Monday, July 15, 2024

‘Stop the bickering’: Sanders voices support for Biden’s candidacy

By AFP
July 13, 2024

US President Joe Biden gestures as Senator Bernie Sanders, Independent from Vermont, looks on at the White House in April 2024 - Copyright AFP Jim WATSON

Senator Bernie Sanders, a prominent figure of the US political left, on Saturday threw his support behind Joe Biden’s White House campaign, dismissing calls for the president to withdraw from the race over health concerns.

“Enough! Mr. Biden may not be the ideal candidate, but he will be the candidate and should be the candidate,” independent senator Sanders wrote in a New York Times column, adding that “it’s time for Democrats to stop the bickering and nit-picking.”

Sanders’ column comes amid steadily growing calls from Democratic officials and donors for the 81-year-old Biden to step aside following a disastrous performance in his June 27 debate with former president Donald Trump. So far, some 20 members of Congress have called for him to leave the race.

Most polls taken since the debate show Trump with a national lead over Biden, though within the margin of error. They also show some key battleground states, including Georgia, Arizona and Nevada, shifting in the Republican’s favor.

And a majority of Americans — including Democrats — believe Biden is too old to serve again, according to a recent poll.

Nor did the president help his own cause when, at a summit in Washington earlier this week, he mistakenly introduced Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as his foe Vladimir Putin, before quickly correcting himself.

Biden, however, insisted during an appearance Friday that he is, and will remain, his party’s flagbearer.

“I am running and we’re going to win,” he told an enthusiastic audience in Detroit, amid chants of “Don’t you quit.”

‘Circular firing squad’ –

Sanders noted in his op-ed that he had some strong disagreements with Biden. Like many of his youthful supporters, Sanders fervently opposes what he called “US support for Israel’s horrific war against the Palestinian people” in Gaza.

Sanders, who at 82 is himself seeking reelection to the Senate in November, did acknowledge the signs of the president’s aging.

But given Biden’s achievements — and the record of Trump, “who has 34 felony convictions and… has told thousands of documented lies” — the senator brushed Biden’s shortcomings aside.

“Yes, I know,” he wrote. “Mr. Biden is old, is prone to gaffes, walks stiffly and had a disastrous debate with Mr. Trump. But this I also know: A presidential election is not an entertainment contest. It does not begin or end with a 90-minute debate.”

He blamed the eruption of anti-Biden rhetoric partly on “the corporate media (which) has obsessively focused on the June presidential debate and the cognitive capabilities of a man who has, perhaps, the most difficult and stressful job in the world.”

Sanders also blamed those Democrats who he said had “joined that circular firing squad.”

He challenged the president to do more — to “propose and fight for a bold agenda” that would help lift working families “who have been left behind for far too long.”

But Biden, he concluded, was “a good and decent Democratic president with a record of real accomplishment,” including helping rebuild the US economy and shoring up the country’s crumbling infrastructure.

“For the sake of our kids and future generations, he must win.”

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