• =?UTF-8?Q?The_members_of_Joe_Biden=E2=80=99s_circle_who_could_convi?= =

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    from https://www.telegraph.co.uk/us/politics/2024/06/28/members-joe-biden-inner-circle-convince-him-stand-down/

    The members of Joe Biden’s circle who could convince him to stand down
    Only the US president’s family and friends may be able to get through to
    him as chorus calling for his replacement grows louder

    28 June 2024 • 7:12pm

    Pressure is mounting on president Biden to stand down and not run for a
    second term
    Pressure is mounting on president Biden to stand down and not run for a
    second term CREDIT: MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images
    Pressure on Joe Biden to stand aside to avoid humiliation in November’s election is mounting.

    But despite the growing chorus of donors and Democrat strategists
    calling for his replacement, it is only the US president’s inner circle
    and wider circles of influence that are capable of getting through to him.

    From family and friends to Democratic big beasts and newspaper
    columnists, their influence will be pivotal over the next few months.

    Circle one: family
    Jill Biden, the first lady, is arguably the most important of all. Dr
    Biden, 73, is the president’s second wife - his first having died in a
    car crash.

    Perhaps the best indication of her influence was in 2003 when leading
    Democrats were trying to persuade Mr Biden to run against George W Bush.

    Dr Biden, who was sunbathing by the swimming pool in a bikini, marched
    into the kitchen to her husband, grabbed a marker pen and wrote “NO” on
    her stomach.

    Mr Biden and his advisers got the message.

    Dr Biden is arguably the most important of all in his inner circle
    Dr Biden is arguably the most important of all in his inner circle
    CREDIT: MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

    Mr Biden’s 78-year-old sister Valerie Biden Owens is a respected
    political strategist.

    Back in 1972, then a high school teacher, she was persuaded by Joe to
    run his longshot campaign to become one of Delaware’s senators. She
    steered him to a shock victory.

    She has been by his side ever since, running all his senate campaigns
    and his two unsuccessful bids for the presidency. According to her book,
    Ms Biden Owens did not want her older brother to run in 2020, fearing
    the impact the personal attacks would have on him and his family.

    Circle two: close political advisers

    Mike Donilon, a 65-year-old political pollster and campaign consultant
    started working for the then Delaware senator Mr Biden in 1981 and has
    been one of his most trusted advisers ever since.

    Described by the Washington Post as Mr Biden’s alter ego, Mr Donilon is consulted on every major decision.

    Having advised Mr Biden to run for a second term, it could fall to him
    to spell out the consequences of the debate debacle.

    Ron Klain, a 62-year-old long-standing Democrat strategist, Mr Klain
    was a key figure in the Biden, Obama and Clinton administrations.

    He was Mr Biden’s chief of staff for the first two years of his administration, having held the same post when he was vice president.

    Even though he has left the White House, Mr Klain is reportedly in
    almost daily contact with his former boss.

    Ted Kaufman’s association with Joe Biden dates back to 1972, and he was picked to complete Mr Biden’s term as a senator when he became Barack Obama’s vice president.

    Known for his blunt straight-talking approach, 85-year-old Mr Kaufman
    headed the Biden transition team after he won the 2020.

    Anita Dunn, 66, is a senior adviser to Mr Biden, returning to the post
    in May 2022.

    A veteran Democratic operative, who also was Barack Obama’s
    communications director, she is part of the tight circle of Biden allies
    in the White House.

    She has a reputation as a political brawler and one of Mr Biden’s
    fiercest defenders in Washington.

    Circle three: political allies
    Relations between the Bill and Hillary Clinton and Mr Biden were not
    always good.

    There was reportedly some ill-feeling when Mrs Clinton beat him to the
    2016 Democratic nomination.

    Since then the Clintons have been enthusiastic fundraisers for Mr Biden,
    who needs all the allies he can find.

    Bill and Hillary Clinton have been enthusiastic fundraisers for Mr Biden despite some reported ill-feeling in 2016
    Bill and Hillary Clinton have been enthusiastic fundraisers for Mr Biden despite some reported ill-feeling in 2016 CREDIT: Tierney L. Cross / CNP
    / SplashNews.com
    Barack Obama has helped raise money for Mr Biden, who was his vice
    president.

    Unlike many other administrations, the vice president and president got
    on well during their tenure. The 62-year-old former president is seen as
    a sounding board for Mr Biden.

    According to Washington gossip, Mr Obama has long been worried by the
    Biden campaign’s performance and has urged him to bring in some seasoned experienced advisers to help run the operation.

    Chris Coons, the 60-year-old senator from Delaware, is arguably Mr
    Biden’s closest ally on Capitol Hill.

    Mentored by Mr Biden, Mr Coons is the president’s eyes and ears in
    Congress and probably best placed to voice the anxieties of Democrats
    who fear they could be casualties of a Republican wave in November.

    Hakeem Jeffries, the 53, Democratic leader in the House of
    Representatives may have nurtured hopes of regaining control of the
    chamber in November.

    Now he will fear his members being turfed out in downmarket ballots in November.

    Asked whether Mr Biden should stand down, Mr Jeffries offered a terse no comment.

    Barack Obama has reportedly long been worried by his former vic
    president's campaign's performance
    Barack Obama has reportedly long been worried by his former vic
    president's campaign's performance CREDIT: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
    Circle four: columnists
    Mr Biden is reportedly a voracious reader of newspapers and the work of
    several major columnists in the US media.

    Thomas Friedman, 70 has a weekly column in the New York Times, is a
    friend of Mr Biden and occasionally has personal briefings from the
    president.

    A Pulitzer Prize winner, Mr Friedman has a postgraduate degree in
    International Relations from Oxford.
    Regularly read by Mr Biden, Mr Friedman’s call for him to step aside on Friday will be a bitter blow to the president

    David Ignatius, 74, is a columnist for the Washington Post. Educated at
    Harvard and Cambridge University.
    He has made little secret of his belief that Mr Biden should not run
    again, having called on the president to stand down last September,
    warning that an electoral defeat would undo his greatest achievement -
    beating Donald Trump in 2020.

    New York Times columnist David Brooks, 62, is a respected
    right-of-centre columnist.
    Earlier this month, he attacked the trial of Mr Biden’s son, Hunter in a radio interview.
    “I don’t think if he had a... didn’t have a high-profile father, he
    would be suffering this increased conviction of a felony.”

    Joe Scarborough, 61, hosts Morning Joe on the left-leaning MSNBC with
    his third wife Mika Brezinski.
    Mr Biden’s favourite news anchor, Scarborough, questioned his decision
    to stay in the race after his performance in the debate on Thursday night.
    Mr Scarborough praised him for his work in office but questioned his
    status as the nominee.
    “If he was CEO and he turned in a performance like that, would any
    Fortune 500 corporation in America keep him as CEO?” he said.
    “These are hard questions, but the fact is, friends, failure is just not
    an option. We know that Joe Biden can govern…he can run the White House.
    He can run the country. But can he run for president in 2024?”

    A former Republican congressman in Florida, who was one of 228 members
    of the House of Representatives to vote to impeach Bill Clinton in 1993,
    he switched his political affiliation to Independent in 2017.


    Related Topics
    US Election, Joe Biden, Jill Biden, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Hillary
    Clinton
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