Trump treads carefully as calls swirl for Biden to exit

Former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at the Historic Greenbrier Farms in Chesapeake, Virginia, on June 28, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 02 July 2024
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Trump treads carefully as calls swirl for Biden to exit

WASHINGTON: As the Democratic Party fights over whether Joe Biden should step aside before November’s presidential election, rival Donald Trump has declined to join the pile-on.

Biden’s halting debate last week against Trump fueled concerns among voters around the president’s age and ability to govern — fears that Republicans have often been eager to highlight.

Yet the Trump campaign has now pushed back against the idea of Biden, 81, stepping down.

Democrats dumping their own candidate would tip them into uncertainty just months before the election — but it also carries risks for Trump, experts told AFP.

Former Republican candidate Nikki Haley warned over the weekend that a Biden replacement would be more “vibrant,” urging Republicans “to prepare and get ready for what’s to come.”

Trump’s campaign — like top Democratic officials — has insisted that Biden is not going anywhere.

“The only way Joe Biden is dumped off the ticket is if he voluntarily decides he’s not going to do it, and he’s not going to make that decision,” Trump campaign adviser Chris LaCivita told NBC.

Republican campaign adviser Brian Hughes said walking away from Biden would amount to Democratic “dishonesty,” while Senator JD Vance — a possible Trump vice president — said doing so would be “an incredible insult” to Democratic voters.

“Trump absolutely wants Joe Biden to be his opponent — it’s just like the Biden campaign always wanted Trump to be the opponent,” Wendy Schiller, a political science professor at Brown University told AFP.

“They see real advantages in the weakness of the other.”

Some of the names being floated as Biden replacements are “younger, vigorous, popular people in Midwest swing states,” Schiller added — whom the Trump campaign couldn’t blame for “inflation and the border.”

By staying out of calls for Biden to step aside, Trump — who faces a slew of legal woes dogging his own campaign — is also letting bitter Democratic divisions take up the media spotlight.

“Why would the Trump campaign want to take the shovel away from Democrats who are digging their own holes right now?” Ron Bonjean, a Republican strategist, told AFP.

“Every day that the spotlight is on Biden’s mental sharpness is another campaign day that Trump has won.”

Trump himself has even appeared to do damage control for his Democratic rival.

“Many people are saying that after last night’s performance, Joe Biden is leaving the race,” Trump told a rally the day after their Thursday debate.

“The fact is, I don’t really believe that,” he added. “He does better in the polls than any of the Democrats they’re talking about.”

That was a marked turn from a few weeks ago, when Trump said in a radio interview that “if you look at (Biden), he doesn’t know where he is.”

“I doubt he will even be running frankly, I just can’t even imagine it.”

On wanting to keep Biden as head of the Democratic ticket, both the president and his challenger seem to be on the same page.

Over the weekend, Biden met with his family at the presidential retreat at Camp David, where US media reported they discussed the 2024 race and supported Biden’s plans to stay in.


Drone-backed militants attack Nigerian army base, several soldiers dead

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Drone-backed militants attack Nigerian army base, several soldiers dead

  • The militants struck the Sabon Gari base before dawn
  • The ⁠army regained control after reinforcements arrived

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria: Islamist militants backed by armed drones raided an army base in Nigeria’s northeastern Borno state, killing several troops in the early hours of Thursday, the military said, in the second assault reported there this week.
The use of drones by the fighters from Daesh West Africa Province (Daesh-WAP) in recent attacks has marked a significant escalation in the violence in the region, military spokesman Lt. Col. Sani ⁠Uba said.
The militants struck the Sabon Gari base before dawn, storming the perimeter and briefly breaching part of the facility, Uba said.
While they were fighting, their drone bombardment destroyed several military vehicles, including an excavator and a low-bed trailer, he added.
The ⁠army regained control after reinforcements arrived, repelled the attack and were pursuing the militants, Uba said.
Some soldiers and Civilian Joint Task Force members “paid the supreme price,” he said, without giving details on the numbers.
Two security sources told Reuters at least nine soldiers and two task force members were killed, with around 16 others wounded.
Nigeria’s military has pushed deeper into insurgent strongholds in the northeast this ⁠year as part of a renewed offensive against militant groups.
But despite repeated operations, Boko Haram and its splinter faction Daesh-WAP continue to mount large-scale attacks, exploiting difficult terrain, porous borders and a weak state presence across parts of the arid northeast. Borno, where Boko Haram and Daesh-WAP fighters have intensified attacks on military convoys and civilians, remains the epicenter of the 17-year Islamist insurgency.