2024
ELECTION
Could Democrats replace Biden as their nominee?
It is nearly impossible for the Democratic Party to
replace Biden, and the president has given no indication that he intends to
step aside — nor is anyone asking him to.
Feb. 9,
2024, 11:01 PM CET / Updated Feb. 9, 2024, 11:36 PM CET
By Alex
Seitz-Wald and Ben Kamisar
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-election/democrats-replace-biden-nominee-rcna138125
Washington
is abuzz with fresh concerns about President Joe Biden’s fitness after a
special counsel report released Thursday raised questions about his memory.
But
Democrats have rallied around Biden and despite the fantasies of some pundits
and anxious Democrats, the president is almost certain to be the Democratic
Party’s nominee as long as he wants.
Both
parties have moved away from the era when insiders in proverbial smoke-filled
rooms could be kingmakers at the national conventions, and Biden has dominated
every primary he’s competed in thus far.
No
prominent Democrats have called for Biden to step aside and there's no known
serious conservations about it.
“The
Democratic Party is united in supporting President Biden, who will be his
party’s nominee this fall and will make Donald Trump a loser a second time this
November,” said Biden campaign spokesperson Daniel Wessel in a statement to NBC
News.
In the
modern era, a national party has never attempted to adversarially replace their
nominee in part because they know it would likely fail. The issue came before
both parties in 2016, but neither took such drastic action.
The “Access
Hollywood” tape provoked some prominent Republican leaders to call for ditching
Donald Trump, but then-RNC Chairman Reince Priebus said, “No such mechanisms
exists."
Meanwhile,
then-interim DNC Chair Donna Brazile wrote in her memoir that she “nearly
replaced" Hillary Clinton after the candidate collapsed during a Sept. 11
memorial service, before ultimately concluding, “I could not make good on my
threat to replace her.”
Still, the
DNC Charter does make provisions in case the party’s nominee is incapacitated
or opts to step aside, and an anti-Biden coup at the convention is
theoretically possible, if highly unlikely. So how would it work?
Is it too late for another Democratic candidate to get
into the race?
Only a
small handful of states have held Democratic presidential primaries thus far.
But there is still not enough time for a new candidate to enter the race and
beat Biden outright.
Filing
deadlines for about 80% of upcoming contests have already passed and cannot be
easily changed since they are set in each state. There are not enough delegates
at stake in the remaining contests where ballot access is still open to win a
majority.
Of course,
a Democrat could opt to run as a write-in candidate (though not every state
allows write-ins). And Democratic Party rules can be changed. As private
organizations, the Democratic and Republican National Committees are legally
given a wide berth over how they select their nominees.
But Biden
essentially controls the national party, as is standard practice for whichever
party controls the White House.
Any changes
to the party’s nomination rules would go through the DNC’s Rules and Bylaws
Committee, stacked with Biden allies, which essentially rubber-stamped his
controversial new 2024 presidential primary calendar putting South Carolina
ahead of New Hampshire, even though the committee was not previously expecting
to do that until the night before the vote.
What happens if Biden drops out before the convention?
Biden has
said he will remain in the race and there is no indication otherwise, but the
only plausible scenario for Democrats to get a new nominee would be for Biden
to decide to withdraw.
He could do
so while serving out the remainder of his term in the White House, as Lyndon
Johnson did in 1968.
If Biden
were to drop out between now and August, it would most likely create a
free-for-all at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in August.
If Biden
calls it quits before he wins the majority of the Democratic delegates, it
likely wouldn't make a difference. Any new candidate who tried to enter the
race would be unlikely to get on enough of the remaining ballots and therefore
couldn't win enough delegates.
Ultimately
the decision would likely come down to the convention delegates who were
initially pledged to Biden.
It takes a
majority of the roughly 4,000 pledged delegates to win the party’s nomination.
Under recent reforms, the party’s more than 700 superdelegates — Democratic
lawmakers and dignitaries — are allowed to vote only if no one wins a majority
of pledged delegates on the first ballot, so their votes could be crucial in a
contested convention.
His
long-shot primary challengers, Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., and self-help
author Marrianne Williamson, who suspended her campaign this week, have won no
delegates so far. And simply having run won't mean that they move to the front
of the list in the event of a vacancy.
Could Democrats replace Biden against his will?
There’s no
evidence the party would entertain a change without Biden’s consent. But even
if they did, there is no mechanism for the national party to replace a
candidate before the convention and certainly no way for them to anoint a
chosen successor.
If large
swaths of the Democratic Party lost faith in Biden, delegates to the national
convention could theoretically defect en masse. Of course, they were chosen to
be delegates because of their loyalty to Biden and have pledged to support him
at the convention.
But, unlike
many Republican delegates, Democratic delegates are not technically bound to
their candidate. DNC rules allow delegates to “in all good conscience reflect
the sentiments of those who elected them,” providing some wiggle room.
The party’s
charter does contain provisions to replace the nominee in the event of a
vacancy. The measure is intended to be used in case of death, resignation or
incapacitation, not to replace someone who has no desire to step down.
That was
the measure Brazile considered invoking after Clinton collapsed two months
before the 2016 election.
In her
memoir, released a year later, Brazile wrote that she was worried “not just
about Hillary’s health but about her anemic campaign ... so lacking in the
spirit of fight.”
“Perhaps
changing the candidate was a chance to win this thing, to change the playing
field in a way that would send Donald Trump scrambling and unable to catch up,”
she wrote, adding that aides to other would-be candidates contacted her,
including chief of staff to then-Vice President Biden.
But after
less than 24 hours of consideration, Brazile realized the idea was untenable
without Clinton’s cooperation and likely to only divide her party.
Current DNC
Chair Jaime Harrison is a longtime Biden ally who serves, essentially, at the
pleasure of the president. And the national party has certainly given no
indication it's anything but fully behind the president’s re-election.
What happens if Biden withdraws after the convention?
To fill a
vacancy on the national ticket, the DNC chair can call a “special meeting” of
the full Democratic National Committee, which includes about 500 members. On
paper, at least, all it takes is a majority vote of those present to pick a new
presidential and vice presidential nominee. But that process would likely be
anything but smooth, and be filled with behind-the-scenes jockeying and public
pressure campaigns.
If a
vacancy were to occur close to the November election, however, it could raise
constitutional, legal and practical concerns. Among other issues, ballots have
to be printed well in advance of the election and may not be able to be changed
in time.
Would Kamala Harris replace Biden?
If Biden
were to relinquish the presidency, Vice President Kamala Harris would
automatically become president — but not the Democratic Party’s nominee. Nor
would she necessarily be the nominee if Biden withdrew from his re-election bid
while remaining in the White House.
She might
be politically favored, but party rules give the vice president no major
mechanical benefit over other candidates.
Biden’s
delegates would not automatically transfer to Harris and the convention holds
separate votes on nominees for president and vice president. So she would still
need to win a majority of delegates at the convention.
If the top
of the ticket was vacated after the convention, she would still need to win a
majority of votes at the special meeting of the DNC.
That is
all, at least, under current party rules. But a vacancy at the top of the
ticket is the kind of dramatic moment that might lead party leaders to revisit
them in the name of easing the transition. Harris has some close allies in key
places at the DNC, including the co-chair of the party’s Rules and Bylaws
Committee. But nothing would likely happen without a fight.
Alex
Seitz-Wald
Alex
Seitz-Wald is a senior politics reporter for NBC News.
Ben Kamisar
Ben Kamisar
is a deputy political editor in NBC's Political Unit.
Alexandra
Marquez, Bridget Bowman and Jack Pedigo contributed.
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