US President Joe Biden has announced his bid “to finish the job” with re-election in 2024, plunging at the record age of 80 into a ferocious campaign that could set up a rematch against Donald Trump.
Launching his pitch in a video on the fourth anniversary of the day he first began his 2020 challenge against Trump, Biden said he is still fighting to save American democracy from Republican “extremists”.
“When I ran for president four years ago, I said we’re in a battle for the soul of America. And we still are,” Biden says in the voiceover.
“That’s been the work of my first term: to fight for our democracy,” he adds in the video. “Let’s finish this job – I know we can.”
He described Republican platforms as threats to American freedoms, vowed to fight efforts to limit women’s healthcare, cut Social Security and ban books, and blasted “MAGA extremists”.
MAGA is the acronym for the “Make America Great Again” slogan of Trump, who is the early frontrunner in the Republican primary race.
If he wins, he will face off against Biden again in the November 2024 election.
After a series of big domestic legislative wins, a strong economic recovery from the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic, and momentous foreign policy struggles, Biden has no real challenger from within the Democratic Party.
However, he will face constant and fierce scrutiny over his age.
The veteran Democrat would be 86 by the end of a second term.
Biden must overcome Americans’ concerns about his age in order to win re-election, with 44% of Democrats saying he is too old to run, a Reuters/Ipsos poll completed on Monday found.
Trump, 76, also faces concerns about his age with 35% of Republicans saying he is too old.
The poll showed that a majority of registered voters don’t want either Biden or Trump to run again.
While Biden’s approval rating is relatively low, his aides are confident he can beat Trump again.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll showed him with a lead of 43% to 38% over his Republican rival among registered voters.
Even if a medical exam in February found him “fit” to execute the duties of the presidency, many including in his own voter base believe he is too old.
“I like what Biden’s done. I think he’s done a really good job,” said retiree Roger Tilton, 72, as he walked near the White House. But “he’s really too old for the job”.
Biden likes to answer those concerns by saying, “watch me” – meaning voters should focus on his policy wins at home and his marshalling of an unprecedented Western alliance to help Ukraine defend itself against Russia’s invasion.
He made no reference to the age issue in his video, although a segment near the end showed him grinning and jogging into a public event.
Over the next year and a half, Biden will have all the advantages of incumbency, backed by a united Democratic Party, while Republicans are only just starting their messy primary season.
Trump, despite becoming the first former or serving president to be criminally indicted – and still facing probes into his attempt to overturn his loss to Biden in the 2020 election – is the overwhelming Republican frontrunner.
The most likely Republican challenger to Trump, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, presents a similarly right-wing figure, though starkly younger at 44.
Trump savaged what he called Biden’s “calamitous and failed presidency”.
“It is almost inconceivable that Biden would even think of running for reelection,” he said in a statement on Monday.
The Republican Party posted a fictionalised video, purporting to show a dystopian future where Biden has won in 2024 and China invades Taiwan, the US southern border is overwhelmed and “officials closed the city of San Francisco” due to crime and drugs.
The US dollar, however, rose in trading after Biden’s announcement.
The first word in Biden’s video, following eerie footage of the attack by Trump’s supporters against Congress on January 6, 2021, is “freedom”.
That sets the tone for the first half of the message, before a shift to Biden’s trademark optimism and his pronouncement that “there is nothing, simply nothing, we can’t do if we do it together”.
A montage of images in factories and construction sites underlines Biden’s argument during his first term that he has been restoring the country’s manufacturing base and creating jobs for the middle class.
That was a theme Biden returned to yesterday in a speech to union workers at a Washington hotel.
The White House said this highlighted “how his investing in America agenda is bringing manufacturing back, rebuilding the middle class, and creating good-paying union jobs”.
Meanwhile, Vice-President Kamala Harris – staying with Biden on the 2024 ticket – was due to speak on another big vote winner for Democrats: abortion rights in an era of growing Republican-led restrictions.
Biden’s approval ratings have not topped 50% for over a year and a half.
However, he has consistently over-delivered when it matters.
Supporters say that the Democratic Party’s surprisingly strong performance in 2022 midterm congressional elections validated the Biden brand.
And while Biden may seem bland in comparison to Trump, he is banking on his moderate, old-fashioned image being the secret weapon needed in an increasingly extreme era.
“I think when folks look at President Biden and his strong record compared to the alternative, they will vote for him, and the polls show that,” Democratic Senator Chris Coons told CNN.