By
Audrewy Fahlberg
Wednesday,
November 09, 2022
In the
weeks leading up to Election Day, the White House enjoyed a brief moratorium on
one of the more uncomfortable news developments of the midterm cycle:
intra-Democratic Party speculation about whether President Joe Biden should run
for reelection in 2024.
Could
Tuesday night’s election results buy him more time?
Skepticism
surrounding a prospective Biden reelection campaign has long centered on how
much the president’s chronic unpopularity would hurt his fellow Democrats in
the midterms. Already bogged down by inflationary headwinds and the
understanding that midterms traditionally hurt the party in power, Democrats
trudged toward Election Day expecting a red tsunami.
That
didn’t materialize—it wasn’t even a wave. At best the GOP looks poised to
recapture the House by a slim majority, and its path to winning control of the
Senate grew increasingly narrow as Election Night went on. Election results are
still being tabulated in a number of Senate battlegrounds, with a number of
races still too close to call as of Wednesday morning.
It’s
unclear how the midterms will affect intra-party conversations surrounding who
the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee next cycle ought to be, especially
since so much of the party’s midterm messaging revolved around access to
abortion following the overturning of Roe v. Wade. But as things
stand, the absence of a red wave suggests that Biden won’t be the target of the
dreaded post-election finger pointing that many senior Democrats had originally
feared.
Will
that help clear the Democratic primary field for Biden in 2024?
“The
Democrats have done a great job of keeping a lid on any talk about Biden and
2024 in recent months,” said former centrist Democratic Rep. Dan Lipinski
Tuesday evening. “But that likely ends the day after this election.”
Concerns
among Democrats about Biden’s electability reached a fever pitch in June, when
a New York Times/Siena College poll showed his approval rating among
registered voters clocking in at a measly 33 percent. Beyond that, an
overwhelming majority of Democrats in the survey said they’d prefer a different
nominee in 2024: Only 26 percent of Democratic voters said Biden should be the
party’s presidential nominee in two years.
Those
numbers fueled ongoing conversations among high-profile Democrats about who
ought to lead the party’s ticket next cycle. “The conversation has started and
people are participating in it,” House Armed Services Committee Chairman Adam
Smith, a Democrat, told The Dispatch in July on
mounting intra-party speculation about 2024.
Much of
the speculation surrounding a prospective Biden reelection campaign has focused
on his age. In 11 days, Biden—already the oldest president in American
history—will turn 80. He isn’t the only octogenarian leader in his party.
House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, 82, is reportedly considering retiring this year. Even if
Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, 83, and House Whip Jim Clyburn, 82, compete to
replace her, one leadership vacancy would still leave room for younger
politicians like House Democratic Caucus Chair Hakeem Jeffries, 52, or House
Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff, 62.
“Is this
enough new, young leadership in Washington to satiate Democrats while Biden
still serves as a bridge to new presidential level leadership for the party?”
asked Lipinski. “Probably not all [Democrats], but it may settle down
congressional [Democrats] in terms of calling for younger blood.”
Democrats
also worry that there’s no obvious alternative to Biden should he decide not to
run. Vice President Kamala Harris is even more unpopular than her boss, and
rising Democratic stars like California Gov. Gavin Newsom or Transportation
Secretary Pete Buttigieg don’t stand out as obvious replacements.
With the
midterm elections in the rearview mirror, close Biden allies maintain that the
White House’s recent legislative successes—namely the Inflation Reduction
Act—could clear the Democratic primary field entirely should he decide to stand
for reelection.
“If he
runs again, I don’t expect a challenge from anybody because he will be running
on a record of accomplishment,” former Democratic Sen. Doug Jones of Alabama
said in a Tuesday afternoon interview. “Back in the spring, everybody thought,
‘Oh, my God, Joe Biden just needs to just stay hidden and hunkered down in
Washington, D.C.’ And then there’s this whole series of successes, and
Democrats are all of a sudden thinking: ‘Wait a minute, this, we’re delivering
care for the American people. And our leader needs to be out there more.’”
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