WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden announced Sunday that
he will end his presidential re-election campaign, bringing an abrupt and
humbling conclusion to his half-century-long political career and scrambling
the race for the White House just four months before Election Day.
Biden, 81, could not reverse growing
sentiment within his party that he was too frail to serve and destined to lose
to Donald Trump in November.
"While it has been my intention
to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the
country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as
President for the remainder of my term," Biden wrote in a letter posted on
X. "I will speak to the Nation later this week in more detail about my
decision."
Biden thanked Vice President Kamala
Harris for "being an extraordinary partner" but did not endorse her
to be his replacement as the Democratic Party presidential nominee in his
letter.
His withdrawal caps a singular
national political career, bookended by Richard Nixon’s fall and Trump’s rise.
He mounted four presidential bids. He spent 36 years in the U.S. Senate
representing tiny Delaware. He rose to the chairmanships of the powerful
Judiciary and Foreign Relations committees. And he served eight years as Barack
Obama’s vice president.
Biden’s decision to exit the race less
than a month before his party’s convention and a few months before voters head
to the polls is unprecedented in the modern political era. The last sitting
president to abandon a re-election bid was Lyndon Johnson, whose expansion of
the Vietnam War in the 1960s split the Democratic Party. But Johnson’s
announcement came in March 1968 — eight months before that election.
“We’re in uncharted waters,” said
Barbara Perry, a presidential studies professor at the University of Virginia’s
Miller Center. “No president has dropped out or died this close to the
convention.”
Replacing Biden atop the Democratic
ticket is likely to set off internal Democratic tremors as ambitious officials
maneuver to become his successor. Factions have already formed around Harris
and prominent governors, including Michigan’s Gretchen Whitmer and California’s
Gavin Newsom.
Harris would seem to be the heir
apparent. She broke a barrier as the first female vice president. A woman of
color, she enjoys strong support among African Americans, a loyal piece of the
Democratic coalition. Overall, though, Harris’ approval rating stood at only
32% in an NBC News poll released earlier this month.
“There’s no one you can name right now
who is an obvious substitute,” Perry said. “That’s what makes this so uncertain
and chaotic.”*
The mechanics of putting a new name on
ballots also gives rise to myriad legal questions. Republicans could work to
throw obstacles in the nominee’s path by mounting legal challenges aimed at
keeping that person off the ballot.
Questions about Biden’s capacities
dogged him throughout his presidency but peaked following his debate with
Trump on June 27. Combined with his flagging poll numbers, his listless
performance sparked a panic among his own party that he couldn’t win in November.
With 51 million people watching, Biden
spoke in a raspy voice and often failed to complete thoughts or deliver a
cogent explanation of why voters should choose him over Trump. He later
attributed his poor performance to exhaustion and a cold. He implored the
country not to let one bad night overshadow his accomplishments in office.
Unpersuaded, Democratic lawmakers
began calling on him to step aside, a rebellion that started slowly but grew
steadily in size and intensity. They appealed to Biden’s patriotism, arguing
that if he sincerely believed Trump is a threat to democracy, he needed to put
his country first and stand down.
NBC
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