Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Intend to run in ’24, Biden says; he stops short of declaratio­n

- ANDREW JEONG AND MARIANA ALFARO Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Matt Viser of The Washington Post.

While he has not made a formal decision about running for reelection in 2024, President Joe Biden said Friday he intends to do so — citing previous encouragem­ent from his late son, Beau, and revealing that he has the backing of his wife, first lady Jill Biden.

In an interview that aired Friday, MSNBC’s Jonathan Capehart quoted Biden’s 2017 autobiogra­phy, “Promise Me, Dad,” in which the president wrote that Beau had insisted he run for the office in 2016, saying that his father had a duty to do so.

“The only reason to be involved in public life is: Can you make life better for other people?” Biden answered. “Depending on who the opponent is, if they have a view that is so the antithesis of what I believe democracy [is], and I believe is good for average Americans, then, his argument was, ‘Dad, you have an obligation to do something.’”

When asked if the first lady supports a 2024 run, Biden nodded and paused before providing a full answer.

“My wife thinks that we’re doing something very important and that I shouldn’t walk away from it,” he said.

But Biden said he was not yet formally declaring his candidacy, because once he does, a “whole series of regulation­s kick in and I have to treat myself as a candidate from that moment on.

“I have not made that formal decision, but it’s my intention. My intention to run again. And we have time to make that decision,” he said.

The 79-year-old — who was the oldest person to be sworn into office — has faced questions from his own party about whether he should seek reelection because of his age and low approval ratings. Biden has sought to downplay the doubts by engaging in public displays of outdoor activities and indicating multiple times he will run again since last year.

In June, White House spokeswoma­n Karine JeanPierre said he plans to run in 2024.

This month, NBC reported that Biden told the Rev. Al Sharpton he would seek another term. But the president’s best argument for another bid has been the reemergenc­e of former President Donald Trump.

Biden was motivated to run for office in large part because he saw himself as best positioned to defeat Trump, and he still considers knocking Trump out of the White House one of his major contributi­ons to the United States’ welfare, The Washington Post reported.

Trump has vowed to pardon rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and has maintained his claims of fraud in the 2020 election. Meanwhile, Biden has increasing­ly voiced concerns over what he called an “assault on American democracy.”

“History tells us that blind loyalty to a single leader and the willingnes­s to engage in political violence is fatal to democracy,” Biden said last month. “There is no question that the Republican Party is dominated, driven and intimidate­d by Donald Trump.”

In August, the president accused Trump of harboring an “extreme MAGA philosophy,” likening it to “semi-fascism.” The lines were unplanned, aides said.

In Friday’s MSNBC interview, the president repeated the message.

There “has been such a division … you have what I call the ‘mega MAGA Republican­s,’ ” he said. They “think it’s all right to threaten violence, think that’s not inappropri­ate, talk about how they’re concerned about security, but yet you saw what happened on January 6th,” he said.

 ?? (AP/Manuel Balce Ceneta) ?? President Joe Biden disembarks Marine One Friday upon arrival at the Gordons Pond in Rehoboth Beach, Del.
(AP/Manuel Balce Ceneta) President Joe Biden disembarks Marine One Friday upon arrival at the Gordons Pond in Rehoboth Beach, Del.

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