Democrats have no Biden backup plan for 2024, despite age concerns
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[November 30, 2023]
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Democratic Party has no Plan B if President
Joe Biden decided for any reason to halt his 2024 re-election campaign,
and a sudden need to replace him as its standard-bearer would spark a
messy intraparty battle.
Despite weak poll numbers and questions, including from some Democrats,
about his age, Biden has stuck to his plan to seek a second term after
clearing the field of serious Democratic primary challengers when he
announced in April that he was running again.
Even if more Democratic candidates were to jump in now, the path forward
would be unclear as deadlines to get on the primary ballot in critical
states such as Nevada, South Carolina and Georgia have already passed.
Biden loyalists, citing his record in office, argue that the party does
not need a backup plan to defeat probable Republican nominee Donald
Trump, who Biden beat in the 2020 election.
Among the possible scenarios if the president, 81, did drop out:
Democrats could pick another nominee next August at their convention, or
even later, in line with party rules.
Reuters spoke to multiple current and former officials who, while making
clear they want Biden to succeed, acknowledge the party could face
upheaval should the oldest president in U.S. history encounter a health
issue or step aside for other reasons during the White House contest.
Biden's running mate, Vice President Kamala Harris, who has her own
popularity problems, would not automatically replace him as the top
candidate if he stepped aside; she would benefit from their joint
campaign infrastructure if she ran for president in his absence, but
other Democrats would likely swoop in to the race as well.
"There is no Plan B. If he were ... suddenly not to run, everyone you
know would run. The VP scares no one," a senior Democrat told Reuters.
If Biden were to drop out while the Democratic primaries were ongoing,
other candidates could join the race, depending on state filing
requirements.
It normally takes months to set up a presidential campaign and raise the
money to run, and deadlines to get on the ballot in consequential states
including California, Illinois and Michigan are approaching in the
coming weeks.
Democratic officials are united behind the president, despite some
trepidation, they say; otherwise big name competitors already would have
entered the race.
"Joe Biden will be the Democratic nominee and he will beat whichever
MAGA extremist the Republicans put forward,” Biden campaign spokesperson
Daniel Wessel said, referring to former President Trump's "Make America
Great Again" slogan.
Trump, 77, the frontrunner for the Republican nomination, also faces
concerns about his age and a litany of charges including mishandling of
classified documents and interfering in the 2020 election, which he lost
to Biden. He denies wrongdoing.
Multiple candidates are challenging Trump in the Republican primary
race, giving the party built-in alternatives in the unlikely event that
Trump drops out.
GOOD OF THE COUNTRY?
To the chagrin of the White House, Biden's age has become a defining
part of the 2024 campaign.
David Axelrod, a top White House adviser during Barack Obama's
presidency, said Biden needed to decide whether it was smart to run
again, after November polling showed him lagging in key swing states
against Trump.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks In the Indian Treaty Room of the
Eisenhower Executive Office Building at the White House complex in
Washington, U.S., November 27, 2023. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
"If he continues to run, he will be the nominee of the Democratic
Party. What he needs to decide is whether that is wise; whether it's
in HIS best interest or the country's?" Axelrod wrote on X, formerly
known as Twitter.
A physical examination in February found Biden healthy and "fit for
duty."
Biden has long believed that he is the Democrat most likely to beat
Trump, but a Reuters/Ipsos poll on Nov. 7 showed his approval rating
at 39%, its lowest since April.
Democrats' primary elections start in February and end in June. They
hold their convention in Chicago in August.
Biden is expected to win his party's nomination after an easy
primary process. He has a massive lead in polls over declared
Democratic challengers Marianne Williamson, a writer, and U.S.
Representative Dean Phillips.
If he dropped out after the last primaries in June 2024, delegates
would be free to vote for another candidate in Chicago.
Any departure before the convention would almost certainly lead to
jockeying among a broad group of presidential hopefuls, including
Harris and California Governor Gavin Newsom, to convince more than
4,000 Democratic delegates to give them the job.
It would augur a return to a time in which convention delegates
truly chose, not just rubber-stamped, their nominee.
"If he drops out before the convention, we will have an
old-fashioned convention where the delegates essentially get to make
up their mind (on whom to vote for) regardless of who they were
elected to represent," said Elaine Kamarck, an elections expert,
senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington and a
member of the Democratic National Committee.
That could spark intraparty warfare, leaving Democrats to mirror
Republicans in a battle in which candidates spend time and money
fighting each other.
Things get more complicated if for any reason Biden dropped out
after the convention. Kamarck, the author of the book "Primary
Politics," said the 435 members of the DNC would then meet in a
special session to select a nominee.
There is some precedent for switching out a nominee.
In 1972, then Senator George Eagleton withdrew as Democratic
presidential candidate George McGovern's vice presidential running
mate after revelations of his treatment for depression forced him
out of the race.
The DNC had an emergency meeting to fill the vacancy and selected
Sargent Shriver to take his place. McGovern lost the election.
Newsom has been particularly active as a "surrogate" for Biden by
taking high-profile swipes at Republican presidential candidate Ron
DeSantis, the governor of Florida. Newsom's office did not respond
to a request for comment.
"A bunch of the surrogate activity we see out there - like Newsom
all over helping Biden - is partially to remind Democratic voters
they are out there as an option," the senior Democrat said.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Heather Timmons and Alistair
Bell)
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