New York Post

Spare Us, Please

Hey, Trump, Biden — don’t run

- MARK PENN & ANDREW STEIN Mark Penn is chairman of the Harris Poll and CEO of Stagwell Inc. Andrew Stein, a Democrat, was a New York City Council president. Adapted from The Wall Street Journal.

JOE Biden and Donald Trump: Please do the country a service and don’t run for president in 2024. America is in gridlock over the both of you, and it’s time to let the country progress and find a unifying force that can lead it into the next decade.

According to a Nov. 10-14 Morning Consult poll, 65% of Americans don’t want Biden to run again, and 65% say the same of Trump. Both of you have served this country, yet both of you have flaws and problems that stand in the way of a successful second term.

President Trump, you did some great things as president. You presided over the strongest economy in decades, lifted millions out of poverty, brokered the Abraham Accords and saved millions of lives by making a deal with the pharmaceut­ical companies that sped up the developmen­t of COVID vaccines.

But your failure to act the moment you heard there was violence at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, was a breach of your oath and presidenti­al responsibi­lity. Your insistence that you won the 2020 election undermined our institutio­ns and degraded your ability to unite and lead the country. In this year’s election you damaged your party by encouragin­g it to nominate many candidates who couldn’t win in key swing states while you held onto money you raised rather than spend it on helping Republican candidates.

You were unfairly investigat­ed by federal and state prosecutor­s who identified their targets before they identified a crime. The fake dossier, the surveillan­ce of Carter Page and the Mueller investigat­ion were wrong. But Bill Clinton faced similar problems with nonsensica­l investigat­ions of a Whitewater land deal and was impeached over a personal relationsh­ip — yet he neverthele­ss stayed within constituti­onal boundaries as he beat back the attempts to oust him.

The way to preserve your legacy is to let the torch pass to those who can win and bring the country closer together. The Republican Party has a new generation of leaders ready to step forward and continue advancing your best ideas while leaving behind the baggage you have accumulate­d.

You can run, but given what happened in the midterms, you will likely face a humiliatin­g defeat, either in the primaries or in Novem

ber 2024. Many of your strongest supporters are moving on.

President Biden, you have served this country for half a century, but now is the time to pull back and let others come onto the stage. You are about to turn 80 and would be 86 by the end of a second term. Already you are shaking hands with people who aren’t there, toasting “President Harris,” calling out to dead congresswo­men and confusing Cambodia with Colombia.

We all have to recognize our limits, and you are at the practical limit of someone who may be called on to make split-second decisions involving the armed forces

and even nuclear weapons.

You came to the aid of those who were in need during the pandemic; you got a massive infrastruc­ture bill passed and finally achieved more competitio­n in drug pricing. You made a down payment on climate change. Whether we agree with your policies or not, you have been a consequent­ial president.

You also have been allowed since the 2020 campaign to avoid answering tough questions related to your son Hunter, your brother Jim and the family enterprise built to monetize your influence. You got away with calling Hunter’s laptop a fabricatio­n when it wasn’t, and your story that you knew nothing about your son’s business dealings when he was right there with you on Air Force Two will never hold up to serious questionin­g.

If you pledge not to run, the Republican­s should drop the investigat­ion into your son and move on. The country needs help to heal rather than more investigat­ions.

Only 40% of Democratic voters support you for re-election, a record low for a sitting president. Don’t become another Jimmy Carter. You might be able to beat Trump again, but if he doesn’t get through the primaries, you will be up against someone from the next generation of Republican­s, such as Ron DeSantis or Glenn Youngkin, and the race won’t be close.

There is no clear successor in the Democratic Party. By choking off a primary process, you will set the Democrats back a decade in looking for a new leader when they have dozens of governors, senators and other officials who could run.

America wants new choices. In a recent Harvard CAPS/Harris poll, we asked respondent­s if they would consider voting for a moderate independen­t if the party nominees were Biden and Trump. Sixty percent said yes.

Walking away from the presidency is like giving up the car keys because you’re too old to drive safely. It’s difficult, but it’s the right thing to do for each of you — for your legacy, your party and the country.

 ?? ?? Give us change! Americans don’t want a repeat of the 2020 Trump-Biden race.
Give us change! Americans don’t want a repeat of the 2020 Trump-Biden race.

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