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Joe Biden faces possible collapse of his re-election campaign after top Democratic Party leaders express no confidence in their nominee

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi each told Biden in separate meetings over the last week that he should reconsider his reelection run or risk losing and dragging the rest of the party down with him. Schumer was “pretty harsh” in his conversation with Biden, said one senior Hill Democrat briefed on the discussion, writes Politico.

Sen. Jon Tester, the vulnerable incumbent from Montana, became the 22nd congressional Democrat — and only second senator — to publicly call for Biden to step aside. “While I appreciate his commitment to public service and our country, I believe President Biden should not seek re-election to another term,” he said.

And House Democrats, party operatives and former administration officials who want Biden to step aside expressed growing optimism that the intensifying pressure campaign would finally crack the shell of defensiveness, denial and unwavering determination constructed around Biden — and that he and his most loyal aides may be starting to listen, said three people familiar with private conversations who were granted anonymity to describe them. Others viewed the leaks of the days-old conversations as a sign the petitioners have grown impatient.

“This is an absolute debacle,” said one senior Democratic official who is close to congressional leadership. “Only amateurs see a path. The red is mushrooming all across the map.”

The flurry of damaging revelations across a 24-hour span marked perhaps the lowest moment of a three-week political nightmare for Biden, who has tried and failed to rebuild confidence within his own party following a dismal debate performance last month. Just a day after Biden insisted in a BET interview that “there’s more to do, and I’m reluctant to walk away from that,” there was growing hope that the president is rapidly being pushed toward a decision point.

“They may be starting to read the writing on the wall,” said one of the people familiar with the private conversations. On Thursday, a letter that Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) had written to Biden earlier this month urging him to hear out critical Democrats began making the rounds as well. The July 6 letter compared the president to an aging pitcher, with Raskin writing that “there is no shame in taking a well deserved bow to the overflowing appreciation of the crowd when your arm is tired out.”

Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), one of Biden’s closest allies in the Senate and one of his fiercest defenders, acknowledged the conversations happening behind closed doors.

He told reporters at the Aspen Security Forum that “the president deserves the respect of having conversations about our path forward constructively and privately and in a way that allows us as a Democratic Caucus to come together in support of our nominee, who I believe will be Joe Biden.”

Biden’s Covid diagnosis struck at a deeply uncomfortable time for the president and his campaign, Democratic allies lamented, forcing Biden off the trail prematurely and creating a contrast with former President Donald Trump, who is set to accept the Republican nomination Thursday night just days after surviving an assassination attempt that has united the GOP behind him. At a press conference outside the Republican convention in Milwaukee on Thursday, deputy campaign manager Quentin Fulks said the campaign “is not working through any scenarios where President Biden is not at the top of the ticket.” “He is and will be the Democratic nominee,” he said.

And a senior Biden aide told POLITICO that “Biden is more committed to staying in than ever.”

But the situation represents a sharp turn for Biden from earlier this week, when close aides believed his strong end to last week — including an hourlong press conference and a fiery Michigan rally — had bought the president some time. They believed the spotlight would then turn to the Republican convention while the campaign worked to quietly mend fences with Democrats eager to push Biden out.

The president’s illness may slow internal discussions on the path forward. But there is an expectation that Biden’s family and closest advisers will discuss the future of the campaign this weekend, according to two of the Democrats.

Swapping out the top of the ticket this late in the race would be a drastic move, with unpredictable consequences. There is no consensus within the party on who should replace Biden, nor how exactly to go about it. Some of Harris’ outside allies have already signaled they are gearing up for a war if party officials attempt to pass over her and nominate another Democrat, such as Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer or Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker.

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