JD Vance’s Delicate Dance
The vice president has done a lot correctly if he hopes to become president in 2029. But he still faces many obstacles to that goal.
No person has a better chance of being president in 2029 — extrapolating from current trends, all things being equal, etc. — than does Vice President JD Vance. In all early polling of the 2028 Republican presidential primary, Vance is a near-prohibitive front-runner. Democrats are still broadly unpopular and lack a serious standard-bearer, much less an agreed-upon and viable presidential candidate. These facts alone argue strongly in favor of the author of Hillbilly Elegy.
American politics, however, is unpredictable. It may seem hard to accept now, a little more than a decade after Trump launched his campaign and proceeded to dominate the national scene ever since, but his candidacy was scoffed at when it was not outright reviled — by, among others, Vance himself. Vance’s decision to cast his lot with Trump has fueled an astoundingly rapid rise, comparable not only to that of Richard Nixon, but also to that of Barack Obama, whom he once claimed to admire. Vance has continued to display canny political instincts in the first year of his vice presidency. But he will have to pull off a truly tricky feat to ensure his place in the Oval Office four years from how.
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Source: JD Vance’s Delicate Dance | National Review