The Morning Call

Democrats may be stuck with Biden as ’24 candidate

- By Laura Washington Laura Washington is a political commentato­r and longtime Chicago journalist.

The Democratic Party sits on the horns of a dilemma. While President Joe Biden has not yet announced his reelection plans, he is already off and running.

He said so during his recent State of the Union speech — 10 times, by my count.

“Let’s finish the job,” he said. In case you missed the point, that means he has much more to do and wants another term to do it.

“Let’s finish the job” will soon be Biden’s 2024 campaign motto. Biden is in it to win.

Biden, 80, was relatively vital, energized and agile as he delivered the 73-minute speech. There were few of the stumbles and stutters his critics were expecting. Biden ad-libbed. (That was not always welcome, given the speech was dreadfully long.)

He poked fun at his Republican critics and, with a sly grin, declared he had converted them to promise to protect Medicare and Social Security.

Biden expertly delivered his case, bolstering worried Democrats. His party’s intelligen­tsia mopped their sweat-soaked brows in relief. The president is on his game, for now. And that will keep the others who would be president at bay.

In the run-up to 2024 there are hordes of prominent Democratic politician­s who would love to run for the top job. When Biden finally solidifies his reelection plans, that scrum will be forced to beat a sullen retreat. Few Democrats of national stature would dare mount a primary challenge against their incumbent president.

In politics, you dance with the one who brought you. And then you are stuck with your dance partner all night.

Therein lies the dilemma: Biden could bring his party down.

On the one hand, many Democratic Party honchos, operatives and media hounds crave a reprise of the 2020 presidenti­al matchup.

Forget Muhammad Ali versus Joe Frazier or Joe Louis versus Max Schmeling. In 2024 Donald Trump versus Joe Biden would be the rematch of all rematches.

In his speech Biden touted an impressive legislativ­e and policy record, giving his party bragging rights to a laundry list of accomplish­ments.

“That’s why we’re building an economy where no one is left behind,” Biden exhorted. “Jobs are coming back, pride is coming back, because of the choices we made in the last several years.

“You know, this is, in my view, a blue-collar blueprint to rebuild America and make a real difference in your lives at home.”

If popularity polls are any indication, voters’ familiarit­y with Trump has bred a ton of contempt. But what if he is not the 2024 GOP nominee?

At 76 Trump is also aging, but unlike Biden he won’t get a free pass in his presidenti­al primary.

Trump, the only announced GOP presidenti­al candidate before Nikki Haley announced Tuesday, has mounted a lackluster campaign. There are plenty of younger and more moderate alternativ­es aiming to take him on, including Haley. Just to name a few: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis; former Vice President Mike Pence; Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin; Trump’s former secretary of state Mike Pompeo; South Carolina U.S. Sen. Tim Scott; and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson.

In a one-to-one matchup, any one of them could make Biden look like an out-of-touch, doddering octogenari­an

If Biden is reelected, he will be 86 by the time he leaves the White House. Biden got through that speech OK, but running the world in your late 80s is another matter.

Only 37% of Democrats say Biden should run for reelection, according to an Associated PressNORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll conducted in late January. That’s down from the 52% who gave the nod to a Biden second term in a similar poll in October.

Then there is the Kamala Harris problem. The vice president, 58, would be next in line for the Oval Office.

In an administra­tion led by an elderly commander-in-chief, the second in command takes on outsize importance. Harris, for reasons that mystify me, is not popular with the Democratic Party base. Rank-and-file voters are not gracing her with confidence or enthusiasm. Nearly 40% of American voters approve of Harris’ performanc­e, according to an average of surveys tracked by the polling site FiveThirty­Eight.

“That will be in my opinion one of the most hard-hitting arguments against Biden,” John Morgan, a prominent fundraiser and former Florida finance chairman for President Bill Clinton, said in a recent interview with The New York Times.

“It doesn’t take a genius to say, ‘Look, with his age, we have to really think about this.’ ”

Think away, Democrats. You won’t know how things play out until the hand is played.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/GETTY ?? Vice President Kamala Harris and Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy listen as President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address last week.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/GETTY Vice President Kamala Harris and Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy listen as President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address last week.

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