Anthony Scaramucci had harsh words for the man who was briefly his boss, saying Donald Trump will lose to Kamala Harris because he is “old” and “boring.”
Veteran Fox News analyst Brit Hume joined Mooch and veteran Republican pollster Frank Luntz as Republicans voiced their concerns about the Trump campaign on Sunday.
Scaramucci, who spent 11 days as White House press secretary in 2017, has turned anti-Trump and said Sunday that he believes his former boss is headed for defeat in November.
“I predict he’s going to lose because he’s getting boring. He’s getting old. He’s getting tired,” he told Fox 5 DC.
He noted that while Trump remains a strong candidate, America has different demographics than when he shocked the world by defeating Hillary Clinton eight years ago.
Anthony Scaramucci had harsh words for the man who was briefly his boss, saying Donald Trump will lose to Kamala Harris because he is “old” and “boring.”
“The electorate has changed since 2016,” he added. “We’ve lost over 20 million baby boomers since 2016.”
‘At the same time, Generation Z has joined the group with 40 million people, so there has been a great mix of younger voters, who seem interested in politics.’
Also on Sunday, veteran conservative Fox News commentator Hume responded to a poll that said 65 percent of Americans were dissatisfied with the state of the country.
Why, he was asked, is Trump starting to lose ground in the polls to Harris?
Hume said Bluntly: “Because it’s Trump.”
“At its core, the last eight or ten years have been about Donald Trump. Everything has been about Donald Trump,” he added.
The latest Real Clear Politics polling average shows Harris with a 1.4 percent lead over Trump.
Scaramucci, who spent 11 days as White House press secretary in 2017, has turned anti-Trump in his politics and said Sunday that he believes his former boss is headed for defeat in November.
The latest Real Clear Politics polling average shows Harris with a 1.4 percent lead over Trump.
“Donald Trump, however enthusiastic his support, is not a majority candidate. He may win, but he is not a majority candidate,” he said.
Hume said Trump had a die-hard base but that it did not represent more than 40-45 percent of voters.
It has been suggested that Trump’s more outlandish antics in recent weeks could cost him vital votes from undecided voters.
The 2024 political season has been one of the most tumultuous in history, but in just over a month the first voters will be able to start casting their ballots in the presidential election.
While each state has its own rules regarding absentee voting and early in-person voting before Election Day on Nov. 5, some voters can begin mailing their ballots up to 50 days in advance.
Harris was catapulted into the race after Biden announced last month that he was abandoning his re-election campaign.
Trump’s entourage was initially jubilant, expecting weeks of infighting among Democrats. But the party quickly coalesced around the vice president and will show a united front at its convention in Chicago next week.
A Trump victory seemed all but assured after he narrowly survived an assassination attempt last month, but the former president has seen his campaign bogged down by a series of gaffes since Harris was named the Democratic nominee.
The former president plans to flood the airwaves with rallies, press conferences and campaign events that will amount to a massive counterprogramming effort against the DNC.
Trump will hold events every day this week in key states, and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance, also plans to visit battleground states with events on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday, all culminating in a rally on Friday.
Veteran Fox News analyst Brit Hume joined Mooch and veteran Republican pollster Frank Luntz as Republicans voiced their concerns about the Trump campaign on Sunday.
Meanwhile, Trump allies will hold daily press conferences at the Trump Hotel in Chicago, Illinois, every day of the convention.
Among the Republican representatives coming to town for the convention are Sens. Rick Scott (Fla.) and Ron Johnson (Wis.) and Florida Reps. Byron Donalds and Mike Waltz. Thursday’s news conference will include a “surprise special guest.”
The first presidential debate between the two will be held in Philadelphia on September 10 and will be moderated by ABC News.
The first vice presidential debate between Democratic Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota and Republican Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio will take place Oct. 1 in New York City and will be broadcast on CBS.