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Home » Celebrities call on Biden to end reelection campaign
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Celebrities call on Biden to end reelection campaign

i2wtcBy i2wtcJuly 9, 2024No Comments9 Mins Read
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The 9th House Democrat on Tuesday called on President Joe Biden to step down as his party’s nominee, joining a chorus of prominent anti-Trump politicians, pundits and columnists who have urged Biden to field an alternative candidate following what was widely seen as a disastrous debate performance.

President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump take part in first presidential debate … [+] At CNN Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, June 27, 2024. (Photo by Kyle Mazza/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Anadolu (via Getty Images)

Key Facts

Rep. Miki Sherrill (DN.J.)In a statement on Tuesday, the White House urged Biden not to run for reelection and to “help lead the process of selecting a new nominee,” saying the stakes are too high for President Trump’s reelection.

Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.), Rep. Mark Takano (D-Calif.), Rep. Joe Morrell (D-N.Y.), The New York Times and NBC News, citing sources familiar with the discussions, reported that all Democrats in Sunday’s debate said Biden should withdraw from the election, although Nadler later walked back his call to urge Biden to withdraw.

Rep. Angie Craig (D-MN) After an interview with ABC News reporter George Stephanopoulos, Biden called for him to withdraw from the race, citing his poor performance in the debate and a “lack of strong response” in the week following the debate. In the interview, Biden reiterated that the debate was a “bad incident” and not a sign of illness, and refused to undergo cognitive testing.

Rep. Mike Quigley (D-IL)In an interview with MSNBC’s Chris Hayes, he argued that Biden should drop out of the race, saying, “The only thing left for Biden to consolidate his legacy and avoid total disaster is to step down and let someone else take over.”

Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Massachusetts)Moulton lamented that he no longer has confidence that Biden can beat former President Donald Trump in the November election, telling Boston’s NPR station WBUR that Biden should “step back and let new leadership rise up.”

Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas): Doggett became the first sitting Democrat to call for Biden out last week, explaining that he “hoped the debate would create momentum” but that Biden “failed to effectively defend many of his accomplishments and expose many of Trump’s lies.”

Congressman Raul Grijalva (D-AZ)became the second sitting Democratic member of Congress, following Doggett, to call on Biden to resign, telling The New York Times that Biden has a “responsibility” to step down from the race.

Julian CastroThe former Housing and Urban Development secretary under the Obama administration and a Democratic primary candidate in early 2020 said Biden should “absolutely” step aside from the race and that Vice President Kamala Harris should take over for the Democratic nomination.

Former Congressman Tim Ryan (D-Ohio): Biden’s former rival for the 2020 presidential nomination wrote in a Newsweek magazine op-ed that he believes Harris is the party’s “best way forward” and called her an opportunity for “generational change.”

Wealthy Biden supporter: Billionaires Christy Walton, Michael Novogratz and Reed Hastings, who have previously donated to pro-Biden and anti-Trump groups, have called on Biden to step down, while Mark Cuban has said Democrats should consider whether someone else could run the nomination.

The New York Times Editorial Board: “To serve his country, President Biden should withdraw from the race,” declared a headline from a left-leaning panel the day after the debate, a call echoed by the editorial boards of the Chicago Tribune, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the Boston Globe.

Thomas Friedman: The Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times columnist, who acknowledged his friendship with Biden and described being reduced to tears while watching the “heartbreaking” debate, wrote that Biden was “unfit to run for reelection” and that Democrats should conduct “a new and open process for finding the Democratic nominee for president.”

Nicholas Kristof: In a column published just hours after the debate ended, New York Times columnist Kristof wrote that Biden’s debate performance “reinforced the narrative” that he is too old to serve as president and urged the president to announce his retirement before the convention and give delegates the opportunity to choose another Democratic candidate, such as Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown or Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo.

Paul Krugman: “The Best President of My Lifetime Needs to Go” was the headline of a petition from a third New York Times columnist, with Krugman acknowledging that “given how much I’ve supported Biden’s policies, some of Biden’s supporters may see this as a betrayal, but I fear we need to acknowledge reality.”

David Remnick: The editors of The New Yorker wrote that Biden appeared to have “slid into a state of onstage indiscretion” and that to remain a candidate “would be not only self-delusional but also a national danger.”

David Ignatius: A Washington Post foreign affairs columnist reiterated a view he expressed in a September piece that Biden should not run, writing after the debate that aides and confidants, including his wife, Jill Biden, had insulated Biden and dismissed calls that he should step aside and were “overly protective.”

Mark Leibovich: The Atlantic staff writer and former national correspondent for The New York Times Magazine headlined his column after the debate, “It’s Time to Go, Joe,” calling the debate a “disaster” and saying Biden “looks and sounds old, very, very old in fact.”

Joe Scarborough: He declared, “I love you”[s]The morning after the debate, Biden, host of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” (a show Biden is said to watch religiously), gently suggested that the president should drop out of the race, asking the rhetorical question, “If he was a CEO and he performed like that, would any company in America keep him on?”

Chandler West: “It’s time for Joe to go,” West, who served as White House director of photography from January 2021 to May 2022, posted on Instagram, Axios reported. Screenshots from West’s article showed White House officials had been privately saying for months that Biden “is not as strong as he was a few years ago,” and later text messages sent by West to Axios predicted the debate “won’t be the last bad day” for Biden.

James Carville: The longtime Democratic political consultant said the Biden campaign used his name in post-debate fundraising correspondence without his permission and told Politico that Biden “should not be the nominee.” He also told Axios that he thinks Biden will end his campaign before Election Day, paraphrasing economist Herb Stein’s “what can’t be done, can’t be done.”

Andrew Yang: Biden’s former 2020 Democratic nominee rival wrote in his blog that he was “wrong” to trust that Biden’s team would prepare him for the debate, described Biden as “old and stumbling” when they met in February, and wrote that Biden was “fighting a race he cannot win” and was “doing the country wrong” by continuing to run.

Cenk Uygur: Less than 30 minutes into the debate, the host and founder of the left-leaning political podcast The Young Turks, who also ran briefly for the Democratic nomination this year, tweeted that his show will “begin discussing who should replace Biden, because at this point it’s clear that it absolutely has to happen.”

Points to note

Some Democrats have expressed cautious skepticism about Biden’s future in the race, but have stopped short of calling for him to step down. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said on MSNBC a few days after the debate about Biden’s cognitive abilities, “I think it’s a reasonable question to determine whether this is a temporary condition or whether this is a medical condition.” Rep. James Clyburn (D-Colo.), a former member of party leadership, said he wanted Biden to remain the nominee, but argued that Harris should replace him if he were to step down. Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, who has vying to succeed Biden, told reporters he would continue to support him “as long as he’s in the race,” but added that “only he can make that decision.”

Contra

Biden, appearing much more energetic than he had the night before, defended himself in a speech in Raleigh, North Carolina, the day after the debate, acknowledging to the audience, “I don’t walk as easily as I used to, I don’t talk as smoothly as I used to, I don’t debate as well as I used to.” In contrast to Trump, Biden said, “I know what I know. I know how to tell the truth!” Biden told reporters immediately after the debate that he had a sore throat, which seemed to excuse his raspy, sometimes inaudible voice.

Main Background

Last month’s presidential debate was billed as the most important night of the 2024 campaign and a chance for Biden to reassure voters worried he was too old to run for president. But Biden was widely seen to have done the opposite, losing his train of thought within the first few minutes of the debate, speaking so quietly that it was sometimes difficult to understand what he was saying, giving incoherent answers and often standing with his mouth open and a stunned expression while Trump spoke. Harsh criticism was swift and coming on social media from even Trump’s harshest critics, and by the end of the debate, multiple media outlets reported that Democrats were privately discussing possible candidates to replace Trump.

tangent

Unless Biden voluntarily resigns, there is no formal mechanism for replacing the candidate. Biden has won nearly 3,900 of the 4,000 available delegates in the primary elections, and delegates are bound (but not legally required) to vote to formally nominate Biden at the Democratic National Convention in August. In an unprecedented and highly unlikely scenario, delegates could reject Biden and vote to choose another candidate. Alternatively, Biden could withdraw from the race before the convention, giving delegates the opportunity to vote for another candidate. If Biden withdraws after the convention in August, party rules allow the roughly 500 members of the Democratic National Committee to convene a special meeting and select a new candidate by majority vote. Harris is the most obvious choice to replace her, but experts and media outlets also frequently mention Whitmer and California Governor Gavin Newsom.

References

Can Democrats Replace Biden? What happens if Biden drops out of the 2024 election? (Forbes)

Biden says he’s “not debating as well as he used to” in fiery speech after fierce battle with Trump (Forbes)

Here’s what the Democratic presidential nominees would look like if Biden withdraws – Calls for withdrawal rise in fierce debate (Forbes)

Biden’s debate performance was also panned by Trump opponents for his weak voice and stumbling words, making it “painful to watch” (Forbes).

Biden loses train of thought during Trump debate, corrects himself multiple times (Forbes)

Correction (7/9): This story has been updated to reflect how many House Democrats now call for Biden to withdraw.



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