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President Joe Biden's first TV interview after his poor debate performance will air across ABC News platforms starting on Friday.
Now, people with direct knowledge of his debate prep process are providing a more detailed picture of the days leading up to Biden’s disastrous debate last week, clarifying the
President Biden pushed back on concerns about his age and speculation about the future of his campaign at a rally in Wisconsin on July 5.
Former President Donald Trump’s lead against President Joe Biden has widened after Biden’s shaky debate performance last week.
U.S. President Joe Biden again called his debate against Donald Trump "a bad episode," suggesting in an interview with ABC News on Friday that his shaky performance was due to poor preparation, exhaustion and illness.
At a rally in Wisconsin, Biden says that he is staying in the race despite calls for him pull out after a shaky debate performance.
To a crowd of invited supporters, Biden displayed more vigor and clarity than in his recent debate performance.
"Like many other people in Washington and across the country, Senator Warner believes these are critical days for the president's campaign, and he has made that clear to the White
Joe Biden sat down with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos on Friday for one of the most important interviews of the Democratic president’s decades-long political career
In any event, let’s not lose sight of the fact that Trump’s debate performance didn’t exactly inspire trust and confidence either. Far from it! Trump’s attacks on Biden, in the words of the Bard, were “full of sound and fury” but ultimately signified nothing.
As he boarded Air Force One for a trip to rally Democratic voters in Wisconsin, Biden was asked whether he could beat his rival. "Yes,” he responded. (Reporting by Andrea Shalal, Katharine Jackson; Editing by Caitlin Webber) Copyright 2024 Thomson Reuters.
President Biden scrambles to save his reelection with a trip to Wisconsin and a network TV interview
President Joe Biden is fighting to save his endangered reelection effort as he holds a rally in Wisconsin and sits down for a network television interview there
Biden continues to deflect concerns over the his ability to defeat Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.
Trump, 78, who made multiple false statements from the debate stage in Atlanta, falsely claimed in a video that was circulated on social media that he had driven Biden out of the
By Andrea Shalal and Nandita Bose WILMINGTON, Delaware (Reuters) - Facing increasing calls from fellow Democrats to end his campaign for re-election, U.S. President Joe Biden on Saturday gave no hint that he was considering stepping aside after a pair of defiant public appearances a day earlier.
Cabinet members could consider removing the president from office if they have questions about his cognitive abilities. It’s politically risky.
About 8.1 million viewers tuned in Friday night to President Joe Biden's much-anticipated interview with ABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos, in which the President sought to convince voters and fellow Democrats that he is still the best candidate to run for re-election against Donald Trump.
In response to Craig’s statement, Biden’s campaign sent a lengthy list of Democrats who have publicly said they would stand by the president, including members of Congress in the crucial swing state of Michigan.
"Did you ever watch the debate afterwards?" George Stephanopoulos asked Biden. "I don't think I did, no," Biden replied.
Reaction to the Joe Biden interview from ABC’s George Stephanopoulos on Friday may or may not calm the Democrats clamoring for the president to step aside.
President Joe Biden survived the most critical day of his campaign reset, avoiding major missteps in a pivotal prime-time interview and earning a warm reception at a raucous Wisconsin rally.
One warning bell for Democrats who assume that a nominee younger than President Joe Biden would do better against former President Donald Trump: Republicans won the two most recent elections in which presidents eligible for reelection bowed out of their campaigns.
In Biden's first sit-down interview since last week's debate against former President Donald Trump, the president acknowledged the debate was a "bad episode," but pushed back strongly against broader questions about his age and mental fitness.
Just over a week after Biden’s disastrous debate performance, Democratic voters seem down on the president’s chances, and ready for an alternative candidate.
U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley encouraged President Joe Biden on Friday to drop his bid for a second term, making the North Side congressman the first in Illinois’ Democratic delegation to join a small but growing group of party members urging Biden to abandon his race against presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.
The president defiantly and repeatedly rejected calls to withdraw following last week’s debate, telling supporters in Wisconsin and a prime-time television audience that he is determined to win re-election against Donald Trump.
By Andrea Shalal, Steve Holland and Jeff Mason MADISON, Wisconsin (Reuters) -President Joe Biden on Friday battled to put down an uprising among some Democrats pushing him to abandon his reelection campaign after a poor debate performance,
President Joe Biden said in a highly anticipated Friday interview that he doesn’t believe he has fallen behind in the 2024 campaign, calling the race a “toss-up” despite a series of recent polls that have shown him trailing Donald Trump by 2 to 6 percentage points nationally.
Wisconsin Democrats told the BBC they support the president but are willing to consider replacing him as the candidate.
Biden suggested he would be OK losing to Trump in November as long as he gave it his all — undercutting the heart of his 2024 presidential platform.
Many Californians are frustrated with the governor for leaving the state during a brutal heat wave and devastating fires. He's off campaigning for President Biden's re-election, being very vocal about his support.
The president's session with ABC was his first nationally televised interview since his disastrous debate with Donald Trump.
President Joe Biden denied that his debate against Trump hurt him in the polls and is causing growing calls for him to step aside.
In an short preview clip released earlier today, Biden brushed off concerns about his debate performance, saying he was feeling sick and exhausted, but that there was no reason to
President Joe Biden, fighting to save his endangered re-election effort, used a highly anticipated TV interview Friday to repeatedly reject taking an independent medical evaluation that would show voters he is up for serving another term in office,
Biden sat down for his first one-on-one interview Friday to discuss the future of his campaign. The president is adamant on remaining in the race.
By Andrea Shalal, Steve Holland and Jeff Mason MADISON, Wisconsin (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden on Friday said he did not need a cognitive test to determine whether he had a mental decline and dismissed calls from some Democrats that he should step aside to let a more vigorous candidate take on Republican Donald Trump.
President Joe Biden is facing calls to drop out of the presidential race following his disastrous debate performance last week. The first Democratic member of Congress to do so was Rep. Lloyd Doggett of Texas,
President Joe Biden presented further excuses and took ownership for his poor debate performance, saying he was “sick” and “feeling terrible.”
By Andrea Shalal, Stephanie Kelly and Kanishka Singh MADISON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden again called his debate against Republican opponent Donald Trump "a bad episode," but remained resolute in an interview with ABC News on Friday that he was the candidate to beat Trump in November's election.
President Joe Biden on Friday held a campaign rally in the battleground state of Wisconsin ahead of his interview with ABC News and amid increased pressure for him to withdraw from the race.
ABC News' George Stephanopolous pressed the president about why he wasn't prepared enough to debate Donald Trump.
By Andrea Shalal, Steve Holland and Jeff Mason MADISON, Wisconsin (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden scrambled to defuse a political crisis over his shaky debate performance on Friday, using an ABC News interview to argue again that he had a bad night,
President Joe Biden acknowledged a weak performance at last week’s presidential debate, but tried to assure Americans during an ABC News interview that he was fit to run again in the 2024 race for the White House against Donald Trump Speaking with ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos Friday,