One and done? Some Democrats say Biden should not seek second term
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[August 04, 2022]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A few Democrats in
the U.S. Congress have begun to voice what many have mulled privately:
whether President Joe Biden, the oldest person to ever occupy the Oval
Office, ought to choose retirement over re-election in 2024.
With his approval rating at 38% - and having held below 50% since May -
the 79-year-old Biden has been damaged by bruising inflation and voter
worries that he will not be able to meet the demands of the presidency
in 2025. Last November, the White House said Biden plans to run again in
2024.
A pair of Democratic U.S. representatives from Minnesota have
articulated the message clearly.
"The country would be well served by a new generation of compelling,
well-prepared, dynamic Democrats to step up," Democratic Representative
Dean Phillips said in an interview last week with WCCO radio in
Minneapolis.
Phillips lauded Biden's decency and service, but added it is time for
generational change.
Democratic Representative Angie Craig, who unlike Phillips faces a tough
re-election on Nov. 8, on Tuesday said she is "in lock step and
alignment" with Phillips, according to the Minnesota Post.
She may have been trying to better position herself with independent
voters, according to some analysts.
But recent public opinion polls have found similar views among
Democratic voters. A July New York Times/Siena College poll found that
64% of Democrats would like a new candidate in 2024, and a CNN poll last
week found an even higher 75% of Democrats hold that view.
TRUMP FACTOR
Party activists normally rally around their president, especially if he
is signaling seeking a second term. And they may do so if former
President Donald Trump, 76, decides to run again in 2024, a possibility
he has been flirting with publicly.
"The hunger for a new generation of leadership is showing. But the
hunger to beat Trump will always matter more. Biden is still the only
name on the list of Republicans or Democrats who’ve done it," noted Matt
McAlvanah, a former Obama administration and Senate leadership official.
A July Reuters/Ipsos poll found that one-third of Republican voters
think Trump should not run again. Polls show Florida Governor Ron
DeSantis, 43, gaining appeal among Republican voters.
White House officials did not immediately respond to requests for
comment on Wednesday.
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers a speech in the East Room at the
White House in Washington, U.S., August 20, 2021. REUTERS/Ken Cedeno/File
Photo
NO 'READY ALTERNATIVE'
One aide to a veteran House Democrat said on Wednesday that Biden's
COVID-19 diagnosis last month kicked off a conversation among a
half-dozen Democratic aides of varying political stripes about
Biden's future.
It was not clear whether they reflected their bosses' sentiments,
but the aide noted there was a general consensus that it would be
"foolish" to dump Biden, given his strong win over Trump in 2020.
"It's not like we have a ready alternative," the aide added.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and other prominent Democratic
lawmakers have expressed their support for a Biden run in 2024.
Others are keeping their options open.
During a debate on Tuesday night between three Democrats vying for
one House seat in New York, long-time Representative Carolyn Maloney
said she didn't believe Biden was running for re-election when asked
whether she would support his candidacy. A day later she declared
her support.
Her leading opponent, Representative Jerrold Nadler, said such
questions are best left for after the Nov. 8 midterm elections, when
Republicans are favored to win back majorities in at least one
chamber of Congress.
The chatter comes as Biden points to a track record of legislative
accomplishments. He signed a $1 trillion infrastructure bill in
November, less than a year into his presidency, a sharp contrast
with Trump who talked about infrastructure for four years but never
won legislation.
Last month Biden signed the first major federal gun safety bill in
three decades.
Now, Democrats in Congress are aiming to pass a record-setting
investment in climate change mitigation and a program to reduce the
costs of prescription drugs for the elderly, all the while coaxing
companies and the wealthy to meet their tax obligations.
Ben LaBolt, a Democratic strategist and former spokesman for former
President Barack Obama, said Democratic lawmakers should be focusing
on those wins.
"It's an odd time for that sort of chatter to happen when the
administration is on the verge of some record accomplishments on
many of the top issues facing the American people," LaBolt said.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan, additional reporting by Jeff Mason;
Editing by Scott Malone and Josie Kao)
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