Joe Biden dealt scathing blow ahead of Super Tuesday: ‘Won’t last four months!’
US President Joe Biden’s hopes of another term in office have been dashed, ahead of the Super Tuesday vote.
As millions of Americans flood to the ballot boxes to choose their candidates for the November election, Biden is looking most likely to face a rematch against predecessor Donald Trump.
According to a CBS News poll, Trump is predicted to beat Biden by four points, 52 per cent to 48 per cent, in the Presidential election.
This comes as the Supreme Court unanimously overturned a Colorado state ruling to disqualify Donald Trump from running for president, using an anti-insurrection constitutional clause.
Reacting to the judgement, Trump told reporters that it was “a great day for liberty”.
Biden accused reporters today of “not reporting his wins” ahead of the big vote. The US President raged: “You guys don’t report. I’m winning, five, five in a row.”
Discussing Super Tuesday’s predictions, Lord Daniel Moylan shed doubt on the current Potus and claimed he “wouldn’t last” another term in the White House.
Moylan predicted that Donald Trump is set to win “a vast majority” of the state ballots.
Moylan told GB News: “He’ll have wrapped up the nomination for the Republicans, and Biden will be the nominated candidate for the Democrats.”
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When asked by host Michelle Dewberry who he believes should be the next President of the US, Moylan admitted: “I think it’s probably going to have to be Trump, because I don’t think Biden is mentally competent to do the job for four years, or indeed four months.”
Commentator Tom Bewick criticised both of the Presidential candidates and said “none of the above” should be in charge.
He told Michelle: “I don’t have a vote in the American election. Frankly, if I was in the US, I seriously wouldn’t want to vote for either them. And that’s as much in a democracy, my right to do that.
“I think it’s just so sad that we’ve got this massive polarisation in American policy.”
Bewick compared the American “polarisation” to the current state of the UK government, and said it is for the same reason that Prime Minister Rishi Sunak made his speech on “extremist behaviour”.
Bewick continued: “We’re seeing it here in our own policy as well. What I will say about Trump is he is a politician that feeds off of division. He appeals really to prejudice as opposed to appealing to rational argument.
“That said, I don’t think the Democratic liberal establishment have done themselves any favours. They need to take some responsibility, frankly, for creating the monster that is Trump. And indeed we’re seeing that with the kind of court cases that are going through the system at the moment.”