President Joe Biden expressed concern over an effort by the group No Labels to consider mounting a third-party 2024 presidential ticket, saying it would only serve to help elect the Republican nominee.
(Bloomberg) — President Joe Biden expressed concern over an effort by the group No Labels to consider mounting a third-party 2024 presidential ticket, saying it would only serve to help elect the Republican nominee.
Biden in an interview with ProPublica published Sunday was asked about the involvement of his onetime colleague, former Senator Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, in the effort to organize a potential third-party challenge.
“Well, he has a democratic right to do — there’s there’s no reason not to do that. Now, it’s going to help the other guy and he knows,” Biden said. “That’s a political decision he’s making that I obviously think is a mistake. But he has a right to do that.”
Biden’s comments underscore growing concerns in Democratic circles that No Labels, a centrist advocacy group, will field its own candidate as an alternative to the nominees on the major-party tickets. Polls show voter unease about a potential rematch between Biden, who does not face a serious primary challenger, and former President Donald Trump, the clear frontrunner for the GOP nomination.
Earlier: Half of Voters Open to Third Party, Worrisome Sign For Biden
West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin, a conservative Democrat, has refused to rule out a third-party bid and appeared at a No Labels in New Hampshire in July.
Asked about the speculation over a 2024 bid, Manchin told Fox News Sunday he would make a decision by the end of the year and that candidates needed to reject the extremes in their parties.
“This country does not run on the fringes,” he said. “It never has. And it can’t start now. So they’re either going to come back or we’re going to bring it back.”
Biden in his interview said the Democratic party needed to do a better job speaking to the concerns of blue-collar voters, whose support will be crucial to his reelection hopes.
“The fact is we’re going to be very shortly a minority White European country. And sometimes my colleagues don’t speak enough to make it clear that that’s not going to change how we operate,” Biden said.
Both Biden and Trump made dueling visits to the Michigan last week in a bid to court members of the United Auto Workers union who are striking against Detroit’s Big Three Legacy automakers, highlighting how the battle for blue collar workers has become a campaign flashpoint. Biden made an historic visit to a picket line while Trump spoke at a nonunion supplier of parts.
Earlier: Biden Hits at Trump Over EV Criticism in Fight for Union Support
“A lot of the guys I grew up with in Claymont, Delaware, and Scranton, Pennsylvania, they feel like they’re not being respected. Not so much by policy just by the, by the failure to talk about their needs,” Biden told ProPublica. “I’ve talked about building a country from the middle on the bottom up, not the top down, and that includes everybody, and embracing — embracing the blue collar workers.”
–With assistance from Ian Fisher.
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
©2023 Bloomberg L.P.