Roll Call reported that Elder contemplated a possible run for the
United States Senate against California Senator
Barbara Boxer in
2010.
2021 California gubernatorial recall election In July 2021, Elder announced his candidacy to replace
Governor Gavin Newsom in the 2021 California gubernatorial recall election. He said that he was encouraged to run by fellow conservative talk-radio figure
Dennis Prager, a mentor to Elder. On July 21, 2021, Judge Laurie Earl of the
Sacramento County Superior Court ordered Elder's reinstatement to the recall ballot, holding that Weber improperly disqualified Elder, who had "substantially complied" with disclosure requirements, and that the recall election's tax return disclosure requirements imposed by Secretary of State Weber were invalid, since the special recall election was not a "direct primary election". Weber's office did not appeal the ruling. After his entry, Elder had been regarded as the
front-runner on the election's replacement question. He refused to participate in debates with other Republican recall candidates, such as former
San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, state Assemblyman
Kevin Kiley, and business owner
John Cox, and had refused to share a stage with certain other candidates at Republican Party events. Former California Governor
Pete Wilson was one of Elder's campaign advisors. If elected governor, Elder pledged to replace one of California's two Democratic senators,
Dianne Feinstein, with a Republican. In September 2021, while the recall election was underway, Elder claimed without evidence that there would be "shenanigans" in the voting process. On the night of the election, after Newsom defeated the recall effort, Elder told his supporters to be "gracious in defeat", stating that "we may have lost the battle, but we are going to win the war", proceeding to repeatedly criticize Newsom. In January 2022, Elder announced that he would not run against Newsom in the
state's gubernatorial election later that year, and would instead focus on a new
political action committee called "Elder for America" in order to help Republicans win back the
House and
Senate.
2024 presidential election }} Over a year after the recall, Elder began floating the idea of running for president. On April 20, 2023, Elder officially announced his candidacy for
president of the United States in the
2024 election. During a television appearance announcing his decision, Elder said "My father was a World War II vet, He served on the island of Guam. He was a Marine. My older brother, late older brother, Kirk, was in the Navy during the Vietnam era. My little brother Dennis actually served in Vietnam in the Army. I'm the only one who didn't serve, and I don't feel good about that. I feel I have a moral, religious and a patriotic duty to give back to a country that's been so good to my family and me. And that is why I am doing this." According to Elder, "America is in decline, but this decline is not inevitable. We can enter a new American Golden Age, but we must choose a leader who can bring us there. That's why I'm running for President." While Elder announced his candidacy on
Fox News, he appeared to break the news to the
Washington Examiner one week earlier, on April 14, 2023. Since announcing his candidacy, Elder has appeared on various cable news shows, podcasts, and other media platforms to make his case for the presidency, including
The Breakfast Club and Valuetainment's
PBD Podcast. Elder claims "America is in decline, but this decline is not inevitable". He has made addressing crime a campaign priority, criticizing district attorneys with connections to billionaire
George Soros for failing to "protect people and property". Elder is known for highlighting crime rates in cities like
Chicago, Illinois. As a member of the
Commission on the Social Status of Black Men and Boys, he is also critical of the
Biden administration for "portraying black males as victims" and "ignoring the root causes of their struggles," accusing Democrats of "turning their backs on the very people they claim to support." In July 2023, Elder criticized the
Republican National Committee's (RNC) primary debate qualification rules, requiring each candidate to secure 40,000 individual donors and then hand over their donor information to the RNC. In an op-ed column published in
The Hill, he called the requirements "artificial and arbitrary," refusing to "serve as a piggy bank for a political party." He also supports making illegal immigration a felony at the state level, urging U.S. states to punish "illegal aliens" themselves. On August 22, Elder disclosed his financials, in which he reported to have made $1-$5 million from
The Epoch Times and between $100,001 and $1 million from the anti-inflammatory supplement Relief Factor. Elder's disclosure violates guidance from the
Office of Government Ethics which requires candidates to provide their exact income, not in ranges as he did. Despite believing to qualify for the first presidential debate in Wisconsin, the RNC officially announced their list of candidates for the debate and Elder was left out. Elder then responded calling the process corrupt, and announced he would take further action in the form of legal prosecution to ensure he was on the debate stage. After being left out of the first Republican primary debate in late August, Elder criticized the RNC for excluding select polls from
Rasmussen Reports, due to alleged connections to Donald Trump's presidential campaign. Rasmussen denied any connection to Trump, prompting Elder to state that “the rules of the game were rigged” to bar him from the debate stage. Elder subsequently filed a complaint with the
Federal Election Commission, accusing the RNC and Fox News of conspiring to leave him out of the debate by failing to apply the debate qualification standards equally. Elder blamed Biden and Vice President
Kamala Harris for the U.S.-Mexico border crisis, with more than two million illegal migrants crossing the border for the second consecutive fiscal year in 2023. He also stated that Biden was "stuck" with Harris as his running mate in 2024, criticizing the president for aligning himself with Gavin Newsom and his "unaffordable dystopia" in California. On October 26, 2023, Elder ended his campaign for president, endorsing
Donald Trump. == Political views ==