Barack Obama, like the rest of the country, is worried about November.
The past six days have been dark times for Americans who don’t want to ambitious dictator become the next president of the United States. Unfortunately, thanks to a objectivity is bad debate on the performance of Joe Biden, It could actually happen—and thanks to the Supreme Court, Donald Trump has been given the green light rule like a real dictatorif he returns to the White House. But, hey, the good news is—no, just kidding, we don’t have any good news. Although perhaps one can take solace in the fact that even Barack Obama supposedly terrified of November, in a “we’ll get through this together” kind of way. Yeah, that’s the low bar!
Washington Post report that Obama “privately told allies who have reached out to him that President Biden’s already difficult path to reelection had become even more challenging after his uncertain debate performance on Thursday—a harsher assessment of the presidential race than his public comments, according to several people familiar with his remarks.” Will the 44th president watch the debate with his hands over his eyes? Michelle Did Biden really pull him back from the brink after he said he would “defeat Medicare”? That’s unclear, but what is clear is that, in private, he’s just as worried as millions of other Americans. (A spokesperson for Obama declined the Post’s request for comment.)
That collective fear is probably not mediated by another report on Tuesday, from New York Timesthat “In the weeks and months leading up to President Biden’s stunning political performance on the debate stage in Atlanta, several current and former officials and others who met with him behind closed doors noted that he had become increasingly confused or disengaged, or would lose the thread of conversation.” According to the outlet:
As if Time Biden “certainly wasn’t always like this,” the note said, and aides and others who met with him in the days after the debate reported that he was “alert, coherent, and competent, engaging in complex and important discussions, and managing volatile crises.” People familiar with the matter also cited his performance in the Situation Room on the night Iran fired missiles and drones at Israel, saying he was “in command” as he spoke with the prime minister. Benjamin Netanyahu. Neera Tanden, Biden’s domestic policy adviser told Time The president is “curious,” “focused,” and “sharp,” and in press conferences, “he will ask you a tough question and he will say, ‘How does this relate to the average person?’ And if you haven’t thought about it in that time, you have to come back to him.” Elizabeth Sherwood-Randall, Biden’s homeland security adviser said at a Situation Room briefing less than two weeks before the debate that the president had “digested a tremendous amount of information” and asked her “deep and insightful” questions. She said his performance on the debate stage “did not reflect the experience I had with him on a day-to-day basis.”
Clearly, things are not looking good from a re-election perspective. In a sign of how dire the situation is, a Time report Biden “told a key ally that he knows he may not be able to salvage his candidacy if he can’t convince the public in the coming days that he’s up for the job after last week’s disastrous debate performance,” said a source on Wednesday. To that end, betting sites trust Vice president Kamala Harris will Democratic candidate. (White House spokesman told Time claims that Biden is likely to drop out are “completely false.”)
However, whether it is Biden or Harris (or someone else entirely) on the ballot, it’s important to remember who the replacement is. And if the worst thing about Biden is his forgetfulness, then, as Time note: