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Tag: Biden 2024

  • As some Democrats call to replace Biden after debate, 1 senior Illinois rep. said he’s still all in

    As some Democrats call to replace Biden after debate, 1 senior Illinois rep. said he’s still all in

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — President Joe Biden doubled down Monday on his plans to stay in the race, calling out critics who say he should step aside.

    The president sent a letter to House Democrats, saying it’s time to move on from the debate.

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    One senior Illinois representative said he’s all in for Biden.

    Biden remains adamantly committed to his campaign for reelection despite concerns within his own party that he may not be up for another four years.

    On Monday, the president sent a letter to Democratic members of Congress, saying he firmly believes he’s the party’s best chance in November.

    “We have one job. And that is to beat Donald Trump. Any weakening of resolve or lack of clarity about the task ahead only helps Trump and hurts us,” Biden wrote.

    Congressman Danny Davis said he needs no convincing.

    “Joe Biden is the candidate. He’s my candidate, and he’s America’s champion. And we need to keep him there,” said Rep. Davis, D-Chicago.

    The president was on MSNBC Monday morning, saying voters have spoken.

    “All the data shows that the average Democrat out there who voted, the 14 million of them have voted for me, still want me to be the nominee,” Biden said.

    But, with polling suggesting Biden now trails Donald Trump in many battleground states, the lone member of the Illinois congressional delegation calling for the president to step aside defended that statement again Monday morning.

    “I think we have to be honest with ourselves; the situation is not getting better. Frankly, it’s getting worse,” said Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Chicago. “What I would stress to the president: This isn’t just about you. It’s not about loyalty; it’s about being pragmatic. We have to be honest with ourself. It’s not just the White House at stake.”

    On a call with major donors Monday, the president tripled down on staying in the race, vowing to go on the attack in the next debate.

    On Tuesday, House and Senate Democrats will meet separately in Washington to discuss the situation.

    Congressman Davis, who is older than Biden, said age should not be part of the discussion.

    “I have not seen anything that I could describe as cognitive decline (in Biden),” Davis said.

    Republicans hope Biden doubts will help local GOP candidates

    Meanwhile, Republicans at at a Palatine dinner Monday night feel confident ahead of a consequential convention and hope the current Democratic Party turmoil will translate to GOP wins locally.

    “It’s a really exciting time. It’s a scary time for our future as an American, but we have a real opportunity to embrace positive change,” said House Minority Leader State Rep. Tony McCombie.

    The Northwest Suburban GOP Lincoln Day Dinner came one week before the start of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee.

    “Donald J. Trump, you heard it first here, is going to win a 48-state re-election landslide!” said former Trump senior economic advisor Stephen Moore.

    Republicans there said doubts about Biden will benefit GOP candidates locally.

    “We look at a lot of our state rep races, a lot of our senate races and our congressional races that are moderate districts, and we are so encouraged to have more wins in those areas because the Democratic Party right now is self-destructing,” said Palatine Township Republican Committeeman Aaron Del Mar.

    The Democratic National Convention is in just 42 days. Capitol Hill Democrats are planning to meet in Tuesday morning to discuss next steps.

    “I think he needs to continue to get out and be in front of the American people, to speak without the teleprompter in front of people. Show us the Joe Biden that we knew four years ago,” said Democratic U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider, who represents the north and northwest suburbs.

    For the president, his next major test begins Tuesday, when the three-day NATO Summit gets underway in Washington, and world leaders will be making their own assessment of the president.

    Copyright © 2024 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    Craig Wall

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  • Biden and Trump clinch nominations, setting the stage for a grueling general election rematch

    Biden and Trump clinch nominations, setting the stage for a grueling general election rematch

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    WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump clinched their parties’ presidential nominations Tuesday with decisive victories in a slate of low-profile primaries, setting up a general election rematch that many voters do not want.

    The outcome of contests across Georgia, Mississippi and Washington State was never in doubt. Neither Biden, a Democrat, nor Trump, a Republican, faced major opposition. But the magnitude of their wins gave each man the delegate majority he needed to claim his party’s nomination at the summertime national conventions.

    Not even halfway through the presidential primary calendar, Tuesday marked a crystalizing moment for a nation uneasy with its choices in 2024.

    There is no longer any doubt that the fall election will feature a rematch between two flawed and unpopular presidents. At 81, Biden is already the oldest president in U.S. history, while the 77-year-old Trump is facing decades in prison as a defendant in four criminal cases. Their rematch – the first featuring two U.S. presidents since 1912 – will almost certainly deepen the nation’s searing political and cultural divides over the eight-month grind that lies ahead.

    In a statement, Biden celebrated the nomination while casting Trump as a serious threat to democracy.

    Trump, Biden said, “is running a campaign of resentment, revenge, and retribution that threatens the very idea of America.”

    He continued, “I am honored that the broad coalition of voters representing the rich diversity of the Democratic Party across the country have put their faith in me once again to lead our party – and our country – in a moment when the threat Trump poses is greater than ever.”

    On the eve of Tuesday’s primaries, Trump acknowledged that Biden would be the Democratic nominee, even as seized on the president’s age.

    “I assume he’s going to be the candidate,” Trump said of Biden on CNBC. “I’m his only opponent other than life, life itself.”

    Both candidates dominated Tuesday’s primaries in swing-state Georgia, deep-red Mississippi and Democratic-leaning Washington. Voting was taking place later in Hawaii’s Republican caucus.

    Despite their tough talk, the road ahead will not be easy for either presumptive nominee.

    Trump is facing 91 felony counts in four criminal cases involving his handling of classified documents and his attempt to overturn the 2020 election, among other alleged crimes. He’s also facing increasingly pointed questions about his policy plans and relationships with some of the world’s most dangerous dictators. Trump met privately on Friday with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who has rolled back democracy in his country.

    Biden, who would be 86 years old at the end of his next term, is working to assure a skeptical electorate that he’s still physically and mentally able to thrive in the world’s most important job. Voters in both parties are unhappy with his handling of immigration and inflation.

    And he’s dealing with additional dissension within his party’s progressive base, furious that he hasn’t done more to stop Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza. Activists and religious leaders in Washington encouraged Democrats to vote “uncommitted” to signal their outrage.

    In Seattle, 26-year-old voter Bella Rivera said they hoped their “uncommitted” vote would would serve as a wakeup call for the Democratic party.

    “If you really want our votes, if you want to win this election, you’re going to have to show a little bit more either support of Palestinian liberation – that’s something that’s very important to us – and ceasing funds to Israel,” said Rivera, a preschool teacher who uses they/them pronouns.

    Almost 3,000 miles away in Georgia, retiree Donna Graham said she would have preferred another Republican nominee over Trump, but she said there’s no way she’d ever vote for Biden in the general election.

    “He wasn’t my first choice, but he’s the next best thing,” Graham said of Trump. “It’s sad that it’s the same old matchup as four years ago.”

    Copyright © 2024 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

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    AP

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  • Why Democrats Should Stop Freaking Out About Biden 2024

    Why Democrats Should Stop Freaking Out About Biden 2024

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    Relax — I’ve got this.
    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty

    Democratic supporters of President Biden should quit freaking out. Despite what a handful of recent polls suggest, there’s good reason to believe that the White House’s policies and performance will be judged a success by the voting public, and that Biden will be elected to another four years.

    Pundits and pollsters have been warning for months that Biden’s anemic approval rating, mired around 39 percent, means Democrats are in imminent danger of losing the White House.

    “He’s losing now and there’s no plan to fix the problems other than hoping that the polls are wrong or that voters look at the race differently when they have more time to focus on it,” writes author/statistician Nate Silver.

    “Biden is not up by 12 points. He can’t coast to victory here. He is losing. He is behind in most polls,” says New York Times columnist Ezra Klein. “He is behind, despite everything people already know about Donald Trump. He needs to make up ground. If he does not make up ground, Trump wins.”

    Silver and Klein both believe that Biden’s age makes his reelection hopeless and that he should quit the race. Other analysis pieces cite polls suggesting Biden is losing ground with Black, Latino, and Asian voters. Vox’s Christian Paz recently looked at numbers suggesting Biden is struggling to attract traditionally Democratic-leaning young voters.

    At most, the numbers point to geographic regions and constituencies that need some attention from Democratic strategists. But it’s hardly a reason to panic. The “behind in most polls” rhetoric in particular is overblown and mostly wrong. According to RealClearPolitics, there have been 16 national polls conducted since January 22. Collectively, the surveys show Donald Trump leading Biden by a whopping … 1.1 percent. I’m not sure why Klein would assume Biden should be up by 12 points or some other randomly selected margin in our famously polarized country, but to conclude “he is losing” nine months before Election Day is wildly premature.

    One polling number Democrats seem to keep ignoring is the unchanging favorability rating of Trump, the all-but-certain Republican nominee. Throughout his presidency, Trump’s favorability averaged 41 percent.  Four years and an insurrection later, that number is 42 percent. The ex-president has a following whose loyalty remains famously unshakable despite riot, scandal, criminal indictments, and brazen promises to govern as a dictator. But Trump does not seem to have added to this base of loyal followers.

    For a sober reality check, I contacted Allan Lichtman, a political scientist who has correctly predicted the outcome of every presidential contest since 1984, using indicators that he claims can explain every election since Abraham Lincoln’s victory in 1860. Lichtman’s book Predicting the Next President: The Keys to the White House dismisses most polls as irrelevant to the final outcome of presidential elections.

    “The problem with these horserace polls is they’re not predictors, they are only snapshots. And they are often wrong,” Lichtman told me recently. “The early polls had Jimmy Carter trouncing Ronald Reagan in 1980; Reagan went on to win in a landslide. George H.W. Bush trailed Mike Dukakis as late as June of 1988 by 18 points; he went on to win handily for a 25-point swing. The last Gallup poll in 2012 had Mitt Romney beating Barack Obama, who also went on to win handily.”

    And don’t even get me started on the problems with polling in 2016, which famously failed to capture the surges in key states that carried Trump into the White House.

    Instead of focusing on polls, Lichtman has developed 13 smart yes/no questions built around the central idea that an incumbent president and his party will normally prevail unless they fail in key measurable areas including foreign policy, domestic policy, party unity, and economic growth. If six or more of the 13 measurements go against the incumbent, according to Lichtman’s theory, the president (or his party) gets kicked out.

    “There’s all this grousing about Joe Biden, his terrible approval ratings, he’s too old, he’s not exciting. But the Democrats’ only chance to win, realistically, is with Biden running, because you win the incumbency key,” says Lichtman, along with a second political indicator, party unity (so far, there is no serious Democratic challenger to Biden). Two of Lichtman’s economic-performance indicators — the absence of a recession and growth rates higher than the last two administrations — both look good for Biden. So does Lichtman’s indicator for a major successful domestic-policy change, which is the administration’s infrastructure law and CHIPS Act.

    There’s been no serious social unrest under Biden (another key), and no major administration scandal (Hunter Biden’s laptop comes nowhere close to Watergate or the Clinton impeachment). So it looks like seven of Lichtman’s keys are lining up nicely for Biden.

    There’s plenty that can go wrong for the administration. “What happens if the Republicans shut down the government? Who knows what effect that could have on the economy?” cautions Lichtman. The turbulence in Ukraine and the Middle East could lead to a foreign-policy debacle, and the emergence of a serious third-party challenger could tilt the playing field against Biden. But those what-ifs point to tangible matters of governance, unlike the latest polls that have rattled nervous Dems.

    “Presidential elections are essentially votes up or down on the party holding the White House. I’ve been screaming this for 40 years, and the politicians paid no attention. It’s governing, not campaigning, that counts,” Lichtman told me. “Forget the sound bites, the negative ads, the attack, the tricks. Campaign on substance.”

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    Errol Louis

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  • Biden Plans A Brilliant Move On The Anniversary Of Trump's Insurrection

    Biden Plans A Brilliant Move On The Anniversary Of Trump's Insurrection

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    President Biden isn’t letting the anniversary of Trump’s insurrection pass unnoticed. The President will be holding a campaign event on the third anniversary of 1/6.

    President Biden Will Mark The Anniversary Of Trump’s Bloody Insurrection

    The Biden campaign announced in a statement provided to PoliticusUSA, “On Saturday, January 6, President Biden will travel to Pennsylvania near Valley Forge where he will mark the three-year anniversary of when–at the urging of Donald Trump–a violent mob breached our nation’s Capitol. On Monday, January 8, the President will take the campaign’s message to South Carolina where he will deliver remarks at Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, a venue that embodies the stakes for the nation at this moment.

    How Many People Died Or Were Injured On 1/6?

    The nation should never forget that at least seven people lost their lives in relation to the 1/6 attack that evidence points to Trump inciting, according to a bipartisan Senate report. Trump’s words and actions got people killed, and the nation needs to be reminded of the lives lost and at least 174 injuries suffered because of the former president’s desire to remain in power illegally.

    Biden Campaign: We Are Campaigning Like Our Democracy Depends On It

    Biden Campaign Manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez said during a press call with reporters:

    On January 6, 2021, we witnessed a very different vision of America – one defined by revenge, retribution, and a rebuke of our very democracy. This Saturday will mark the three-year anniversary of when–with encouragement from Donald Trump–a violent mob breached our nation’s Capitol. It was the first time in our nation’s history that a president tried to prevent the peaceful transfer of power. Not even during the Civil War did insurrectionists breach our Capitol. But at the urging of Donald Trump, insurrectionists on January 6, 2021, did.

    America watched as 2,000 rioters launched a violent attack on the Capitol as our duly elected Congress carried out the sacred ritual of our republic and certified the Electoral College vote. 140 police officers were assaulted by rioters and five people died as a result of the events on January 6 – including Capitol police officers. When Joe Biden ran for president four years ago, he said, ‘We’re in a battle for the soul of America.’ And as we look toward November 2024, we still are. The threat Donald Trump posed in 2020 to American democracy has only grown more dire in the years since.

    Our message is clear and it is simple: We are running a campaign like the fate of our democracy depends on it. Because it does.

    Trump’s Attacks On Democracy Will Be A Central 2024 Issue

    The move to hold an event marking the 1/6 anniversary is brilliant. It is good politics and the right move to protect democracy. The media rarely links Trump’s campaign to his attacks on democracy and illegal efforts to stay in power. The Biden campaign isn’t assuming that Americans will inheritanly understand the election’s stakes. President Biden and Vice President Harris are defining the election and reminding voters that Trump is more authoritarian thug than a viable democratic option.

    A Special Message From PoliticusUSA

    If you are in a position to donate purely to help us keep the doors open on PoliticusUSA during what is a critical election year, please do so here.

    We have been honored to be able to put your interests first for 14 years as we only answer to our readers and we will not compromise on that fundamental, core PoliticusUSA value.

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    Jason Easley

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