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Today's Paper | November 22, 2024

Published 06 Jul, 2024 07:02am

Biden under pressure from donors to quit race

PRESIDENT Joe Biden is under pressure from some Democratic donors who have warned they will withhold funds unless he is replaced as the party’s candidate in the wake of his disastrous debate performance last week, according to the BBC.

Pressure on the 81-year-old Biden to quit the Nov 5 presidential race has grown following several instances during the debate where he lost his train of thought.

While he admitted that he “screwed up” that night, he has vowed to stay on as his party’s standard-bearer taking on Donald Trump.

Scrutiny on his public appearances has markedly risen since the debate.

In a White House speech to military families on Thursday to mark July 4 Independence Day, he stumbled over his words when referring to Trump as “one of our colleagues, the former president”.

And in an interview with a radio network in Philadelphia, he lost his thread and appeared to say he was proud to be the first black woman to serve with a black president.

Donors have been reconsidering their bets. Abigail Disney, an heiress to the Disney family fortune, told business news channel CNBC that she did not believe Mr Biden could win against Trump.

She said her decision to pull support was rooted in “realism, not disrespect”.

“Biden is a good man and has served his country admirably, but the stakes are far too high.”

The consequences of defeat in November “will be genuinely dire”, she added.

With her warning, she joined a handful of other wealthy donors.

Philanthropist Gideon Stein told the New York Times that his family was withholding $3.5m (£2.8m) to non-profit and political organisations active in the presidential race unless Mr Biden steps aside.

Hollywood producer Damon Lindelof, who has donated more than $100,000 to Democrats this election cycle, wrote an essay in a magazine urging other donors to withhold their funds until there is a change.

The brother of Barack Obama’s former chief of staff, Hollywood agent Ari Emanuel, told a conference in Colorado that withholding funding was the key to ensuring Mr Biden’s exit from the race, the Financial Times reported on Thursday.

“The lifeblood to a campaign is money, and maybe the only way...is if the money starts drying up,” he said, according to the newspaper.

Ramesh Kapur, a Massachusetts-based Indian-American entrepreneurt, has organised fundraisers for Democrats since 1988.

“I think it’s time for him to pass the torch,” Mr Kapur told the BBC this week. “I know he has the drive, but you can’t fight Mother Nature.”

There are some who are worried there’s not enough time left for a new candidate to join the race, and they have decided to back Biden if he stays on.

A mega-donor the BBC spoke to this week, who declined to be named, said he planned to go ahead with a fundraiser for the president scheduled for later this month at his Virginia home.

The Biden campaign has said it raised $38m from debate day through to the weekend.

They have conceded he had a difficult debate, but have said he is ready to show the public he has the stamina for the campaign.

On Friday morning they announced a new “aggressive travel schedule” in which he and his wife, along with Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, would blitz every battleground state.

Published in Dawn, July 6th, 2024

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