Biden Campaign Staff Tries to SHUT DOWN Interview

The Buck STOPS Here

Voters who made disparaging remarks about President Biden during their interviews with a New York Times reporter over the weekend apparently received an ultimatum from a Biden campaign aide.

 

While covering a vice president Kamala Harris rally in Las Vegas, Simon Levien, a NYT political fellow, said that a Nevada Biden campaign manager followed him around and encouraged attendees to “end their interviews” when their remarks became disparaging of Biden.

 

 

Stephen Stubbs, an undecided voter, expressed his desire that Biden would withdraw and allow Harris to be the candidate for president. The employee broke off, apologizing, and said, “I’m going to stop it here if I can.” It’s a Biden occasion. Is that acceptable? Levien thought back.

On X, previously Twitter, he also said that when he questioned the employee about why she had interrupted the interviews, she responded by stating that she was “just doing her job.” The incident happened on Friday, after the CNN Presidential Debate in Atlanta between former President Trump and Vice President Joe Biden. Following a barrage of criticism for his performance in the debate, Biden has complied with requests to resign before the election in November 2024. 

 

The editorial boards of the New York Times and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution both urged the president to withdraw from the 2024 contest.

 

“The president had to persuade the American people during Thursday’s debate that he was capable of handling the demanding responsibilities of the position he is running for reelection to.” But voters can’t be asked to overlook what was evident from the start: Mr. Biden has changed from four years ago, the editorial board of the Times said.

 

“On Thursday night, the president materialized as the specter of a magnificent public worker. He found it difficult to articulate his goals for the next term. He found it difficult to react to Mr. Trump’s provocations. He found it difficult to hold Mr. Trump responsible for his deceit, his shortcomings, and his ominous ambitions. He had trouble finishing sentences on many occasions,” it went on. “As president, Mr. Biden has been excellent. The country has benefited under his direction, starting to tackle a number of long-term issues, and the wounds that Mr. Trump caused are starting to mend. But Mr. Biden’s announcement that he would not be seeking reelection is the greatest civic service he can currently provide.”

 

Fox News was informed by the Biden team that the president is still committed to participating in the September debate and has no intention of dropping out of the race. At a rally in North Carolina on Friday, Biden admitted to having a subpar debate performance and said he was aware that he was “not a young man.” 

 

Biden also said, “I can’t walk as comfortably as I once could. My speech isn’t as fluid as it once was. Although I’m not as skilled at debating as I once was, I still know how to speak the truth. I am aware of good and bad,” he said to his admirers. “And I am capable of handling this task and completing it. And I am aware of what millions of Americans already know: you always get back up after being knocked down.”