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I traveled with Biden all weekend. He’s not going down without a fight.

Over the long holiday weekend, as Joe Biden was staring down the biggest crisis of his political career, I was given a front-row seat to it all, as part of the White House travel pool. At this extraordinary moment in U.S. politics, it happened to be the Monitor’s turn to be the eyes and ears for the wider Washington press corps on a swing through Wisconsin, Delaware, and Pennsylvania. 

In Madison, a reporter called out a question as the president was boarding Air Force One, wondering how he could argue that he was the best candidate to take on Donald Trump. 

Why We Wrote This

The American president is facing perhaps the biggest crisis of his political career, a make-or-break moment for his 2024 reelection campaign. The Monitor accompanied him on the campaign trail this weekend. Here’s what our reporter saw.

“Because I beat him before,” Mr. Biden said.

We huddled around the president on the tarmac, a sweaty bunch of journalists reflected in his aviators, trying to hear him over the roar of the plane. “That was four years ago, Mr. President,” a reporter responded.

“You’ve been wrong about everything so far,” Mr. Biden fired back. 

Later, as he boarded Air Force One to fly home and return to the maelstrom of Washington, the president turned back to us in the pool. 

“I’m up for the job,” he said, flashing a thumbs-up.

Joe Biden is still running for president. Quite literally.

A week after a disastrous debate performance that led many within his own party to question his physical and mental stamina, the president could be seen jogging from Air Force One to greet Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers in Madison. He jogged across the stage at a middle school to the Tom Petty song “I Won’t Back Down.” He jogged from the lectern and swayed with the choir after speaking to an enthusiastic Black congregation in Philadelphia. 

“I am running and going to win again,” he said at the Madison rally, prompting chants from the crowd: “Let’s go, Joe!”

Why We Wrote This

The American president is facing perhaps the biggest crisis of his political career, a make-or-break moment for his 2024 reelection campaign. The Monitor accompanied him on the campaign trail this weekend. Here’s what our reporter saw.

The president indignantly cast the calls for him to step down as an affront to the millions of voters who had turned out to support him during the primaries. “Some folks don’t seem to care who you voted for,” he said. Then, shouting, “I’m staying in the race!”

Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

President Joe Biden (right) and pastor Dr. J. Louis Felton pray at a church service at Mount Airy Church of God in Christ, July 7, 2024, in Philadelphia.

Over the long holiday weekend, as Mr. Biden was staring down the biggest crisis of his political career, I was given a front-row seat to it all, as part of the White House travel pool. At this extraordinary moment in U.S. politics, it happened to be the Monitor’s turn to be the eyes and ears for the wider Washington press corps, sending out regular updates about everything the president said and did during swings through Wisconsin, Delaware, and Pennsylvania. 

“Jill Biden’s husband,” as the president likes to introduce himself, came on the Washington political scene more than a half-century ago as a 30-year-old senator. Now, pointed questions about his mental acuity have brought Mr. Biden to a make-or-break moment for his 2024 reelection campaign – and a defining juncture for his storied political career. 

Facing criticism in the wake of the debate that he and his team were in denial and willfully ignoring concerns, Mr. Biden made a concerted show of energy this weekend. His voice was often strong on the campaign trail. At one stop in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, he spoke and mingled with supporters for over an hour in 90-degree-Fahrenheit heat, in a courtyard filled with balloon animals and wafts of sunscreen. And while he often held the handrail exiting his plane, he also jokingly acted as though he was ready to dart away from us in the press pool. 

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