NEW POLL — NBC News’ first national poll of the 2024 GOP presidential race finds DONALD TRUMP with a double-digit lead over Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS among Republican primary voters. The numbers: 46% for Trump, 31% for DeSantis and 6% for former VP MIKE PENCE. Tied in fourth place with 3% each: former South Carolina Gov. NIKKI HALEY, Sen. TIM SCOTT (R-S.C.) and former Arkansas Gov. ASA HUTCHINSON. VIVEK RAMASWAMY in last place with 2%. Full results The other big takeaway: “Substantial majorities of all Americans don’t want Trump or President JOE BIDEN to run for president in 2024,” writes NBC’s Mark Murray. A full 70% of voters think Biden shouldn’t run, while 60% say Trump shouldn’t. (“Sequels are frequently hits at the box office, but apparently not at the ballot box,” quipped pollster JEFF HORWITT.) THE LAST DANCE — Biden is expected to soft-launch his reelection campaign on Tuesday in the form of a video and fundraising appeal to supporters. Now, at the 11th hour, there’s some doubt about the timing. Biden famously takes a long time to pull the trigger on his final political decisions, and many top Democrats wouldn’t be surprised if Tuesday comes and goes without him taking the plunge. In Biden world, there are two camps on the “timing” front, as our colleagues Chris Cadelago, Holly Otterbein and Jonathan Lemire report. One wants to get the announcement out of the way and start fundraising. The other essentially argues that timing doesn’t matter. “Amid all the breathlessness, several Democrats outside the White House told POLITICO they are fine with him waiting until late summer or even the fall. They point to the chaotic Republican primary and cable TV chyron-dominating legal morass swirling around former President Donald Trump as reasons for Biden to keep his powder dry. Some noted the awkwardness of his possible relaunch video Tuesday, the first day of a Manhattan trial over allegations Trump raped a woman decades ago. Which one, they ask facetiously, is the story that will get more eyeballs?” Biden reportedly recorded the announcement video after returning from Ireland. WaPo’s Tyler Pager and Michael Scherer have more details: “A videographer soon met him in Rehoboth Beach, Del., where Biden spent the weekend, after arriving in Dover at 2:26 a.m. with his sister, VALERIE, and his son, HUNTER. The president shot parts of the launch video over the next two days before returning to the White House on Sunday night, according to people familiar with events, who like others in this story requested anonymity to describe private conversations. “Once Biden returned to the White House, he and first lady JILL BIDEN met with senior aides to finalize the details of the reelection launch, and after the Bidens signed off on the plans, the officials ramped up their final preparations. “Top fundraising officials at the Democratic National Committee scrambled to make dozens of phone calls, frequently ending up in voice mails, inviting top donors for a hastily arranged summit with the president to plan events. Other staffers were dispatched to build a campaign website that could receive the first donations of what some in the party believe could amount to a $2 billion effort, counting the spending of outside groups.” Good Sunday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza. A NEW GOP DIVIDE ON ABORTION — For years, Republican presidential candidates faced a rather straightforward litmus test on abortion: Should Roe v. Wade be overturned? On that, they generally agreed: It should. But now that Roe has been overturned, a new divide is splitting top Republicans: Should abortion be banned nationally, or should abortion rights policy be left up to the states? Last night, that emerging fissure was on full display at a forum held by the Iowa Faith and Freedom Coalition, which featured speeches from Pence, Hutchinson, Scott and Ramaswamy. (Trump appeared via video.) Des Moines Register’s Katie Akin and Galen Bacharier: “Pence, who has been among the most vocal Republican opponents to abortion, said he would ‘certainly support any pro-life legislation that came before me’ if elected. And he split with Trump on the issue, criticizing him for not being open to federal restrictions. “‘I do think it’s more likely that this issue is resolved at the state level,’ Pence told reporters. ‘But I don't agree with the former president, who says this is a states-only issue. We've been given a new beginning for life in this country.’ “Pence said federal abortion proposals, like a ban after 15 weeks of pregnancy, ‘are all ideas that ought to be part of the debate.’ The former vice president also said he believed ‘mail-order abortions’ involving medication ‘should be banned,’ a day after the Supreme Court ruled that the abortion drug mifepristone should remain widely available.” But the politics of abortion rights are proving toxic for the GOP in swing seats and suburbs throughout the country, and many Republicans in Washington are eager to steer clear of the types of policies Pence is touting, as CNN’s Melanie Zanona, Annie Grayer and Lauren Fox report in a big piece this morning: “House Republicans are abandoning a years-long push by their party to pass a federal abortion ban and are exploring other ways to advance their anti-abortion agenda — a remarkable shift that underscores how the GOP is wrestling with an issue that has become a political landmine for their party. “In interviews with dozens of Republicans, the vast majority — even among the staunchest opponents of abortion — rejected the idea of Congress pursuing a national ban and said leadership has no plans on the horizon for it to be a centerpiece of their agenda, despite passing federal restrictions on the procedure in previous years when they were in power. … “There is a political risk, however, in letting states be in the driver’s seat. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a six-week abortion ban earlier this month and other states have outright banned the procedure, while a legal fight is playing out in the courts about whether women should continue to have access to a commonly used abortion pill. That’s fueling fears over whether these developments could be a drag on the entire Republican ticket next year, regardless of how hard congressional Republicans try to avoid questions about the matter.” Related read: “Losing Ballot Issues on Abortion, G.O.P. Now Tries to Keep Them Off the Ballot,” by NYT’s Kate Zernike and Michael Wines SUNDAY BEST … — New Hampshire Gov. CHRIS SUNUNU on the timeline for deciding to enter the presidential race, on NBC’s “Meet the Press”: “I think everybody will have to make a decision by Fourth of July. Get the exploratory committees. I think there’s a lot of new candidates that are stepping up saying, ‘Hey, wait, there’s lanes here?’ There’s a lot of opportunity here.” — ASA HUTCHINSON on DeSantis’ fight with Disney, on “Fox News Sunday”: “I think he’s getting it wrong on Disney. I think Disney got it wrong on themselves to begin with. I don't agree with how Disney has handled things, but you don't use the heavy handed government to punish a business.” — Sen. DICK DURBIN (D-Ill.) on a potential code of conduct for Supreme Court justices, on “Meet the Press”: “The code of conduct would look an awful lot like the code that applies to the rest of federal government and other judges. … Why this Supreme Court, these nine justices believe they are exempt from the basic standards of disclosure, I cannot explain.” — Sen. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.) on whether he agrees with Trump’s abortion stance, on CNN’s “State of the Union”: “Here's what I believe, that anybody running for president who has a snowball's chance in hell in the 2024 primary is going to be with me, the American people and all of Europe saying late-term abortions should be off the table.” — Sen. MARK WARNER (D-Va.) on the abortion pill decision, on ABC’s “This Week”: “I'm not sure how to read it. I do know that it was the judge’s decision in Texas. I think it was crazy. The notion that you would take a drug that has been used safely for more than two decades and somehow then take that away from availability.” — Sen. AMY KLOBUCHAR (D-Minn.) on the debt limit negotiations, on “State of the Union”: “President Biden should sit down with Speaker McCarthy. … That is the place to negotiate. And they should start those negotiations now, not using the American people and their mortgages as hostage, because, right now, we have got to simply make clear we're going to avoid default and get this behind us. We pay our bills.”
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