The Daily - Voters Are Wary of Biden. Here’s Why He Might Win Anyway
Episode Date: April 26, 2023President Biden has announced that he will seek another term in the Oval Office, despite the fact that he will be 81 on Election Day 2024.Not everyone is overjoyed about that prospect — more than ha...lf of Democrats don’t want him to run again. Nonetheless, the party’s leaders are increasingly confident about his chances. Jonathan Weisman, a political correspondent for The Times, explains why.Guest: Jonathan Weisman, a political correspondent for The New York Times.Background reading: Mr. Biden has acknowledged that he has not accomplished all he wished to. But that, he maintains, is an argument for his re-election.Although his poll numbers remain low, structural advantages have Democrats insisting that Mr. Biden is better positioned than his Republican rivals.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today.
More than half of Democrats don't want Joe Biden to seek a second term.
But as he formally embarks on his re-election campaign,
Democratic leaders are increasingly confident that the polls
fail to capture Biden's real strength and that the electoral map favors him over a Republican.
My colleague, Jonathan Weissman, explains why. It's Wednesday, April 26th.
Jonathan, we woke up Tuesday morning to a form of news that's not exactly earth-shattering,
not exactly shocking, but nevertheless, very important.
That's right.
Joe Biden is running for re-election, and he announced it as we expected with a video posted to the internet.
Freedom. Personal freedom is fundamental to who we are as Americans.
And he repeatedly evokes two words, freedom and rights.
But you know, around the country, MAGA extremists are lining up
to take on those bedrock freedoms.
He talks about banning books.
He talks about people trying to control who you love.
Dictating what health care decisions women can make.
People trying to tell women
what they can do with their pregnancies.
All while making it more difficult
for you to be able to vote.
Joe Biden isn't making an argument about his record as president.
When I ran for president four years ago, I said we're in a battle for the soul of America.
And we still are.
He's making an argument that this is a values election for what he called four years ago the soul of America.
That's why I'm running for re-election, because I know America. And he puts the 2024 race as another contest between
those who want to curtail our rights and freedoms and those who want to push the nation forward toward a more perfect
union. Let's finish this job. I know we can, because this is the United States of America.
There's nothing, simply nothing we cannot do if we go together.
And what's interesting about this video is that Biden does not explicitly refer to Donald Trump,
but the fact that Trump is also running again is clearly the backdrop for this entire announcement.
And so Biden seems to be anticipating a rematch, a 2020 campaign part two.
But if we're being honest, this is not a Biden re-election campaign that
voters of either party have exactly
been clamoring for. No. About 70% of Americans don't want Joe Biden to run for re-election,
and that includes about 51% of Democrats. The man will be 81 years old on election day 2024. He is already the oldest president in American history. He'll be 86 at the end of his second term. That's pretty old. And in the eyes of a lot of Americans, there's a real worry there. It's a very difficult and tricky issue. And yet, if you talk to the Democratic cognoscente,
the leaders of the party, they're pretty happy with the way things are developing.
So explain that gap between voters and Democratic Party leaders and why they are so confident
despite voters anxieties around Biden. Democratic leaders are looking at the structural advantages that President Biden has
going into 2024. And the most important structural advantage is the map. Right now,
there are only really three big swing states that matter. Three, Wisconsin, Arizona, and Georgia.
It didn't used to be that. Remember when there were huge fights over Florida and Ohio?
Those are Republican.
Remember, there used to be fights over Virginia.
Virginia's Democratic.
So we're left with three real battlegrounds that count.
Georgia, Arizona, and Wisconsin.
And President Biden only has to win one of those.
The Republicans need to sweep all three.
And Democrats feel pretty confident they will win either Wisconsin, Arizona, or Georgia.
Okay, I just want to pause because this is a little bit of a mind-blowing mathematical equation
that you have just laid out. Democrats, Biden, can win back the White House by winning just
Democrats, Biden, can win back the White House by winning just one of three of the states you just mentioned. That would get Biden, if he performs the way we think he will elsewhere in the country, to the 270 electoral college votes he needs to win the election.
But Republicans have to sweep these three states in order to beat Biden and take back the White House.
So those odds are extremely good for
President Biden if Democrats truly are in good standing in these three states. So how good
is their standing in these three states? So let's start with Georgia. Now, this state was Republican for a very, very long time. But in 2020, Joe Biden
narrowly won Georgia. Then, a few weeks later, in a runoff, two Democratic senators, John Ossoff
and Raphael Warnock, won the state, both of them. There's another data point. In 2022, Raphael Warnock had to stand for
reelection again and beat the Republican Herschel Walker. So now we have multiple data points that
do point to the fact that Georgia is now a swing state that Democrats can win in statewide. And now let's skip over to Arizona. In 2020, Joe Biden won Arizona narrowly.
But then two years later, in 2022, we had a dramatic contest for the governorship of Arizona,
where Kerry Lake ran as a Trump heir apparent against a fairly quiet, low-key Democrat. And again,
the Democratic candidate for governor won. And going into 2024, there's a lot of turmoil on the
right in Arizona, whereas the Democrats now have an infrastructure with a Democratic governor that will help Joe Biden
try to defend his 2020 victory there. Got it. Okay. And then that, I think,
brings us to Wisconsin. Wisconsin is a very interesting state. It is heavily gerrymandered.
Republicans control the legislature there overwhelmingly. Right. But Democrats control statewide offices.
Now, Joe Biden went in in 2020 and won it.
Two years later, in 2022, the Democratic governor, Tony Evers, won re-election.
Narrowly, but he won it.
Now comes the final data point I want to point out.
but he won it. Now comes the final data point I want to point out. Earlier this month in April, there was a heavily contested race for a Supreme Court seat in Wisconsin.
Both parties poured money in. They took it extremely seriously. And the Democratic
candidate for the Supreme Court won by 11 percentage points. That was a resounding victory in a state that
has been 50-50 for over a decade and in a very good sign for Democrats. That race for Supreme
Court revolved around one issue, abortion. Right. Which is a good issue if you're Joe Biden,
Right. Which is a good issue if you're Joe Biden, because you are for abortion rights and Republicans in this moment are very much restricting abortion. So from everything you're saying, the thinking from Democrats has to be that winning one of these states, one of these three seems eminently doable. They've all proven themselves friendly to Biden in statewide elections since he became president.
And the issues that are coming up in these states,
like abortion, are good for Biden.
So that has to be why Democrats are feeling confident
about Joe Biden being their nominee,
despite voters' questions about his age
and perhaps kind of like menace about him as a candidate.
Right. Stop looking at nationwide polls.
Stop looking at Joe Biden's approval rating.
Of course, those weigh on our minds, and they certainly weigh on Democratic minds.
But if you look at how presidential elections are won,
they're won on issues and they're won on terrain, the map. And for now, for now, the map and the issues terrain looks very good for Joe Biden.
If I'm reading between the lines of what you're saying, for Democratic leaders, this is a clear case of it ain't broke. Don't try to fix it.
That's a good way to put it. People know Joe Biden. They've known him for years and years.
It will be very difficult for Republicans to somehow rebrand him. And the Democrats are
thinking, let's not try anything fancy. Let's go for it with Joe Biden. And a challenge to Joe Biden, a primary that perhaps might satisfy some Democrats' hunger
for a true contest in which the most popular person emerges. You're saying the leadership
of the party just thinks that is a bad idea. It can only make things more complicated.
Let's not even entertain that idea.
make things more complicated. Let's not even entertain that idea.
Right. And let's look at what's happened in the past when an incumbent president has faced a fairly serious challenge during a primary. There was Jimmy Carter, who had to beat back Ted Kennedy,
and then there was George H.W. Bush, who had to beat back Pat Buchanan. In both cases,
beat back Pat Buchanan. In both cases, they limped out of the primary season and were beaten by the opposite party in the election. Democrats don't want that to happen. And there's a good reason
for that. Because if Joe Biden faces an opponent, especially a more liberal opponent, he'll be pulled to the left on very difficult issues.
And he might have to embrace positions to win over Democrats that would come back to haunt him in November against the Republican candidate.
And so the question for Republicans now, given that glide path you described to Biden's renomination, is, is there anything that they can do to overcome this map?
Of course, this is a nation that is extremely narrowly divided,
but it will be difficult. We'll be right back.
So, Jonathan, what can Republicans do with Donald Trump as their leading frontrunner for the nomination in 2024 to counteract that map you just described as difficult for them to overcome?
It will be really hard. The fact is, everyone knows Donald Trump.
They all have an opinion.
More than half the country doesn't like him.
Trump. They all have an opinion. More than half the country doesn't like him. And to have Trump as their standard bearer makes it virtually impossible for Republicans to make this a
referendum on Joe Biden, because Trump is always going to be the counter, the contrast. It will be
a choice between Joe Biden and Donald Trump. And let's look at
these states. In Georgia, Donald Trump chose Herschel Walker to run for the Senate, and he
lost. In Arizona, Donald Trump loved Carrie Lake. Carrie Lake was the female Donald Trump, and she
lost her race for governor, even in Wisconsin. Donald Trump chose the candidate
to challenge Governor Tony Evers. And again, the Republican candidate lost the race.
Right. So presumably, if Donald Trump himself is on the ballot in these three states, he's not
going to fare much better than the candidates he endorsed in those states who lost all within the past two years. It's hard to see how Donald Trump changes who Donald Trump is. He never has. He never will.
Okay. So what about an alternative to Trump, such as Florida Governor Ron DeSantis? Would
nominating someone like DeSantis help Republicans do better in these three states?
like DeSantis help Republicans do better in these three states? Probably not. DeSantis has kind of defined himself and his brand as a social conservative. He just signed a bill in Florida
banning abortion at six weeks. He's now tarred as an anti-abortion candidate. But moreover, his jousting with Disney, his constant attacks on wokeism have made him a hero among social conservatives.
But for swing voters who are looking for a more economic message, who are looking for a more centrist message, Ron DeSantis is not the answer.
who are looking for a more centrist message, Ron DeSantis is not the answer.
It's not clear that in those three states, Georgia, Arizona, and Wisconsin,
DeSantis' standing and chances are that much better than Donald Trump's. Because what would seem to be best for Republicans in those three states
would probably be someone who is moderate, especially on social issues.
Yes. But as we've all learned by now, the Republican primary process really is led by
social conservatives and very conservative voters. I was just in Iowa over the weekend
at an evangelical Republican gathering called the Faith and Freedom Forum. Those voters, Iowans, will be the first to
vote on the nominee for the Republican Party. And they very much are looking for a fighter.
They're looking for somebody who will really grapple with the fate of abortion, with the fate
of transgender athletes. They want to go straight at the hot button issues in conservative territory,
not those swing issues that might have more of appeal in a general election.
So you're saying the Republican primary process, which is very heavily influenced by people like
those who went to the Faith and Freedom Forum that you attended in Iowa, is designed to pick a socially conservative candidate,
the kind of candidate who might be very poorly positioned
to win in these three states, Georgia, Wisconsin, Arizona,
in the general election against Biden.
Yeah, the fact is, whereas the Democratic Party right now
is being led by their leaders, the right now is being led by their leaders,
the Republican Party is being led by their voters, and their voters are pulling their candidates
to the right. So what can Republicans do when their process seems to predetermine a conservative
candidate like Trump or DeSantis to fundamentally improve their odds in these
three states. Republicans need to really nationalize this race. They need to make
enough Americans think we just can't have another four years of Joe Biden in the White House.
And we started to see that Tuesday morning. This just in, we can now call
the 2024 presidential race for Joe Biden. The Republican National Committee's answer to Joe
Biden's announcement video was a video of its own. And it laid out the world of Joe Biden's
second term. This morning, an emboldened China invades Taiwan.
China invading Taiwan and the world at war.
Officials closed the city of San Francisco this morning,
citing the escalating crime and fentanyl crisis.
The city of San Francisco being shut down by anarchy.
These are images that actually don't exist.
They were generated by a computer, but they are already trying to make Americans think
Joe Biden is just an unacceptable second-term president.
Who's in charge here?
It feels like the train is coming off the tracks.
Right. I watched that video,
and it was Republicans saying that Biden is weak
and that the consequences would be dangerous.
And if you read between the lines of that ad, it seems to kind of point to the issue of capability and kind of age.
Yes, the imagery that they're using is a chaotic America with no one really at the helm. And the implication is that an octogenarian at the White House wouldn't be able to tame the
forces in the United States and the globe that are working toward diminishing the United States
as a nation, as a power. We should say, Jonathan, fact check here, Donald Trump isn't all that much younger than Joe Biden.
So that argument seems a little bit complicated.
That's right.
Trump would also be in his upper 70s
by the time the election rolls around.
And Americans in poll after poll also say he's too old.
But they will put Joe Biden and Donald Trump
next to each other in ad after ad.
They will select the right clips to make Trump or whoever the nominee is look virile, look tough, look masculine, and look like he could just beat Joe Biden up.
This is our man.
Joe Biden up. This is our man. So given this anticipated line of Republican attack,
how can Biden campaign in a way that maximizes his chances in these three states we've been talking about? What do you foresee as a strategy that plays with that reality?
2020 was the weirdest campaign. Remember, it was in the middle of the pandemic,
and we didn't see Joe Biden pressing the flesh,
holding huge rallies the way Donald Trump was, and obviously obeying the rules of the pandemic.
2024 will also be an odd, odd election
because the Democrats don't want to put Biden
toe-to-toe with Trump in huge arenas full of people.
They know that that's not Joe Biden's strength.
They probably couldn't fill a huge arena of people coming to hear Joe Biden.
So what they'll have him do is go across the country, and especially to those three states,
and especially to those three states, Wisconsin, Arizona, and Georgia, to cut ribbons and break ground on new highways, bridges, factories, semiconductor plants, wind farms, all funded by
programs and legislation that Joe Biden signed into law in his first two years of office.
So this might end up feeling like a kind of smallish local form of a presidential. I mean,
if your goal is to win those three states, and Biden only needs one of them, but presumably he'd
love to win all three, he can run the equivalent of three local state races, right?
And it may feel to people who live in Wisconsin or Georgia or Arizona like, oh, it's Tuesday.
So Biden's doing, you know, a ribbon cutting downtown once again.
Yeah, I grew up in Georgia.
My mother lives in Atlanta.
My sister lives in Atlanta.
My brother lives in Atlanta. My sister lives in Atlanta. My brother lives in Atlanta. And I warned them that they are
about to be hit by a deluge of advertising that you probably won't see in Ohio and Florida the
way you once did. Now, I want to just caution here that we're talking about this moment and
things can change. Right now, the economy is hanging tough.
But let's say a recession hits and suddenly the map changes because circumstances have changed.
And then you're going to have to see Joe Biden defend turf that he didn't want to.
You know, we are 18 months from this election.
That's a long way away.
A lot can happen in 18 months from this election. That's a long way away. A lot can happen in 18 months.
And the other thing that could change,
and that perhaps seems most risky for Biden,
is that he could change.
He could suddenly have a health scare.
Biden's health is the big unknown in this race.
You know, what if something happens?
What if Joe Biden has to have an unexpected
surgery and Kamala Harris is the president for a month as he's recovering? What if something even
more serious happens? We don't know. And of course, a health crisis for the president would
completely change the dynamics of this race. A lot, a lot is riding on him staying healthy.
And if Biden does stay healthy,
and if Republicans nominate one of the two candidates,
it looks like they might,
then we are dealing with a race that is,
as you have explained,
structurally very sound for Democrats.
Their chances are quite solid.
But it would be a re-election if it happens, not based so much on passion for Biden, but rather a kind of small, carefully cultivated electoral map, right? And in that sense, it has a kind of moneyball quality to it, right? In this case, to politics. It's a little bit bloodless. I mean, in politics, winning is
winning is winning. But this would be a distinct kind of reelection if it happens.
Well, Joe Biden can make this campaign whatever he wants to, as big or as small as he wants.
His launch video did talk about large themes of freedom and rights. But at its heart, this is about Joe Biden. And is Joe Biden
loved? Is he revered? No, he's not. But he's not hated either. Joe Biden inspires a certain
comfort level. And, you know, against the Republicans that he wants to run against,
comfort might just be good enough.
Jonathan, thank you very much. We appreciate it.
Thank you for having me.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Here's what else you need to know today.
The Biden administration says that the ISIS leader responsible for the death of 13 American soldiers and dozens of civilians at the Kabul airport in 2021 has been killed by the Taliban.
The United States has refused to identify the ISIS leader,
but said he planned the now infamous suicide bombing,
which was designed to inflict mass casualties at the airport as the U.S. evacuated American soldiers and Afghan civilians
in the days before the Taliban took over the capital.
And, in a sign that the regional banking crisis may not be over, the stock price of First Republic Bank
of San Francisco plunged by 50% on Monday after the bank disclosed that customers have withdrawn
more than half of the bank's money over the past few weeks. First Republic already received a $30
billion bailout from rival banks last month. But the Times reports that its ongoing problems
may require a new infusion of cash or a government takeover.
Today's episode was produced by Diana Nguyen and Muj Zaydi. It was edited by Rachel Quester,
Patricia Willans, and Devin Taylor. Contains original music by Dan Powell
and Diane Wong, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and
Ben Landsberg of Wonderly. That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.