The Bakersfield Californian

Biden’s 2024 campaign has been hiding in plain sight

- BY ZEKE MILLER AP White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign has been hiding in plain sight all along.

The contours of the 2024 campaign that Biden will formally launch with a video today will look a lot like his messaging and policy moves from the past few months: Play up accomplish­ments from his first two years, draw a sharp contrast with Republican policies he deems extreme, and brush off worries about his age.

Biden, aides contend, has essentiall­y been campaignin­g since Republican­s took control of the House last year, focused on showing Americans how his administra­tion is implementi­ng massive new infrastruc­ture, technology and climate laws, and portraying Republican­s as in the grip of the far right at a time when Washington is nearing a crucial fight over raising the nation’s borrowing limit.

While advisers say Biden’s activities and message in coming months will be largely indistingu­ishable from what he’s been doing over the last six months, the frame of reference will inevitably shift as voters increasing­ly tune in to 2024 political dynamics.

“President Biden is delivering and making the strong case for reelection before, during and after any formal campaign announceme­nt,” said Democratic consultant and former Biden spokesman Scott Mulhauser. “Rather than throwing darts at calendars, let’s focus on the President doing his job and doing it well, from an investing in America tour, an economy humming and unemployme­nt at historic lows to a home run of a State of the Union, an expertly pulled-off Ukraine trip and more.”

He added: “These wins on economic and political fronts onward are what success looks like, how incumbents win and matter far more than a campaign kick-off event.”

Aides are planning for Biden’s launch video to be released today, the four-year anniversar­y of his first successful campaign launch. He was expected to select Julie Rodriguez, a senior White House adviser, to manage his reelection campaign, according to two people familiar with deliberati­ons.

“I told you I’m planning on running,” Biden told reporters Monday. “I’ll let you know real soon.”

Biden has taken his time in making official his candidacy for reelection not because he’s wavered in his commitment to run, a half-dozen aides and advisers said, but because there was little incentive to do it sooner.

Incumbents — with the exception of former President Donald Trump, who filed for reelection on his Inaugurati­on Day — tend to hold off on announcing as long as possible. Most deemed it easier to appeal to a wider swath of the populace when they were viewed outside the lens of electoral politics.

Leaks and private reassuranc­es last year about Biden’s intention to run,

aides said, were designed to reinforce to the political class that the president was all-in for a second term and to ward off any serious rivals for the nomination. That effort largely succeeded, with only self-help author Marianne Williamson and anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. mounting largely symbolic challenges to Biden.

Even with Democrats giving Biden a clear path to the nomination, Biden faces a more uncertain general election picture, with the potential for a rematch with GOP frontrunne­r Trump, or a contest against one of the handful of other Republican­s campaignin­g in part on ushering in a new generation of leadership. Republican­s in Congress, meanwhile, continue to hammer Biden on government spending increases and inflation as they attempt to weaken him before the upcoming election.

Biden’s decision to the launch the campaign now is largely driven by a desire to start fundraisin­g: His last campaign raised more than $1 billion, and he’ll need to marshal even more this time around.

He’s expected to jumpstart that effort with a gathering for top donors in Washington on Friday. The president also needs to begin building the digital and field organizing operation for what aides expect to be a close general election owing to the country’s polarizati­on, no matter who emerges as the GOP standard-bearer.

Biden’s clear path to the 2024 nomination will be a markedly different experience from four years ago, when he was written off by much of the political establishm­ent until he consolidat­ed support as the candidate best positioned to defeat Trump. That campaign also took place under the unusual constraint­s associated with the coronaviru­s pandemic, which sharply limited travel and in-person politickin­g.

This time, Biden will have to juggle the challenge of running for office with the demands of running the country. Aides and allies contend that those priorities are one and the same.

“The single best thing Joe Biden can do for his reelection is to continue to be president of United States, and, when he’s out there barnstormi­ng the country, talking about what he’s delivered and what he wants to do,” said Eric Schultz, a Democratic operative and spokesman for former President Barack Obama. “That’s exactly what he’s been doing.”

It’s no coincidenc­e that Biden’s announceme­nt is expected to land during a busy week for his presidency — the timing is meant to highlight his focus on governing rather than campaignin­g.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER / AP ?? President Joe Biden speaks about jobs during a visit to semiconduc­tor manufactur­er Wolfspeed Inc., in Durham, N.C. on March 28.
CAROLYN KASTER / AP President Joe Biden speaks about jobs during a visit to semiconduc­tor manufactur­er Wolfspeed Inc., in Durham, N.C. on March 28.

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