“I intend to win this election. (…) When you fall, you get up,” Biden said during a campaign rally in Raleigh, North Carolina, indicating that he does not intend to give up the race for the White House.
The US President lost the first presidential debate to Donald Trump, as almost all political analysts point out. During the televised dispute, Biden's voice was hoarse – attributed to a cold – and a little enthusiasm and hesitation on several occasions. On the other hand, Trump calmly and firmly released a series of lies, without Biden correcting them.
At Friday's rally, Biden offered a different approach to the debate. Speak with more energy In a 20-minute speech, he concluded his sentence and spoke clearly.
“I know I’m not a young man, to state the obvious. (…) I wouldn’t run again if I didn’t believe with all my heart and soul that I could do this job. The stakes are very high,” the Democratic candidate said.
Former President Barack Obama defended Biden, who was his vice president between 2009 and 2017, saying that “Bad talk nights happen.”
“Bad debate nights happen. Believe me, I know that. But this election is still a choice between someone who has fought for ordinary people all his life and someone who only cares about himself. Between someone who tells the truth, and who knows what is right,” Obama said in a blog post. Facebook: “Trump is wrong and will speak straight to the American people, and someone who blatantly lies for his own good last night doesn't change that, which is why there's so much at stake on November X (formerly Twitter) on Friday.”
Biden, Trump trade insults in first presidential debate
A Biden campaign spokesman said Friday there were no talks about the president withdrawing from his re-election bidThe strategy did not change after the debate, and the Democrat's presence in the next debate, on September 10, was confirmed.
The US elections will be held on November 5. The Democratic convention, which will confirm Biden's candidacy for re-election, is scheduled to be held between August 19 and 22.In less than two months.
After the debate, the North American press noted the state of panic among a number of members of the Democratic Party and concern about whether the US President would be able to rule for another term.
Could he replace Biden?
Criticism of President Biden's performance in the first presidential debate on Thursday (27) raised questions: Could he replace him as the Democratic Party's presidential nominee?
In theory, yes. And the Democratic Party could replace Biden with another candidate. But theory is one thing; practice is another.
One of the main problems is that the delegates who will vote for Biden are, in theory, from the president himself, and not from the party. In the United States, front-runners from each party compete in each state and territory of the country to elect a certain number of delegates in each. Whoever has the most delegates at the end of the process becomes the party's nominee for president.
It was Biden's campaign, not the party, that won those delegates in each statewhich has already held its presidential primaries.
Democratic rules state that Biden's delegates remain bound to support him at the party's next national convention unless he tells them he is dropping out of the race.
The loophole in this story is that the agreements and their rules are controlled by political parties. It is possible that the Democratic National Committee will meet before the convention opens, on August 19, and change these rules, but that is unlikely because of another rule: It must be the candidate themselves who express a desire to withdraw their nomination.
No, according to sources close to him, who say the president has indicated he has no plans to surrender. He told his supporters after leaving the discussion: “let's continue”Biden campaign spokeswoman Lauren Hitt was more blunt Friday after the standoff with Trump: “It’s clear he’s not going to give up.”
The current rules say: “National Convention delegates who are committed to a presidential candidate must conscientiously reflect the feelings of those who elected them.”
No, this is one of the problems.
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