What if Biden doesn't run again?
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[November 04, 2022]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Heather Timmons
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. midterm
elections on Tuesday will do much more than shape the next two years of
Joe Biden's presidency, they'll help determine whether he will run in
2024 as well, political analysts and advisers believe.
While a new president's party historically suffers losses in Congress
during the midterm election, Biden, 79, faces extra scrutiny.
He and advisers have said as recently as Nov. 2 that he plans to run
again, and that they're already making plans. White House officials
expect him to run as well.
But a wide margin of Democratic losses would be viewed as a rebuke of
Biden's presidency, and increase pressure on him to cede the role to
someone else, some Democrats say.
"I think we're due for a generational shift," said Thomas Alan Schwartz,
a presidential historian at Vanderbilt University. "I think the midterms
could be decisive on that level. If the Democrats lose badly, I think
you may see a fairly strong push for Biden to take himself out of 2024."
Biden choosing to step aside, however, raises its own thorny issues:
SO WHO'S THE CANDIDATE?
Vice President Kamala Harris is currently the Democrat's top alternate
candidate, Democratic officials tell Reuters, with most polls showing
her second after Biden, and well ahead of most other oft-mentioned
names. Michelle Obama, a voter favorite, has shown no intention of
jumping into the race, and Vice Presidents who seek presidential
nominations historically win them.
But Harris's approval ratings, once well over 50%, have languished at or
below 40% in most polls. Her poor showing in the 2020 presidential race
and lack of standout policy success as vice president have raised doubts
she can defeat a Republican opponent.
Harris's office had no comment.
A trio of governors from deeply blue states - California's Gavin Newsom,
Illinois' J.B. Pritzker and New Jersey's Phil Murphy - have already
contacted potential donors and staff in the case that Biden stands down,
according to two sources familiar with those efforts. None of the three
would run against Biden in a primary, and they may defer to Harris, too,
sources say.
A senior Democrat said Newsom "has told people he won’t run against
Biden" or Harris. The Democrat said Newsom could change his mind about
running against the vice president.
Newsom, Pritzker and Murphy's offices didn't respond to requests for
comment.
Multiple failed 2020 Democratic presidential candidates could pop up
too, a scenario so unsettling for Democrats it was skewered as a horror
movie by comedy television show Saturday Night Live last month.
Already, about 20 politicians rumored to have 2024 ambitions have raised
over $591 million since January 2021 through their aligned political
operations, the nonprofit Open Secrets reported in September, including
Newsom, Pritzker, U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, U.S. Senator
Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.
Spending in the 2020 presidential election surpassed $5.7 billion,
campaign finance research site Open Secrets found, more than double the
amount spent in any of the last three presidential elections, thanks to
small dollar donors.
Any Democratic primary contest would weaken the party's financial
firepower in 2024, which could seen spending jump again, campaign
finance experts believe.
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers
remarks on "student debt relief" during a campaign stop at Central
New Mexico Community College (CNM) Student Resource Center in
Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S., November 3, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
PRIMARY CALENDAR CHANGES
The Democratic National Committee (DNC) is close to making the
biggest change to its presidential primary calendar in decades,
which might affect who the party chooses for 2024.
Iowa and New Hampshire have long opened the presidential nominating
process, but with populations at about 90% and 93% white,
respectively, don't reflect the likely Democratic party electorate,
estimated at 40% non-white by Pew Research. .
South Carolina, Nevada or Michigan, may host the Democratic primary
instead. The changes would may have little impact on an uncontested
Biden reelection bid - after all the President won the Democratic
nomination with South Carolina's help.
But it could be seismic if he steps aside, forcing candidates to
address the concerns of black and Latino voters early, shifting
momentum of the race.
"It will have a dramatic impact. Having a more diverse early
primary, including geography, will help ensure candidates address a
broader range of issues and will ultimately produce a better
candidate," said Karen Finney, a Democratic political consultant.
The DNC's Rules and Bylaws Committee is expected to meet in early
December on the issue, with a final decision by early January.
LESSONS FROM LBJ AND THE 1860s
Biden would not be the first U.S. president to decide against
running for reelection.
Lyndon B. Johnson, challenged by fellow Democrats who opposed the
Vietnam War, shocked the country by announcing in March of 1968, a
presidential election year, not to run again. And multiple
consecutive Republican presidents, beginning in the 1860s, served
only one term.
The results were markedly different for the two parties, historians
note. Johnson stepped down in a speech pleading for peace in South
Vietnam and action from Congress on cutting the deficit, saying he
couldn't devote time to "personal partisan causes" while Americans
were dying overseas.
The chaotic Democratic convention and campaign ended in Republican
Richard Nixon taking office. “It was a mess, largely because it was
so late in the game," said Jeremi Suri, professor in the University
of Texas Department of History.
Republicans in the late 1800s, however, held the White House through
a time of national division, widespread anger after the Civil War
and razor thin voting margins for several terms in a row, by putting
up new candidates again and again.
“I think the Democratic party and the White House should not presume
you need to run the same presidential candidate again to hold the
White House,” Suri said.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw, Steve Holland, Nandita Bose and
Heather Timmons; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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