe he’s one of them enough to get over that hump. His groveling session with Tucker Carlson seemed to suggest a guy who doesn’t really know what his plan is or how to do anything except try to be whatever he thinks the right people want him to be. (Previous ranking: 6)
6. Tim Scott: The U.S. senator from South Carolina is raising huge money — $7 million last quarter — for something which should, by all accounts, be a pretty sleepy reelection race. He’s also doing something lots of presidential candidates do before running: release a book. (Previous ranking: 4)
5. Donald Trump Jr.: This might feel high, and it might indeed be. But imagine a scenario in which the elder Trump doesn’t run. Who else on this list is truly ready to lock down a significant majority of Trump supporters? The obvious answer would seem to be DeSantis, but there’s some brewing tension between him and Trump (more on that later). Others either aren’t terribly Trump-y in their approach or have waffled on Trumpism. If the party wants a middle-finger candidate again, the next-of-kin might be an obvious answer for lots of casual voters. Of course, the younger Trump would have to run a campaign to capitalize on that. And he has less relevant experience on that front than even his dad did six years ago. (Previous ranking: 7)
Former vice president Mike Pence said Feb. 4 that he had no constitutional right to overturn the results of the 2020 election. (Video: CNN, Photo: CNN)
4. Mike Pence: Were it not for Jan. 6 and everything that surrounded it, Pence would be up there in the top three. Unfortunately for him, his refusal to go along with trying to overturn the 2020 election has led to an extended exercise in trying to massage the fallout. That most recent development: Pence saying earlier this month that Trump was “wrong” that Pence could have tried to unilaterally overturn the election — and repeating that the idea itself was extremely “un-American.” Trump, though, has notably declined to go after Pence like he has others who run afoul of him. We’ll see if that holds. One encouraging sign for Pence: Even though most Republicans wrongly believe Trump won the election, most agree with Pence that he didn’t have the ability to overturn the election. (Previous ranking: 5)
3. Nikki Haley: The former United Nations ambassador and South Carolina governor has, perhaps more than anybody on this list, struggled to decide whether she’s angling to run in Trump’s GOP or a post-Trump GOP. Most recently that has taken the form of her endorsing another South Carolina Republican who has struggled with the same thing, Rep. Nancy Mace, who was sharply critical of Trump after Jan. 6, before backing off. (Mace soon after earned a Trump-backed primary opponent.) All that said, we have long contended that when Haley can put it together, she’s a very talented politician. (Previous ranking: 3)
2. Ron DeSantis: DeSantis stays at No. 2 because of the poll above. He also stays here because, unlike many others on this list, it seems possible he might run even if Trump does — and could even have a shot in that scenario. Of course, that posture has alienated Trump. And the interaction between the two is understandably going to be a major subplot of the looming 2024 race in the coming months. Their relative receptions at CPAC starting Thursday will certainly provide some hints. (Previous ranking: 2)
1. Donald Trump: Naturally. That said, his No. 1 status is not as prohibitive as it once was. He’s also got some legal issues to worry about, and perhaps some declining GOP patience with making everything about 2020. (Previous ranking: 1)
WP.