I don't wanna see him run, rider a bike, or walk up steps but if it's either him or Trump I'm going with old Joe in 2024.
Maybe Biden & Trump can kick the bucket and we can vote for people who aren't going to be in their 80s during the next Presidency? Seems pretty evident neither is going to just step aside.
I just want smart competent leadership that isn’t a geriatric puppet and overly influenced by woke ideologue. (Biden),… I rather it be Republican but I can live thru a Bill Clinton type that is fairly moderate and has actual cognitive ability and not old AF…and I don’t need Trump again either. There has to be someone 39-59 age range please. Step up to the plate …
Michelle Obama stops short of endorsing Biden reelection bid https://thehill.com/blogs/in-the-kn...tops-short-of-endorsing-biden-reelection-bid/ excerpt: Former first lady Michelle Obama on Monday praised President Biden but stopped short of endorsing a 2024 reelection bid. Asked in a “20/20” interview with ABC’s Robin Roberts whether she hoped Biden would run again, Obama said, “You know, I — I will have to see.” more at the link
National Poll: Biden’s Approval Recovers Two Years into Term, Trump Maintains Lead over DeSantis in GOP Primary https://emersoncollegepolling.com/n...-maintains-lead-over-desantis-in-gop-primary/ excerpt: Despite improving job approval, President Biden trails former President Trump in a hypothetical 2024 Presidential match-up, 41% to 44%. Ten percent would support someone else and 4% are undecided. Since the November national poll, Trump’s support has increased by three percentage points, from 41% to 44% and Biden’s support has decreased by four percentage points, from 45% to 41%. In a hypothetical match-up between Biden and DeSantis, Biden leads by less than a percentage point, 40% to 39%. Thirteen percent would support someone else and 9% are undecided. Since the November poll, DeSantis has held his support at 39% while Biden has lost three percentage points, from 43% to 40%. more at the link
Biden may not run — and top Dems are quietly preparing The president no longer seems absolutely certain to go for a second term, leaving the party, his top aides and potential candidates unsure about '24 and very quietly mulling plan B. https://www.politico.com/news/2023/02/22/bidenworld-joe-may-not-run-2024-00083905
Hunter Biden’s ‘laptop from hell’ countersuit could drag Joe’s reelection bid https://nypost.com/2023/03/17/hunter-biden-files-countersuit-against-laptop-repairman/
what a nothing burger, as compared to Trump's indictment on 34 courts by Manhatten DA and pending legal jeapardies elsewhere GA's imminent charging on overturning an election leading the 6 Jan insurrection and misleading of classified docs
Biden Has Held the Fewest News Conferences Since Reagan. Any Questions? As President Biden prepares to announce his bid for a second term as soon as Tuesday, his decision to keep the news media at arm’s length is part of a deliberate strategy. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/21/us/politics/biden-public-appearances-media.html
Smart decisions like that might mean he or those around him make good decisions. As a citizen, however, it is not ideal for politicians to not answer questions from the press.
Trump can't beat biden in any general election. While voters find biden boring, old and upset with inflation none of them flock to trump. Republicans are going get crushed in 2024 with trump. If anyone wants to wager *any* sum of money shoot me a dm. Literally blank check whatever you want to wager.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/bidens-second-term-mistake-23dd7cbe?mod=hp_opin_pos_1 Biden’s Second-Term Mistake Age is only one of the reasons the President shouldn’t run again. By The Editorial Board April 21, 2023 at 6:45 pm ET The White House is whispering that next week President Biden will announce his intention to run for a second term, though the polls say that even most Democrats hope he doesn’t. The public understands what Mr. Biden apparently won’t admit: that electing an octogenarian in obvious decline for another four years could be an historic mistake. No doubt it’s hard to walk away from the Oval Office after working for five decades to get there. Flying Marine One home for the weekends beats Amtrak. The chance to pull the levers of power is intoxicating, and that’s also true for the advisers who have pushed him in such a sharply progressive direction in his first term. They know Mr. Biden will lead wherever they want him to go. *** But asking the country to elect a man who is 80 years old and whose second term would end when he is 86 is a risky act that borders on selfish. It’s impossible to know Mr. Biden’s real physical and mental state because the White House goes to great lengths to hide it. But his decline is clear to anyone who isn’t willfully blind. He rarely holds a press conference, and his words are as scripted as possible to avoid embarrassing stumbles that he nonetheless continues to make. Different people age at different rates, but the risk of an accelerated decline for Mr. Biden is considerable. The chance that he could serve a full second term is hardly assured. This means Americans could be voting for his running mate to take over in a second term, which as of now would be Vice President Kamala Harris. Mr. Biden would be running on a vow to serve a complete term that he knows he might not be able to keep. At the very least, he owes the country more than a Rose Garden repeat of his Wilmington basement campaign strategy from 2020. For Democrats, there’s no small risk that Mr. Biden could decline noticeably in the 19 months until Election Day in 2024. In that event, voters on the fence could swing toward a Republican nominee who can at least meet the rigors of the office. Yes, even Donald Trump. Mr. Biden may believe he’s the only Democrat who could beat Mr. Trump, but many others also could. And what if Republicans nominate someone else? GOP voters could decide they don’t want to repeat 2020, and a younger GOP nominee would have an advantage over Mr. Biden as the more vigorous candidate of generational change. A younger Democrat would have a comparable edge over Mr. Trump. Many Democrats think Mr. Biden is the only man for the job because otherwise they would be stuck with Ms. Harris, a demonstrably bad candidate who has shown little capacity as Veep. But if Mr. Biden bowed out now, Democratic Governors and others would have ample time to organize a campaign and compete for the nomination. The way to get stuck with Ms. Harris is if Mr. Biden clears the field but then has a health setback that forces him to withdraw after the primaries are mostly done. There are also political risks for Mr. Biden—not least the investigations into son Hunter and the Biden family’s business. Only the Bidens know where this might lead, but the Republicans aren’t going to stop pursuing the story. The way to end all that is not to run. But the best reason not to run is for the patriotic good of the country. The world is growing more dangerous by the week, and the U.S. faces more formidable adversaries than any time since the height of the Cold War. It will take more than a figurehead President to confront and counter them. In 2008 Hillary Clinton ran an ad saying that she was prepared to take a 3 a.m. phone call in a crisis. Could an 84-year-old Joe Biden take a 3 p.m. call? Enemies size up leaders as much as they do nations when they make their calculations to seize territory or seek other strategic advantage. There is a strong case to believe that Vladimir Putin decided to invade Ukraine in part because he judged that Mr. Biden lacked the determination to resist after his retreat from Afghanistan. Xi Jinping will not shrink from exploiting Mr. Biden out of Chinese respect for his elders. *** Mr. Biden can say he saved the country from a second Trump term. We would not call Mr. Biden’s Presidency a success, but no doubt many Democrats would. By their lights he can point to his Covid and climate spending and his resistance to Russian aggression in Ukraine. Second terms are rarely successful, and Mr. Biden could give a Democratic successor a chance to serve for eight years. If Mr. Biden ignores all this and does run again, then some prominent Democrat would do the country a service by running against him in the primaries. The polls show that Democratic voters want another candidate. At this moment of great economic and strategic challenge, the United States needs a better presidential choice in 2024 than a redo of Joe Biden vs. Donald Trump. Appeared in the April 22, 2023, print edition as 'Biden’s Second-Term Mistake'.
NYT Editorial Board joining in Biden Should Take Voters’ Concerns About Age Seriously https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/22/opinion/editorials/biden-age.html excerpt: . . . But candidates shouldn’t pretend, as Mr. Biden often does, that advanced age isn’t an issue. Mr. Biden is 80 now, the oldest American to serve as president, and even supporters, including the political strategist David Axelrod, have expressed deep worriesthat his age will be both a political liability in 2024 and a barrier to a successful second term. If Mr. Biden runs again, as he recently said he intends to, questions will persist about his age until he does more to assure voters that he is up to the job. more at the link