Joe Biden defended his fitness for office in a high-stakes press conference

Hey, everybody.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Thank you. Please be seated. I wouldn't have picked Vice President Trump to be vice president, but I think she was not qualified to be president. So let's start there, number one. The fact is that-- the consideration is that I think I'm the most qualified person to run for president. I beat him once, and I will beat him again.

Look, what I said was, instead of my every day starting at 7:00 and going to bed at midnight, it'd be smarter for me to pace myself a little more. And I said, for example, the 8:00, 7:00, 6:00 stuff, instead of starting a fundraiser at 9 o'clock, start at 8 o'clock. People get to go home by 10 o'clock. I've taken three significant and intense neurological exams by the neurosurgeon-- neurologist. In each case, as recently as February, they say I'm in good shape.

I will not bow down to Putin. I will not walk away from Ukraine. I will keep NATO strong. That's exactly what we did and exactly what we'll continue to do. That framework is now agreed on by both Israel and Hamas. So I sent my team to the region to hammer out the details. These are difficult, complex issues. There are still gaps to close, but we're making progress. The trend is positive. And I'm determined to get this deal done and bring an end to this war, which should end now.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Joe Biden defended his fitness for office in a high-stakes press conference © Reuters

Joe Biden vowed to stay in the US presidential race and defended his fitness for office in a high-stakes press conference, but failed to halt defections from Democratic lawmakers urging him to drop his re-election campaign.

Biden also referred to Kamala Harris as “vice-president Trump”, the kind of lapse that has triggered calls for his exit from the race.

Speaking at the end of the Nato summit in Washington on Thursday, Biden said he was best qualified to defeat Donald Trump in November and still had time to recover from what he called the “stupid mistake” of his damaging debate performance two weeks ago.

“I beat him once, and I’ll beat him again,” Biden, 81, said of his 78-year-old predecessor and Republican rival. “There’s a long way to go in this campaign, I’m just going to keep moving.”

In a press conference watched across the world for signs of the president’s fitness, Biden showed his grasp of global affairs, with detailed answers on Ukraine and Israel.

But critics seized on his stumbled answers, including remarks before the start of the news conference where he mistakenly introduced Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as “President Putin”.

In addition to his mix-up over Harris’s name, Biden — who is commander-in-chief of the US military — said he was “following the advice of my commander-in-chief” on Ukraine policy.

Immediately after Biden walked offstage, another senior Democrat in the House of Representatives — Connecticut’s Jim Himes — called on him to step aside. He was quickly followed by Eric Sorensen from Illinois and Scott Peters of California.

Their entreaties came after a new surge of House Democrats said Biden should withdraw in the hours leading up to his appearance.

As of Friday morning, 19 House members and one senator from the party have called for the president to step aside. Biden’s campaign received some relatively encouraging polling news on Friday in an NPR/Marist poll that showed him ahead by 2 percentage points over Trump nationally, with the race statistically unchanged since the debate.

“With yesterday’s press conf[erence] and this new poll, it’s time to end the freak out and unite behind the Democratic nominee and the only person who has ever beaten Trump,” Ron Klain, his former White House chief of staff, wrote on X.

Biden is heading on Friday to Michigan, a pivotal swing state, for an evening rally in Detroit.

Some megadonors who have led calls for Biden to drop out of the race were unmoved by the news conference.

“I think he’s done,” said entrepreneur Gideon Stein, adding that Biden’s “unscripted appearances instil terror in just about everyone I’ve talked to”.

A top Wall Street investor and Republican voter said Biden’s unscripted press conference was the latest gift to the Trump campaign.

“Trump can keep chilling until November if Biden stays in the race,” said the New York-based investor. “He can’t even remember his VP’s name.”

During the hour-long news conference the president acknowledged concerns about his mental acuity, but insisted any slip-ups were due to overscheduling and workdays that start early and stretch late into the night.

“I’ve just got to pace myself a little more,” he said.

Biden also said he had “taken three significant and intense neurological exams” and “they say I’m in good shape”. He added: “I’m tested every single day on my neurological capacity on the decisions I make.”

But his main message was that he should be judged by his record and accomplishments.

“Can you name me somebody who’s gotten more major pieces of legislation passed in three and a half years?” he said, and noted the strong job creation numbers during his presidency.

As Biden left the stage, predictive traders rated the news conference as a modest success for his re-election campaign. His implied odds of securing his party’s nomination on PredictIt, a political prediction market, rose to 44 per cent, tied with those of Harris.

Although Biden’s aides had hoped to tamp down discussions over his fitness for office, the end of the Nato summit appeared to trigger another round of public debate over his candidacy.

Party leaders, including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, had urged Democrats to refrain from undermining Biden while many foreign leaders were in Washington.

The largely unscripted press conference was rare for the president, who has engaged less with journalists than any modern predecessor. His last solo press conference was after meeting China’s President Xi Jinping in November in San Francisco.

Biden acknowledged that he had to “allay” fears about his candidacy among Democrats but said it was not “unusual” for lawmakers to be concerned about the presidential ticket in an election year. He insisted that “no one” was telling him he could not beat Trump.

Polling since the debate on June 27 has mostly shown Trump opening up a wider lead over Biden in most battleground states, adding to anxiety among Democratic lawmakers and donors.

Hakeem Jeffries, the party’s leader in the House, told reporters on Thursday morning that he intended to speak to each of the more than 200 House Democrats before talking with his top team to plot a path forward.

“Throughout this week, as House Democrats, we have engaged in a process of talking to each other. Those conversations have been candid, comprehensive and clear-eyed, and they continue,” Jeffries said.

Additional reporting by Alex Rogers and Steff Chávez in Washington and James Fontanella-Khan in New York

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