Biden
Faces Fresh Calls to Withdraw as Democrats Fear Electoral Rout
The dam has
mostly held on Capitol Hill for President Biden, but cracks continued to open
as more donors and elected officials publicly called on President Biden to drop
out.
Annie Karni
By Annie Karni
Reporting from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/10/us/politics/biden-congress-clooney-election.html
July 10, 2024
President Biden faced a fresh wave of pressure on Wednesday
to end his campaign or rethink his decision to run for re-election, as
Democrats from Hollywood to Capitol Hill aired grave concerns that he would
lose to former President Donald J. Trump in November and drag his party’s
chance of controlling Congress down with him.
Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the former House
speaker and a longtime Biden ally, gave the strongest public signal yet that
Democrats were still divided on Mr. Biden’s candidacy, saying that “time is
running short” for him to make a decision.
Speaking on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” Ms. Pelosi, 84, said that
she would back Mr. Biden, “whatever he decides.”
Mr. Biden, 81, has said his mind is made up about continuing
his campaign and called on Democrats to come together behind him. But lawmakers
are still agonizing over his decision and hoping to at least keep alive a
conversation about an alternative path, as many feared the president would lead
their party to an electoral rout from which it could take years to recover.
Mr. Biden’s strategy to save his candidacy appears to be
aimed at running out the clock. And every day he defies pressure to step aside
makes the logistics of replacing him more difficult. On Wednesday, he appeared
to have survived another day, as Capitol Hill remained mired in a state of
uncertainty and division during what lawmakers had deemed to be a critical week
for Mr. Biden’s campaign.
Intense focus was turning to Mr. Biden’s performance at a
NATO news conference on Thursday, which Democrats said would be a critical —
and perhaps final — test of the president’s ability to stay in the race.
The dam of support for Mr. Biden did not appear to be
breaking yet, but a trickle of dissent continued to seep out. Hours after Ms.
Pelosi’s comments, Representative Pat Ryan of New York, one of the most
vulnerable Democratic incumbents, called on Mr. Biden to drop out “for the good
of the country.” By late afternoon, Representative Earl Blumenauer of Oregon, a
veteran progressive who is retiring, also said Mr. Biden should end his
campaign. “This is not just about extending his presidency but protecting democracy,”
he said in a statement. They were the eighth and ninth House Democrats to make
public calls for the president to drop out.
And by evening, the first Democratic senator had joined the
chorus. “We have asked President Biden to do so much for so many for so long,”
Senator Peter Welch of Vermont wrote in an opinion essay in The Washington
Post. “For the good of the country, I’m calling on President Biden to withdraw
from the race.”
Some senators appeared to adopt Ms. Pelosi’s stance that
there was still a decision that the president needed to make, even though he
has been clear that his mind is made up. Senator Tim Kaine, Democrat of
Virginia, appealed to Mr. Biden’s sense of decency in making a difficult
choice, arguing that Mr. Biden would ultimately “do the patriotic thing for the
country.”
Others were not waiting for him to do so. George Clooney,
the actor and prominent Democratic donor who just last month hosted a $28
million fund-raiser in Hollywood for Mr. Biden, made a powerful plea to the
president to end his candidacy, saying he had witnessed Mr. Biden’s decline up
close in recent weeks.
“It’s devastating to say it, but the Joe Biden I was with
three weeks ago at the fund-raiser was not the Joe ‘big F-ing deal’ Biden of
2010,” Mr. Clooney said in a guest essay in The New York Times. “He wasn’t even
the Joe Biden of 2020. He was the same man we all witnessed at the debate.”
Mr. Clooney said that every “senator and congress member and
governor who I’ve spoken with in private” agreed with him that Democrats would
lose in November with Mr. Biden as their presidential candidate. “Most of our
members of Congress are opting to wait and see if the dam breaks,” he said.
“But the dam has broken.”
(Responding to Mr. Clooney’s piece, a person familiar with
the planning of the event said the president had stayed at the fund-raiser for
three hours while the actor left much earlier.)
As if to underscore the concerns among Democrats, the Cook
Political Report, a nonpartisan election forecaster, has moved Electoral
College projections in six states in Mr. Trump’s direction. Arizona, Georgia
and Nevada went from “tossup” to “lean Republican.” Minnesota, New Hampshire
and the Second Congressional District in Nebraska went from “likely Democrat”
to “lean Democrat.”
And Representative Elissa Slotkin, a Michigan Democrat who
is running for an open Senate seat, told donors privately at a fund-raiser on
Tuesday that her private polling showed Mr. Trump defeating Mr. Biden in her
state. In New York, Antonio Delgado, a former House member who serves as
lieutenant governor, called on Mr. Biden to step aside, even though the state’s
governor, Kathy Hochul, has positioned herself as one of Mr. Biden’s biggest
cheerleaders.
Almost two weeks after the disastrous debate performance
that surfaced serious doubts about the president’s mental acuity and fitness to
run, Mr. Biden has not yet participated in the kinds of high-profile,
unscripted events that lawmakers said they wanted to see to help ease their
concerns.
Mr. Biden was set to participate in a planned NATO news
conference on Thursday and an interview with the NBC News anchor Lester Holt
the following Monday.
The Senior White House advisers Steve Ricchetti and Mike
Donilon, as well as the chairwoman of Mr. Biden’s campaign, Jen O’Malley
Dillon, were also set to brief Democratic senators at a special caucus luncheon
on Thursday. There, they were set to face frustrated Democrats who have
complained privately and publicly that the White House has not done enough to
reassure them, as well as voters, that Mr. Biden has a path to victory.
Their presence on Capitol Hill may only raise more questions
about why Mr. Biden, who served for more than three decades in the Senate, has
not appeared in person to address and rally his former colleagues in what was
once his comfort zone. On Wednesday, Mr. Biden spent the day in meetings with
union leaders and foreign dignitaries in Washington for a NATO summit,
including Keir Starmer, the newly elected British prime minister, while
lawmakers were left to wonder aloud about whether the president could run and
win.
Senator Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of Connecticut, told
reporters, “I am deeply concerned about Joe Biden winning this November.” He
said the party had to “reach a conclusion as soon as possible” about his
candidacy but reiterated that he supported Mr. Biden as the party’s nominee.
But a group of Black Democrats and progressives continued to
profess their complete commitment to Mr. Biden and declared the conversation
about any change at the top of the ticket to be over. “The matter is closed,”
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Democrat of New York, said Tuesday
night. “Biden is our nominee. He is in this race and I support him.”
But Ms. Pelosi’s comments appeared designed to give alarmed
Democrats, who so far are mostly falling in line behind Mr. Biden, space to
pivot in the coming days, given the deep divide inside the party about whether
his candidacy is viable.
The former speaker, however, quickly moved to walk back any
sense that she herself was suggesting that Mr. Biden leave the race.
“The president is great, and there are some
misrepresentations of what I have said,” she said in a statement to The New
York Times. “I never said he should reconsider his decision. The decision is
the president’s. I don’t know what’s happened to The New York Times that they
make up news. It isn’t true.”
Later in the day, she told ABC News that she thought Mr.
Biden could win in November.
Senator Michael Bennet, Democrat of Colorado, said in an
interview with CNN on Tuesday night that he did not think Mr. Biden could beat
Mr. Trump — though he stopped short of publicly urging Mr. Biden to end his
campaign. “I think we could lose the whole thing,” Mr. Bennet said, warning of
a “landslide” in the presidential race and referring to both chambers of
Congress.
He added, “The White House has done nothing since the debate
to demonstrate they have a plan to win this election.”
Reporting was contributed by Catie Edmondson, Robert
Jimison, Nicholas Fandos and Michael C. Bender.
Annie Karni is a congressional correspondent for The Times.
She writes features and profiles, with a recent focus on House Republican
leadership. More about Annie Karni
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