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Joe Biden: 'Man of the middle' ends US reelection campaign

July 22, 2024

Joe Biden has served in both the Senate and White House, spending most of his adult life in US politics. Now, he has announced he will not seek reelection as president.

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US president Joe Biden sits at the desk in the Oval Office during a presidential address
Biden began his political career as one of the country's youngest senators, and will end it as the oldest US president in historyImage: Erin Schaff/REUTERS

In the end, it was his age that prevented Joe Biden from running for president again. The US president has announced he will not seek reelection in November. Biden will see out the rest of his term in office, but the Democrats will look for a new presidential candidate at their convention in August.

Calls from his allies in the Democratic Party and the US media for the president to withdraw his candidacy had been getting louder since his disastrous performance in a TV debate against Donald Trump on June 27. Biden's frail appearance and his many bungled, confused answers had fueled concerns that, at 81, the president was too old for the job.

While he maintained for months that he had every intention of running again, he eventually withdrew from the race on Sunday. It marks the twilight of an illustrious political career, which Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. began at 30 as one of the youngest senators in US history. When he entered the White House in 2021 at 78, he was the oldest US president ever to be inaugurated.

Biden tested by tragedy

Biden grew up in modest conditions. Scranton, Pennsylvania, where he was born on November 20, 1942, had once been a prosperous mining hub but was suffering by the 1950s. After a brief career in law, he decided to challenge Delaware's long-standing Republican senator in 1972.

Biden bows out: DW correspondent Stefan Simons reports

Despite having little money and few apparent chances — family members filled many campaign staff roles — Biden won the election at the age of 30, making him the sixth-youngest senator in US history.

"My own father always said the measure of a man wasn't how many times or how hard he got knocked down, but how fast he got back up," Biden once said. This philosophy would be put to the test more than once in his life.

A few weeks after Biden won his Senate election, his wife, Neilia, and their 1-year-old daughter Naomi died in a car crash that also left their sons Beau and Hunter badly injured. 

Though Biden initially wanted to resign, he was persuaded to take office. On January 3, 1973, he was sworn in at the hospital where his sons were being treated. He started to commute between Wilmington and Washington, D.C.. His sister Valerie moved into his home to help with the children and stayed until 1977, when Biden married Jill Jacobs, with whom he had a daughter, Ashley.

Obama and Biden: A good team

During his six terms as Delaware senator, Biden earned a reputation for seeking bipartisan support for his legislative plans. When he later became vice president under President Barack Obama, he was seen to be an intermediary to middle America.

Biden had twice tried for the Democratic presidential nomination. In 1988, he ended his campaign after being accused of plagiarizing a speech by British Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock. In 2008, he failed to gain traction in primaries against Obama and Hillary Clinton. When he became vice president, however, he was instrumental in the passage of the Affordable Care Act, a health care bill which many consider Obama's greatest legacy.

President-elect Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, left, and Vice President-elect Joe Biden and his wife, Jill, wave to the crowd after Obama's acceptance speech
As vice president, Biden played a key role in many of Obama's major policy achievementsImage: AP

Against this backdrop, it was a particularly tragic twist of fate that next befell his family. While he was fighting for health care for low-income families, his oldest son, Beau, died of a brain tumor

"To know Joe Biden is to know love without pretense, service without self-regard, and to live life fully," Obama said in 2017, when he awarded Biden the Presidential Medal of Freedom. 

Running against Trump

"Maybe the most important thing my mom and dad taught me was that everyone should be treated with dignity," Biden said after announcing that he would run for president in 2020 against incumbent President Trump. "Today, too many middle class and working class people, they're not able to look their kid in the eye and say, 'Honey, it's going to be OK,' and mean it. That's why I'm running."

It's because Biden was considered a "man of the middle" that many Democrats thought he could bring together a wide coalition of voters to defeat Trump, who was and remains an incredibly divisive figure among the American public.

The fact that Biden had Obama's backing also drew support from many Black voters, which helped him toward victory in an election which saw the highest turnout in more than a century.

Tackling COVID, ailing infrastructure

By the time his administration declared the end of the COVID-19 public health emergency in May 2023, more than 1.1 million Americans had died of the disease, the majority since Biden took office in 2021. During his 2020 election campaign, he had promised he would listen to medical experts more than his predecessor. 

Biden extended lockdown measures, presided over a broad distribution of vaccines and a $1.9 trillion (€1.6 trillion) economic relief package. Under his presidency, the number of Americans without health insurance fell by nearly 6 million compared to before the pandemic. Yet critics still called Biden's lockdown measures too strict, and said they hurt US businesses.

Policies that brought Biden acclaim included lowering prices for prescription medications and passing a bipartisan infrastructure law to repair many of the US' ailing roads and bridges. 

Hunter Biden leaves a court after a plea hearing
Biden's son, Hunter, has been a source of repeated controversy during Biden's presidencyImage: Jonathan Ernst/REUTERS

Under Biden's presidency, the US has experienced record job growth of the kind it has not seen since the 1960s. But in the summer of 2022, the US saw inflation of 9.1%, a four-decade high.

The cost of living, including for things like fuel and grocery prices, rose considerably, especially hurting low-income families. While some factors behind this were beyond Biden's control, like the war in Ukraine causing supply-chain problems, critics said increased federal spending under Biden, including $750 million on efforts to tackle climate change and tax breaks, exacerbated the problem.

Family controversy hounds presidency

Controversy around the career of his son, Hunter, followed Biden throughout his presidency. Hunter Biden worked on the board of a Ukrainian energy company while his father served as vice president in the Obama administration, leading to accusations of corruption and misconduct.

In 2023, the House of Representatives opened an impeachment inquiry into whether Joe Biden had ever acted in a corrupt way in relation to his son's business dealings. By spring 2024, the campaign had petered out, with observers saying the Republicans would not be able to gather enough votes to impeach Biden.

Hunter Biden was indicted on tax evasion charges in 2023, and convicted on three felony charges regarding lies he told about drug use on a gun purchase form in 2024. He has denied any other wrongdoing.

Criticism over Israel

Some of the most vociferous criticism Biden faced from his left flank was over US support for Israel in the conflict following the Hamas-led attacks on Israel in October 2023. 

As Israel's troops launched massive attacks in Gaza in response, Biden emphasized his country's strong alliance with Israel and sent financial and military aid. Historically, the US has always been a partner of Israel. But as Israeli airstrikes killed more and more civilians in Gaza — the current death toll tops 39,000 — and the humanitarian situation there became catastrophic, many in the US, especially young voters, were appalled that their tax dollars were being used to fund Israel's military. 

Joseph Biden hold Benjamin Netanyahu's shoulder
Biden has been one of Israel's most consistent supporters throughout his careerImage: Avi Ohayon/Israel GpoI/Zuma/MAGO

Biden has issued several ultimatums to Israel about its conduct, first demanding that it increase the amount of humanitarian aid entering Gaza after Israel killed several World Central Kitchen workers in an airstrike in April; and then in May, when he opposed a ground invasion of Rafah, in Gaza's south, where more than a million Palestinians have sought safety, and paused the delivery of 3,500 bombs to Israel.

But the White House's red lines have proved flexible. UN experts have repeatedly criticized that the aid entering Gaza is wholly inadequate, and in July, announced that famine had spread through the entire Gaza Strip, with some 8,000 children affected by malnutrition according to recent UN counts. And as Israeli airstrikes killed scores of civilians sheltering in Rafah, the White House remarked that while the incidents were "heartbreaking," they did not cross the stated red line.

Biden stresses importance of bringing people together

It was perhaps Bernie Sanders, Biden's erstwhile rival for the Democratic nomination in 2020, who best encapsulated his character when he endorsed Biden for the presidential race. "I know you are the kind of guy who is going to be inclusive. You want to bring people in, even people who disagree with you. You want to hear what they have to say."

Biden himself has stressed time and time again how important it was for him to bring people together, as he did when Republican Nikki Haley withdrew from her party's presidential primary in March.

"I know that Democrats and Republicans and independents disagree on many issues and hold strong convictions," read a statement issued by Biden. "That's a good thing. That's what America stands for. But I also know this: what unites Democrats and Republicans and Independents is a love for America."

Carla Bleiker
Carla Bleiker Editor, channel manager and reporter focusing on US politics and science@cbleiker