As of now, the **** and the party has been former Florida Governor Jeb Bush as well as former presidential candidate Mitt Romney has publicly expressed his willingness to run for the election, and will probably become the frontrunner in the **** and the party contenders.
For Romney, who lost the election twice, 2016 will be his third chance. in 2012, he had lost the election with 21 percent of the vote below the incumbent U.S. President Barack Obama.
According to the latest polls, Romney has caught up with other potential **** and party contenders in Iowa, whose primary has long been considered a bellwether for the U.S. presidential election.
And as it stands, Romney's biggest rival may be Jeb Bush, the son of former U.S. President George H.W. Bush Sr. and younger brother of George W. Bush Jr. who announced his decision to run for office via facebook as well as his personal twitter feed as early as December of last year.
The media had previously reported that if Romney is not taken into account, Jeb is tentatively in first place with 15 percent support in the **** and the party. But if Romney is included, he would be 10 to 20 percentage points behind in support. But even so, the "presidential descendant" from the Bush family, with his family's huge network, still has a strong advantage.
Democrats:
Compared with the **** and the party's side of the fire, the Democratic side of the dawn seems quiet. The most promising candidate in the race right now is Hillary Clinton.
While Hillary Clinton has yet to officially announce her candidacy, the outside world has long regarded her candidacy as a foregone conclusion, so viewers have already cast their eyes on the "soap opera" of American politics - the Clintons versus the Bush family. If "lucky", Hillary and Jeb will represent the two families in the White House.
Former U.S. secretary of state and first lady Hillary has gone from blinking to "thinking about it," but in fact her preparations have already begun. Unlike the situation in 2008, Hillary's support within the Democratic Party and the campaign funds she has raised are unrivaled, and if she succeeds, she will become the first female president in U.S. history.