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Biden is set to meet with Democratic governors as he fends off calls for him to quit

Thibault Spirlet   

Biden is set to meet with Democratic governors as he fends off calls for him to quit
  • President Joe Biden faces growing calls to exit the race after his disastrous debate performance.
  • He's due to meet on Wednesday with Democratic governors to try to reassure them of his competence.

President Joe Biden is set to meet with Democratic governors as he tries to fend off growing concern about his ability to beat Donald Trump.

White House officials said Biden is scheduled to talk to the governors in virtual meetings and in person at the White House on Wednesday, Reuters reported.

Since his disastrous debate performance Thursday, Biden has come under increasing pressure to exit the race.

During the debate with former President Donald Trump, Biden's performance was at times marked by vacant facial expressions and incoherent sentences.

Biden's campaign has offered a series of excuses, citing jet lag, a cold, and bad preparation going into the event. But this hasn't stopped calls for his exit.

On Tuesday, Rep. Lloyd Doggett of Texas became the first sitting Democratic member of Congress to publicly urge the president to quit the race.

"Too much is at stake to risk a Trump victory — too great a risk to assume that what could not be turned around in a year, what was not turned around in the debate, can be turned around now," Doggett said in a statement.

Former Democratic House members, party strategists, and candidates have issued similar calls, with some urging Vice President Kamala Harris to replace Biden on the Democratic ticket.

Former Rep. Tim Ryan said in a social-media post on Tuesday that Harris should replace Biden.

He said Harris "has significantly grown into her job, she will destroy Trump in debate, highlight choice issue, energize our base, bring back young voters and give us generational change. It's time!"

In a video message on Tuesday, Adam Frisch, a Democrat running in Colorado's 3rd Congressional District, said: "We deserve better. President Biden should withdraw from this race."

James Carville, a longtime Democratic strategist, told CNN that the party needs to do "something different."

"Give the people a shot, let them see who's in the party, and I believe there's staggering talent in the Democratic Party," he said, adding, "Get out of the way and let a thousand flowers bloom."

Meanwhile, an anonymous House Democratic aide told Reuters that 25 Democratic House members are preparing to urge Biden to pull out of the race if he appears shaky in the coming days.

In the event that Biden does withdraw, several possible replacements could throw their hat in the ring.

Replacing Biden at the top of the ticket a few months before the November election would be a challenge for the party, however.

President Lyndon B. Johnson dropped out of the race in 1968, and his vice president, Hubert Humphrey, entered the Democratic primary but went on to lose the election to former Vice President Richard Nixon.

ABC News said it would air parts of Biden's first television interview since last week's debate on Friday at 6:30 p.m. ET on "World News Tonight with David Muir."



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