Three 2024 headwinds Biden didn’t have to face in 2020

President Joe Biden launched his 2024 campaign earlier this week. He’s focusing on beating back “MAGA Republican extremists” and using the tagline “Let’s finish the job.”

His next presidential run is bound to look a little different. He’s entering a highly contested race that is likely to involve hot-button topics, including abortion, the economy, and immigration. He’ll also have to contend with spitfire Republicans, including former President Donald Trump and possibly Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL).

BIDEN SAYS AGE ‘DOESN’T REGISTER WITH ME’: ‘I CAN’T EVEN SAY THE NUMBER’

As an incumbent president running for reelection, Biden has an edge. However, it could also prove to be a liability as the country seeks to pull itself from a period of high inflation, border influxes, and a slew of social problems.

Here are three headwinds that Biden did not have to face in 2020 but must overcome in 2024.

Biden
President Joe Biden.

Age is not just a number

In 2020, at age 76, Biden was similar in age to other presidential candidates, such as Trump, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA). So, age was not necessarily at the forefront of voters’ minds.

Now, at 80, Biden is the oldest president to serve in the White House. He would be 86 by the end of his second term in office, and he is already facing criticism and skepticism regarding his cognitive ability.

A poll released on Monday determined that only 26% of respondents wanted Biden to seek a second term, with 69% of voters citing Biden’s age as a factor.

Biden has been quick to say “Watch me” when people comment on his age and whether it impedes his ability to occupy the White House. On Wednesday, he said age “doesn’t register with me” when asked about his poll ratings.

“I can’t even say the number,” Biden said about his age. “It doesn’t register with me. But the only thing I can say is that one of the things that people are going to find out is they’re going to see a race, and they are going to judge whether or not I have it or don’t have it.”

However, age will be a roadblock that even Democrats acknowledge will require triumph if Biden is to win the presidency again. If he faces Trump, who is now 76, it will likely not be as much of a liability as if he faces DeSantis, who is 44.

“I do believe he is up to the task, and that is something we just cannot pretend is not on people’s minds,” Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-SC) said of Biden. “I think he has to show the energy that he’s been showing over the past several months.”

Joe Biden
President Joe Biden.

End of COVID-19 forces Biden out of the basement

The largest difference between Biden’s 2020 and 2024 election campaigns is the end of COVID-19, which will force Biden into the spotlight.

In the 2020 race, the president avoided large events and rarely campaigned outside of his home state of Delaware, a point of mockery for Republicans who suggested he was hiding in his basement. It proved effective for Biden, though, because it allowed him to contrast more starkly his campaign’s quiet response to the pandemic to Trump’s louder one. At the time, Trump argued against lockdown procedures and wearing a mask in public, among other things.

However, former White House adviser Karl Rove called Biden’s 2024 election debut on social media a “second basement campaign” that is unlikely to leave a strong impression, in a Wall Street Journal op-ed published Thursday.

He blasted Biden’s social media video, which announced his reelection bid on the four-year anniversary of his 2020 campaign launch on April 25, 2019.

“Tuesday’s video will leave no strong imprint, and news of the president’s announcement will be drowned out by the debt-ceiling fight in Congress,” Rove said.

Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said she believes voters will see that Biden cannot keep up with an active campaign.

“It’s going to be hidin’ Biden again, just like we had in 2020, and I just hope the American people reject that and want to see this candidate face the American people and answer tough questions, which he’s never done,” McDaniel said Wednesday on Fox News.

President Biden Signs Inflation Reduction Act Into Law
WASHINGTON, DC – AUGUST 16: U.S. President Joe Biden (R) moves to give Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) (L) the pen he used to sign The Inflation Reduction Act with Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-NY) in the State Dining Room of the White House August 16, 2022 in Washington, DC. The $737 billion bill focuses on climate change, lower health care costs and creating clean energy jobs by enacting a 15% corporate minimum tax, a 1-percent fee on stock buybacks and enhancing IRS enforcement. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Presidential record in the spotlight

One of the assets of a fresh candidate without top elected office experience means that their records cannot be used against them. That is not the case for Biden.

Before, when he entered the 2020 race, Biden was able to tout a mostly successful vice presidency under former President Barack Obama. He entered the campaign promising, among many things, to defeat the pandemic, revive the economy, and safeguard abortion rights, as well as establish the United States abroad, according to Politifact. This resonated with voters, particularly among Democrats and independents who liked the idea of someone other than Trump in office.

Now, in the 2024 campaign, Biden can garner voters off the promises he kept, but he will also have to atone for the promises he failed to keep.

Biden’s record on dealing with the coronavirus pandemic is complex. On one hand, he brought an end to the Trump-era national emergency on April 11, but his decision to do so came after heavy pressure from House Republicans, who pushed through legislation in March to bring an end to both the national emergency and the public health emergency immediately. The public health emergency is set to expire in May.

The economy and immigration are likely to be two of the biggest hits to Biden’s record, especially for independent voters in red-leaning states.

Biden promised voters that under his administration, he would tax the companies and wealthy more, paving the way to give more benefits to the middle class, a goal that the president still seems to be working toward. In his 2024 federal budget proposal, Biden proposed increasing taxes for those who make more than $400,000 in annual income from 3.8% to 5% in order to fund Medicare and Social Security benefits.

Still, under Biden’s administration, voters have seen a stark increase in inflation. The inflation rate was at 8.3% as of April 17. A report released on Thursday from the Bureau of Economic Analysis showed the economy grew at a rate of 1.1% in the first quarter of 2023, falling short of the 2.6% posted in the fourth quarter of 2022.

The influx of immigrants at the border is a thorn in Biden’s side and a rewarding target for the GOP. In March, the influx of immigrants illegally crossing the border rose by 25%.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

Democrats and Republicans have both expressed concern over the dubbed “border crisis” that has brought fentanyl into the country. Federal law enforcement seized a record 14,700 pounds in 2022, compared to 11,200 pounds in 2021 and 4,800 pounds in 2020, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

The agency seized a record-breaking $21 million worth of fentanyl from a man seeking entry into the country. The pills were disguised as green beans.

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