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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.
President Joe Biden, fighting to save his endangered reelection effort Friday, said his disastrous debate performance last week was a “bad episode” and there were “no indications of any serious condition” in a highly anticipated ABC interview that was seen as a significant test of his fitness to run for office.
Joe Biden is facing intensifying pressure from Democrats and donors to drop out, suggesting that his candidacy is remarkably fragile at the moment.
Biden’s campaign announced it will be executing a $50 million paid media blitz in July following Biden’s concern-airing debate performance last week.
President Joe Biden’s team has telegraphed a strategy to put the president forth for more casual, unscripted events and an accelerated public schedule as he seeks to shift the narrative away from his poor debate performance.
They also said Biden will headline NAACP and UnidosUS conferences in Las Vegas, which will serve as his counter-programming during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee in mid-July. calling
President Joe Biden on Thursday opened a critical stretch in his effort to salvage his imperiled reelection campaign, arguing the stakes extend far beyond his own political prospects to the future of the country's economy and democracy itself.
But in Wisconsin, Biden was focused on proving his capacity to remain as president. When asked whether he would halt his campaign, he said he was “completely ruling that out” and said he is “positive” he could serve for another four years.
President Joe Biden has used a highly anticipated TV interview to repeatedly reject taking an independent medical evaluation that would show voters he is up for serving another term in office
Biden’s campaign announced it will be executing a $50 million paid media blitz in July following Biden’s concern-airing debate performance last week.
President Joe Biden’s 2024 reelection campaign ignored the worst storm of criticism the candidate has endured with a $50 million ad blitz announcement Friday. Biden’s shaky debate performance has rattled the campaign to its core,
Biden says he's 'staying in the race' as he scrambles to save candidacy and braces for ABC interview
In front of roughly 300 supporters at a Wisconsin middle school, Biden again acknowledged his subpar debate last week, saying he “can't say it was my best performance” but that amid speculation over what he would do,
At a campaign rally in Madison, Biden gave supporters the pledge many were waiting to hear — and others, perhaps, were dreading.
The White House communications strategy for dealing with President Joe Biden's dismal debate performance against Donald Trump appears to have only made things worse.In the latest of several examples of foggy communication,
President Joe Biden’s team has telegraphed a strategy to put the president forth for more casual, unscripted events and an accelerated public schedule as he seeks to shift the narrative away from his poor debate performance.
President Joe Biden, fighting to save his endangered reelection effort Friday, defiantly declared that “I’m staying in the race” during a campaign rally in a critical battleground state as he prepares to sit down for a network television interview where his every answer is sure to be scrutinized for evidence of his competency and fitness to run for office.
A defiant President Joe Biden on Friday downplayed his poor performance in last week’s debate in what had become a high-stakes interview on ABC, as questions swirled over the future
The president made it through an ABC interview without any major blunders, but it appeared unlikely to fully tamp down concerns about his age and fitness for another four years and his ability to defeat Donald Trump in November.
The president is scheduled to campaign in Wisconsin on Friday and sit for an interview with ABC's George Stephanopoulos that will air tonight.