President Joe Biden's ability to run for reelection faced crucial tests Thursday as he prepared for questions at a highly anticipated press conference and sent his team to meet privately with sceptical seNators on Capitol Hill, as a 10th House Democrat called for him to exit the race.
The Biden campaign laid out what it sees as its path to keeping the White House in a new memo, saying that winning the blue wall states of Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan is the clearest pathway to victory. And it declared no other Democrat would do better against Republican Donald Trump. Biden will head to Detroit on Friday.
It all comes as Democrats are facing an intractable problem. Top donors, supporters and key lawmakers are doubtful of Biden's abilities to carry on his reelection bid after his recent debate performance, but the hard-fighting 81-year-old president refuses to give up as he prepares to take on Trump in a rematch.
There is also no indication that anyone else would outperform the president vs. Trump, said the memo from campaign chair Jen O'Malley Dillon and campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez that was obtained by The Associated Press.
The memo sought to brush back hypothetical polling of alternative nominees as unreliable and it said such surveys do not take into account the negative media environment that any Democratic nominee will encounter.
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"The only Democratic candidate for whom this is already baked in is President Biden.
Thursday is pivotal. Biden must show sceptics during his whirlwind day with world leaders at Nato, and the evening press conference that he is up for another four years. Voters are watching, and elected officials are deciding whether to press for another choice.
As the day unfolded, Rep. Hillary Scholten, whose district is in the battleground state of Michigan, became the latest Democrat in Congress to call on Biden to step out of the race, telling The Detroit News that people can't unsee Biden's terrible debate performance.
The first-term Democrat praised Biden's legacy but said in a statement that it's time to pass the torch.
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Top leaders in Congress have largely kept quiet as they meet privately with other lawmakers. But House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi opened the door this week to a continued conversation about Biden's political future when she publicly said it's up to the president to decide what to do even though Biden had already emphatically told Congress he was staying in the race.
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said talks among lawmakers are candid, comprehensive and clear-eyed as they discuss the path ahead.
Jeffries, who supports Biden and the Democratic ticket, said House and Senate Democrats remain unified on the agenda ahead that includes growing the middle class, fighting for reproductive rights and pushing back against Trump and the far-right Project 2025 agenda.
While Biden has expressed confidence in his chances, his campaign on Thursday acknowledged he is behind, and a growing number of the president's aides in the White House and the campaign privately harbour doubts that the president can turn things around.
But they're taking their cues from Biden, expressing that he is in 100 per cent unless and until he isn't, and there appears to be no organised internal effort to persuade the president to step aside. His allies were well aware heading into the week there would be more calls for him to step down, and they were prepared for it.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer invited Biden's team to meet with seNators privately at the lunch hour to discuss concerns and the path forward, but some seNators groused they would prefer to hear from the president himself.
One Democrat, Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut, said afterward, My feeling is still the same. And this is not a reflection on that meeting. My belief is that the president can win, but he's got to be able to go out and answer voters' concerns. He's got to be able to talk to voters directly over the next few day."
The fresh emphasis on the blue wall states by the campaign, which has heavily invested in other battlegrounds such as Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina and Georgia, acknowledges that the path to defeating Trump in November is narrowing, even as the team insists the Sun Belt states are not out of reach.
Though senior campaign aides write in the memo that Biden could clinch 270 electoral votes in a number of ways, it also says those three states are critical and that is why Biden has prioritised the areas in his recent travels. including the upcoming trip to Michigan. He went to Madison, Wisconsin; Philadelphia and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania over the weekend.
It acknowledges real movement in the race, but argues that it was not a sea change.
Campaign leaders say they want to continue touting Biden's achievements in office, drawing a contrast with Trump and his policies, and redoubling their grassroots efforts to engage voters which were their goals anyway before the disastrous June 27 debate that left in question Biden's cognitive capabilities and fitness to serve. Their internal research suggests that voters will make their decisions based on policies and issues, rather than Biden's age, O'Malley Dillon and Rodriguez contend.
What has changed following the debate is that the urgency and discipline with which we need to pursue them has kicked into high gear, O'Malley Dillon and Rodriguez wrote. We believe if we follow the roadmap below, we will win.
It's all part of a mounting effort from the president, who insists he is not stepping aside, and his allies to stop a potential flood of defections and end the turmoil tearing the party apart.
Polls conducted after the debate have largely agreed that Democrats nationwide have doubts about Biden's ability to lead the ticket in November.
More than half of Democrats, 56 per cent, in a recent Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll said that given Biden's debate performance, he should step aside and let someone else run. But the Biden campaign points to this same poll to argue that despite the increased anxiety after the debate, his performance was not leading to a drastic shift in vote share.
More than half of Democratic voters in a CNN/SSRS poll said the party has a better chance of winning the presidency in November with a different candidate. And around 6 in 10 voters, including about one-quarter of Democrats, said that reelecting Biden as president this November would be a risky choice for the country rather than a safe one, according to a New York Times/Siena College poll.
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