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U.S. President Joe Biden holds an event to sign an Executive Order on Artificial Intelligence in the East Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., October 30, 2023. Biden faced questions this week, including from some in his own Democratic Party, about the wisdom of his 2024 re-election bid after a series of weak polls. A Sunday New York Times/Siena College poll showed Biden behind Republican frontrunner Donald Trump in five of six battleground states. Whether victories for Democrats this week are a definitive sign of strength for Biden's re-election is unclear. Harris, who appeared in the White House driveway so abruptly that she interrupted Jean-Pierre's scheduled press conference, closed with an optimistic prediction about next November.
Persons: Joe Biden, Leah Millis, Biden, Joe Biden's, Pollsters, Sam Cornale, Israel, Donald Trump, Andy Beshear, Biden's, Mary Anna Mancuso, Kamala Harris, Harris, Trump, MAGA, Donald Trump's, Cornale, Karine Jean, Pierre, Jean, Pierre's, Steve Holland, Trevor Hunnicutt, Heather Timmons, Rod Nickel, Deepa Babington, Lincoln Organizations: Artificial Intelligence, White, REUTERS, Rights, Democratic National Committee, Reuters, Democrats, Democratic Party, Democratic, Sunday New York Times, Siena, Republican, U.S, Supreme, Voters, NBC, Trump, Republican Party, MAGA Republicans, Republicans, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, America
U.S. President Joe Biden holds an event to sign an Executive Order on Artificial Intelligence in the East Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., October 30, 2023. Biden faced questions this week, including from some in his own Democratic Party, about the wisdom of his 2024 re-election bid after a series of weak polls. A Sunday New York Times/Siena College poll showed Biden behind Republican frontrunner Donald Trump in five of six battleground states. The election results showed that "the government should not be telling a woman what to do with her body," Harris said. Harris, who appeared in the White House driveway so abruptly that she interrupted Jean-Pierre's scheduled press conference, closed with an optimistic prediction about next November.
Persons: Joe Biden, Leah Millis, Biden, Joe Biden's, Pollsters, Sam Cornale, Israel, Donald Trump, Andy Beshear, Kamala Harris, Harris, MAGA, Donald Trump's, Cornale, Karine Jean, Pierre, Biden's, Jean, Pierre's, Steve Holland, Trevor Hunnicutt, Heather Timmons, Rod Nickel Organizations: Artificial Intelligence, White, REUTERS, Rights, Democratic National Committee, Reuters, Democratic Party, Democrat, Sunday New York Times, Siena, Democratic, Republican, U.S, Supreme, MAGA Republicans, Republicans, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, America
WASHINGTON, March 22 (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden's team is leaning toward basing his 2024 re-election campaign in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, and is considering at least three people to serve as his campaign manager, Democratic sources familiar with the matters said. Philadelphia, home to Biden's 2020 campaign operations, has also been under consideration, the sources said. The president is considering at least three people for the role of campaign manager, according to Democratic sources familiar with the deliberations. Jen O'Malley Dillon, who served as Biden's campaign manager in 2020, has ruled out returning to the role in 2024, two sources said. Now deputy chief of staff at the White House, she will be influential in selecting who takes the reins for the 2024 race, one source said.
Democrats had been spending millions of dollars in Republican primaries elevating extreme candidates who falsely insist Donald Trump won the 2020 election, in hopes of facing weaker opponents in the general election. The raw political calculus that underpins the Democrats’ midterm election strategy is at odds with President Joe Biden’s core political message that democracy is in peril. Biden appears to have accepted the tradeoff involved: If boosting election-denying candidates saves even a few Democratic congressional seats, it’s worth the risk. NBC News asked the White House what Biden thinks of the practice and whether he’s ever voiced qualms about it. During the 2016 presidential campaign, many Democrats saw Trump as the weakest and, hence, most desirable opponent in the general election.
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