Will President Joe Biden be on the ballot in the presidential election of 2024? It’s a question that Biden seemed to answer four months ago when he announced, in an online video, that he would be running for re-election next year. “Let’s finish this job,” he said. “Because I know we can.”
Three-quarters of American say they’re ‘seriously concerned’ about Biden’s mental and physical competence to do the job
Team Biden must have hoped that, after making that announcement, the doubts surrounding his bid for re-election would go away. As the polls increasingly show Donald Trump cruising towards a re-nomination for the Republican ticket, America appears then to be heading — grimly, inevitably — towards a repeat of 2020. Trump versus Biden 2024: this time it’s more depressing.
But the concerns about Joe Biden’s fitness for office now, let alone another four years, have never gone away. In fact, they’re intensifying again.
He’s an unpopular president: his approval ratings have remained stuck around 40 percent, though it’s worth noting Obama’s were not much better. The Biden administration like nothing more than to talk up his economic accomplishments — record jobs! Manufacturing boom! — yet the public doesn’t agree. Some 60 percent of Americans now say that Biden’s policies have made the country worse off. The number of people who think America is on the “right track” under his leadership is currently less than 25 percent.
Democrats can and will find comfort in telling themselves that Biden beat Trump in 2020 and, with the added advantages of incumbency, he can do it in 2024. America isn’t really going to vote for Donald Trump again, is it?
Well, the polls suggest it might. The latest CNN survey suggests Trump has a very slight advantage over Biden. According to the same poll, other Republican contenders for the nomination do better than Trump when pitted against Biden — Nikki Haley, for instance, had a six-percentage-point advantage. Nearly 50 percent of all registered voters say any Republican candidate would be better than Biden.
Worst of all, as far as Biden’s nomination is concerned, the number of Democrats saying they don’t want Biden as their candidate is growing again at a clip — up to 67 percent from 53 percent in March.
Why? It’s the senility, stupid. Three-quarters of American say they’re “seriously concerned” about his mental and physical competence to do the job. The same number doubt he’ll be able to serve another full term if elected.
Add to that the worsening scandal over the Biden family’s business dealings — shockingly under-reported, still, outside of conservative media — and the likelihood of Biden coming under strong pressure to step aside continues to grow.
Many financial analysts have been predicting a dramatic upsurge for the US economy in the coming months. That might help address the despair surrounding his presidency. For now, however, the polls show clearly that Americans do not want four more years of an octogenarian president who is making them feel poorer.
This article was originally published on The Spectator’s UK website.