September 26, 2023
2 mins read

7 Republican candidates to clash in 2nd presidential debate

Trump, the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican nomination, will be a no-show after he skipped the first debate as well…reports Asian Lite News

The Republican National Committee (RNC) has announced that seven candidates, excluding former President Donald Trump, are set to clash in the second presidential debate on Wednesday night.

The debate, at 9 p.m. on Wednesday is taking place at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, and will be hosted by the Fox Business Network and Univision, CNN quoted the RNC as saying in a statement late Monday night.

The participants are Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley, South Carolina Senator Tim Scott, Indian-origin entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, former Vice President Mike Pence, former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum.

Former Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, who appeared in the first Republican presidential primary debate on August 23, did not meet the RNC’s heightened polling and fundraising standards for Wednesday’s debate.

Trump, the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican nomination, will be a no-show after he skipped the first debate as well.

On Monday, the former President called the Republican primary debates “stupid” and suggested that he could bypass them all.

“Basically, it’s a job interview. You look at the debates, it’s a job interview, and so far, I’m not too interested,” CNN quoted Trump as saying at a campaign field office in Summerville, South Carolina.

New polls released over the weekend from NBC News and The Washington Post/ABC News found Trump with a clear nationwide lead in the Republican primary.

NBC showed the former president with 59 per cent support, ahead of DeSantis at 16 per cent, Haley at 7 per cent, Pence and Christie at 4 per cent each, Scott at 3 per cent and Ramaswamy at 2 per cent.

The Post/ABC poll put Trump’s support at 54 per cent support to DeSantis’ 15 per cent, with Haley receiving 7 per cent, Pence 6 per cent, Scott 4 per cent, and Christie and Ramaswamy at 3 per cent each.

To qualify for the second debate, Republican candidates had to register at least 3 per cent in two national polls or one national poll and two polls from separate early voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina or Nevada.

Those polls had to be released at least 48 hours prior to the debate and meet the RNC’s standards. Candidates were also required to have a minimum of 50,000 unique donors, with at least 200 donors in 20 states or territories.

Debate participants will also need to sign a pledge committing to supporting the eventual Republican nominee.

ALSO READ: ‘Debt Outpaces Growth: US Economy Takes China’s Path’

Previous Story

Indian-American to run as Democrat for Senate seat in Tennessee

Next Story

‘India held most successful G20 ever’

Latest from -Top News

Trump tariffs send world markets into panic

US benchmark crude oil shed $2.70 to $64.25 a barrel after major oil producers announced they plan to increase production. Brent crude, the international standard, was down $2.63 at $67.51 a barrel

EU prepares retaliation for Trump’s tariffs

The European Commission is assembling a fresh round of counter-tariffs aimed at US goods, adding to two existing lists of potential targets—one of which includes products that were hit by suspended tariffs

US, EU slam China’s war games near Taiwan

US President Donald Trump underscored the need to maintain peace in the Taiwan Strait, advocating for a diplomatic approach to cross-strait tensions while warning against the use of force The United States

£13.9 billion of R&D fund to boost innovation, jobs

Funding outlined to support transformational R&D in areas like life sciences, green energy, engineering and beyond More UK innovators like those developing treatment-transforming dementia tests or building world-leading testing facilities to power

OPEC+ accelerates oil output hikes

Despite the production boost, the group emphasised that future adjustments remain flexible and could be paused or reversed depending on market conditions. Eight OPEC+ nations have unexpectedly decided to accelerate their oil
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Valentine’s Day 2046: Asteroid Alert

NASA officials have advised that the odds of impact could

Honduras Urges US To Stop Meddling In Its Internal Affairs

Reina rejected Dogu’s remarks as “devoid of any legal and