Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, makes his way to House votes in the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, June 5, 2024.
Tom Williams | Cq-roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images
Rep. Lloyd Doggett of Texas urged President Joe Biden on Tuesday to “make the painful and difficult decision to withdraw” from the 2024 presidential race.
Doggett, 77, is the first sitting Democratic lawmaker to formally call on his own party’s incumbent to drop his reelection bid against former President Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee.
The call significantly escalates pressure on Biden, 81, whose disastrous debate against Trump last week set off waves of panic among his supporters about whether he is capable of winning in November and serving another four years in the White House.
But Biden and his team have so far shut down any suggestion that he will leave the race.
In response to Doggett’s statement, a Biden campaign official told NBC News: “He’s staying in.”
That and other post-debate assurances from Biden and the campaign have done little to quell Democrats’ mounting concerns, some of which are already boiling over into public view.
“I think it’s a legitimate question to say, is this an episode or is this a condition?” former House speaker and current Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Tuesday on MSNBC.
She recommended that Biden sit for multiple face-to-face interviews with “serious journalists” to reassure his allies. Biden has participated in fewer press conferences or interviews than many of his modern peers.
ABC News announced Tuesday afternoon that Biden will sit with news anchor George Stephanopoulos for his first one-on-one interview since the debate.
The interview will apparently not be held live: ABC said it will air its first clip Friday on “World News Tonight,” followed by an extended interview Sunday on “This Week.”
Doggett, meanwhile, explicitly tied his decision on Biden to the president’s performance in Thursday’s debate.
“President Biden has continued to run substantially behind Democratic senators in key states and in most polls has trailed Donald Trump,” Doggett said in a press release. “I had hoped that the debate would provide some momentum to change that.”
“It did not,” he wrote. “Instead of reassuring voters, the President failed to effectively defend his many accomplishments and expose Trump’s many lies.”
“Too much is at stake to risk a Trump victory—too great a risk to assume that what could not be turned around in a year, what was not turned around in the debate, can be turned around now.”
The Texas Democrat also warned of the threat that a second Trump presidency would pose, pointing to the Supreme Court’s decision this week to grant “presumptive immunity” to former presidents for all their official acts.
“Trump, newly-empowered with immunity, could usher America into a long, dark, authoritarian era unchecked by either the courts or a submissive Republican Congress,” Doggett’s statement said.
He encouraged Biden to follow the lead of former President Lyndon Johnson, who voluntarily declined to seek a second term in office.
“Under very different circumstances, [Johnson] made the painful decision to withdraw. President Biden should do the same,” Doggett said.
“My decision to make these strong reservations public is not done lightly nor does it in any way diminish my respect for all that President Biden has achieved,” he said.
“Recognizing that, unlike Trump, President Biden’s first commitment has always been to our country, not himself, I am hopeful that he will make the painful and difficult decision to withdraw.”