Defiant Biden vows ‘I’m the nominee’ but says wrong election year at Wisconsin rally
President Biden doubled down Friday on his refusal to leave the presidential race — saying “I’m the nominee” and that “I’m running and going to win again” — but at one point mistakenly said the election year was 2020 as fellow Democrats suggested that he drop out due to perceived senility.
“There’s been a lot of speculation: What’s Joe going to do? Is he going to stay in the race? Is he going to drop out?” the 81-year-old president said at the top of a 17-minute campaign speech in Madison, Wis.
“Here’s my answer: I’m running and going to win again.”
“I’m the nominee of the Democratic Party,” Biden told hundreds of supporters in a middle school gym. “You voted for me to be your nominee — no one else.
“Some folks don’t seem to care who you voted for. Guess what? They are trying to push me out of the race. Let me say this as clearly as I can: I’m staying in the race.”
“I will beat Donald Trump,” the president said. “I will beat him again in 2020.”
Several seconds later, Biden corrected himself, adding: “By the way, we’re going to do it again in 2024.”
Not all rallygoers bought the message— with cameras catching one attendee holding a sign over Biden’s shoulder that read: “PASS THE TORCH JOE.”
Outside the school, Biden’s motorcade passed locals holding signs saying “Save your legacy drop out,” “Be a hero one more time,” “I heart you Joe, Bow out” and “Give it up, Joe.”
Another handmade sign said “Pres Biden- serve your country — not your ego… exit now.”
But the president was unfazed, telling reporters on the tarmac as he left Wisconsin for his home in Delaware that there’s no way he will step aside.
What to know about the calls for President Biden to drop out of the 2024 race:
- President Biden’s poor performance in the first 2024 presidential debate left some Democrats unsure of his fitness for office and future as the party’s candidate.
- More than a dozen congressional Democrats have joined in calling for Biden’s exit from the race. Former Biden supporter George Clooney echoed these calls in an op-ed published in the New York Times just weeks after he helped lead a record-breaking fundraiser for the Democrat.
- Democratic voters have continued to raise concerns about Biden’s nomination since the debate, with speculations and suggestions for replacement nominees running rampant.
- Biden’s former running mate Barack Obama has reportedly been trying to pressure him to drop out, and had prior knowledge of Clooney’s op-ed. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi allegedly told Biden he could not beat former President Donald Trump this time around.
- As the Democratic National Convention approaches, California delegates for the Democratic Party are reportedly in disarray as debate over the president’s chances of re-election threatens to tear the party apart.
- However, the Biden campaign has denied any plans for Biden to bow out and for Kamala Harris to step in as the Democratic nominee. Sources close to the president believe he might not be willing to drop out, while other sources claim he is “receptive” to giving up on a second term.
“I’m completely ruling that out,” Biden said of dropping out after his dazed and confused CNN debate showing last Thursday, which triggered a groundswell of Democratic calls for a new candidate.
When asked why he thought he was the best candidate to beat Trump, the president reiterated that “I did it before.”
When a reporter mentioned that had happened four years earlier, Biden rebuked them with “you’ve been wrong about everything.”
The president also said that “I’m committing now, absolutely” to debating Trump, 78, at the second and final scheduled forum of the 2024 campaign, which is set to be hosted Sept. 10 by ABC News.
Biden would be 86 if he completes a full second term and has privately acknowledged that he may indeed have to drop out within the next month if he is unable to regain his footing — though many Democrats fear that Vice President Kamala Harris would fare even worse against Trump, prompting contentious conjecture on possible alternatives.
Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), the chairman of the chamber’s intelligence committee, is organizing a letter calling on Biden to drop his bid for a second term, the Washington Post reported Friday afternoon.
Biden dismissed Warner’s moves Friday, saying “he’s the only one” who wants the president to step aside.
However, three House Democrats — Lloyd Doggett of Texas, Raul Grijalva of Arizona and Seth Moulton of Massachusetts — already have called for Biden to retire and others — including Reps. Jared Golden of Maine and Marie Gluesenkamp Perez of Washington — have said publicly they expect him to lose to Trump.
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Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey all but urged Biden to stand down in a Friday statement saying: “I urge him to listen to the American people and carefully evaluate whether he remains our best hope to defeat Donald Trump.”
Healey, 53, was one of 10 Democratic governors to travel to the White House on Wednesday to meet with Biden in person, only three of whom stood on the White House driveway afterward to vouch for the incumbent.
“Maura Healey didn’t say anything when I was in the room, OK?” Biden said.
Wisconsin Republicans jumped all over the president in their pre-buttal to his speech Friday, with state GOP Chairman Brian Schimming telling reporters: “This may be Joe Biden’s last appearance in Madison and Wisconsin as a candidate with the mess they have going on.”
Biden delivered his Friday speech off teleprompters, but spoke with vigor and relative clarity — shortly before sitting for his first TV interview since the June 27 debate, with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos.
Additional reporting by Amy Sikma and George Caldwell