Biden fundraisers on hold amid questions about whether he should remain at the top of party ticket
Several of U.S. President Joe Biden’s re-election campaign fundraisers are on hold, multiple Democratic sources involved in the events told Reuters on Friday, even as the Democratic Party planned to accelerate his nomination and he vowed to continue in the 2024 race.
Biden had planned to raise money in Austin, Denver and California next week, but these plans have been shelved, at least for now, the sources said. The president tested positive for COVID-19 on Wednesday but said Friday he would return to the campaign trail next week.
Biden’s campaign said his fundraisers would go ahead as planned. “Reuters’ sourcing is incorrect, and we look forward to a robust fundraising schedule,” campaign spokesman Kevin Munoz said on Friday.
A number of big donors are closing their chequebooks amid questions about whether Biden should remain at the top of Democratic Party ticket, the sources said, using their financial clout to tell Biden to drop out of the Nov. 5 race, potentially in favour of Vice President Kamala Harris.
The campaign hoped to raise some $50 million in big-dollar donations in July for the Biden Victory fund but was on track for less than half that figure as of Friday, according to two sources familiar with the fundraising efforts.
“There are a lot of donors who have said they won’t put another dime in this race. The question is if Biden stays in the race, will they come back?” said one major East Coast campaign financier.
Biden raised $28 million in one night in June at a Hollywood fundraiser that was hosted by the actor George Clooney, who recently urged Biden to end his campaign.
Kamala Harris assured major Democratic donors on Friday that the party would win the presidential election as more lawmakers called for her running mate, President Joe Biden, to stand down.
“We are going to win this election,” she said on a call arranged on short notice to calm donors, according to a person on the call. “We know which candidate in this election puts the American people first: Our president, Joe Biden.”
Donors were called to join the 30-minute briefing “to discuss urgent, emerging needs,” according to a copy of the invitation seen by Reuters.
Harris attended the call “at the direct request of senior advisers to the president,” one of the people said, an account confirmed by another person familiar with the matter.
Fundraising from megadonors was expected to drop from June to July due to many of these people taking vacations, a campaign official told Reuters on Friday. “This narrative that high-dollar fundraising has dried up is wrong,” the official said.
More than one in 10 congressional Democrats have now publicly called on the incumbent to drop out following a disastrous June debate against Republican Donald Trump that raised questions about Biden’s ability to win or to carry out his duties for another four years.
The official party process to nominate Biden is advancing.
The Democratic National Convention Rules Committee met on Friday to outline a virtual voting process to bring forward the official nomination of the 81-year-old before the party’s in-person convention starts Aug. 19 in Chicago. Officials argued an early nomination is needed to more easily comply with state election laws or risk being left off the November ballot.
“They’re not risks that we as a party can or should take,” Dana Remus, Biden’s former White House counsel, told the committee.
For a party already divided over Biden, with fresh calls on Friday from Democrats in Congress to leave, the early virtual vote is another point of controversy.
Critics argue it is a means of pushing Biden through early as the party’s official nominee. Others, including DNC Chair Jaime Harrison, say it is necessary to deal with an Ohio law that could have kept Biden’s name off ballots in the state if he wasn’t nominated by Aug. 7, prior to the convention in Chicago.
A member of the rules committee asked whether it was possible that another candidate could challenge Biden in a virtual vote. Leah Daughtry, the committee’s co-chair, said any challenger would need the “verified support of hundreds of delegates.”
“Such a challenge has never happened over the past half century of competitive primaries,” Daughtry said.
It was unclear how the nominating process would unfold if Biden were to abandon his re-election bid. The committee is expected to meet again next week to finalize the plan.
Biden has been isolating since he tested positive for COVID this week and was believed to be taking calls to step aside seriously. Several Democratic officials think an exit is a matter of time, Reuters reported on Thursday.
“The writing is on the wall,” said a Democratic donor on Friday.
Biden has insisted for weeks that he would stay in the race despite calls from heavyweights in his party to cede his position.
Trump, 78, accepted the Republican Party’s nomination this week in Milwaukee, speaking before a rapt audience on Thursday.
Some Democrats have begun advertising against Biden. Pass the Torch, a group that wants Biden to step down, has launched a TV ad to air in Washington and Rehoboth, Delaware, where Biden frequently vacations, and features Democratic voters from Pennsylvania urging Biden to “pass the torch.”
This article was first reported by Reuters