2020 Contenders: Who’s In, Who’s Out And Who’s On The Fence

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More than a dozen candidates announced they’re running for president in 2020, with many more waiting in the wings for just the right time to launch a formal campaign.

Democratic heavyweights, newcomers and no-names are champing at the bit to face President Donald Trump in 2020, and he could face competition from the right as well.

Here’s a list of major presidential hopefuls who are in the race or on the fence:

In The Running (14)

Democratic New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker announced he was running for president Feb. 1. He’s held the office since 2013. Booker, a progressive, signed onto Sanders’s Medicare for All proposal and praised the Green New Deal.

Pete Buttigieg, mayor of South Bend, Indiana, had low name recognition when he jumped into the race Jan. 23, but has garnered more attention on social media for his affable “Mayor Pete” persona. Buttigieg even enjoyed third place in a poll of Iowa voters conducted in late March. He’s a progressive Democrat and wants to be the nation’s first openly gay president.

Former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro announced he was running as a Democrat on Jan. 12. He has been a vocal critic of Trump, blaming him for divisiveness in today’s political climate.

Former Democratic Maryland Rep. John Delaney announced his run early in July 2017. He has painted himself as a unifying candidate who wants to focus on bipartisan issues like criminal justice reform, the opioid crisis and infrastructure.

Democratic Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard announced her candidacy in January and had a rocky start. She apologized for her past stance supporting traditional marriage almost immediately. Gabbard continues to face criticism for allegedly defending Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and questioning U.S. military intervention in Syria.

Democratic New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand announced her run in mid-March and delivered her kickoff speech in front of the Trump International Hotel in New York City on Sunday. Gillibrand has portrayed herself as a voice for women but has faced backlash after her office was accused of botching the handling of sexual misconduct allegations involving two different male staffers.

California Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris was in the top tier of Democratic frontrunners even before she announced her candidacy Jan. 21. Harris, a former prosecutor, has taken up the progressive mantle, but some of her critics on the left find her past too problematic, as detailed in this opinion piece in The New York Times. Like many farther on the left, she supports Sanders’s Medicare for All plan and the Green New Deal.

Former Democratic Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper announced his run March 4 and could have an uphill battle as a moderate trying to gain name recognition among a field of candidates farther to the left. He has already made a few awkward missteps in his campaign — Hickenlooper said he accidentally took his mother to an X-rated film (and stayed) during a CNN town hall.

Democratic Washington Gov. Jay Inslee announced he was running as a “climate candidate” March 1. Inslee has said he would declare a climate emergency should Congress fail to pass global warming legislation. He also declined to endorse the Green New Deal, saying it is “not a policy document” and “people like me will issue policies to actually put meat on the bones.”

Democratic Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar launched her bid Feb. 10 and has tried to distance herself from self-described socialists in her party like Sanders. She does not support ideas like taxpayer-funded college tuition for all. Klobuchar announced a big part of her 2020 platform Thursday: $650 billion in federal funds for an infrastructure plan that includes repairing roads and bridges, public schools and expanding broadband internet access, reported The Wall Street Journal.

Former Democratic Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke burst onto the 2020 scene with a record-breaking $6.1 million in campaign donations after announcing his candidacy March 14. But the television-ready Democrat, who’s most well-known for losing his Senate challenge to Texas Republican Ted Cruz in 2018, has been criticized for his lack of tangible policy proposals.

Some diehard fans of Bernie Sanders, an Independent who is seeking the Democratic nomination, still feel he got an unfair shake at the 2016 Democratic convention. The socialist candidate is back and declared he was starting a “political revolution” with his campaign Feb. 19. He led other 2020 contenders in Day 1 campaign cash hauls with $5.9 million until O’Rourke surpassed his record.

Democratic Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren announced her run Feb. 9. The former Harvard Law School professor has painted herself as the candidate with specific policy proposals, including a plan to break up big tech companies like Facebook, Google and Amazon. Should she secure the Democratic nomination, Trump will likely dredge up his “Pocahontas” nickname for her that played into her decision to make an ill-received announcement about her Native American heritage.

Entrepreneur Andrew Yang is a wild card for the 2020 Democratic nomination, but has gotten attention for his out-there policy proposals, including a $1,000-a-month universal basic income for all Americans called “freedom dividends.”

On The Fence (5)

Rumor had it that former Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams might become Biden’s vice president pick once he declared his candidacy, but she asserted Wednesday a presidential run could still be in the cards for her. Abrams, the Georgia House of Representatives’ former minority leader, had refused to acknowledge Republican Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp as legitimately elected but also worried in 2016 that Trump would not concede the presidential election if he lost.

Joe Biden might be the biggest name still waiting to declare a 2020 Democratic run. Some speculate he is getting his apologies — for things like mishandling sexual harassment accusations against then-Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas — out of the way before launching a campaign. Biden has already come out swinging against his possible rivals, declaring March 16 he has “the most progressive record of anybody.”

Republican Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan has not committed to challenging Trump in a primary, saying he would wait until seeing the results of special counsel Robert Mueller’s report. Mueller handed in his report Friday, but its full contents have not been released. Hogan is a Republican governor in a blue state and faces steep odds in a primary matchup: 73 percent of voters said they’d vote for Trump over Hogan, according to a Morning Consult poll from late March.

Former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz first floated the possibility he’d run for president as an Independent during a Jan. 27 “60 Minutes” interview. His announcement worried Democrats like fellow presidential candidate Castro and Democratic Hawaii Sen. Brian Schatz, who predicted that Schultz’s candidacy will split the Democratic vote and keep Trump in office.

Former Massachusetts Republican Gov. Bill Weld formed a presidential campaign exploratory committee in February for a Republican challenge to Trump. He will likely make a decision in April. Weld has also been on the ticket as a Libertarian vice presidential candidate.

This story will be updated.

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