Many in the Biden campaign are worried about the administrative structure of the incumbent’s 2024 reelection campaign, and some are painting an apocalyptic picture if things aren’t changed quickly.
President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign is split between Delaware and the White House, straining the infrastructure of the campaign, according to a report from the New York Times.
Matt Bennett, co-founder of the progressive Third Way think tank, went so far as to warn that the consequences of a failure of the Biden reelection campaign could mean the destruction of the United States.
“Everybody’s nervous,” he told the outlet, “and the downside risk isn’t that Mitt Romney becomes president. It’s that the republic collapses, and so people are really scared.”
Aside from historic-low approval ratings for Biden, concerns within the campaign are centered on the potential consequences of the bifurcated structure of the campaign. Campaign figures have been arguing for months about when to relocate the campaign to Delaware fully, something the president has repeatedly put off.
The result is a campaign with two centers of gravity, campaign officials juggling administrative jobs, and discord around consolidation.
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Officially, Biden’s campaign has shrugged off any suggestions that the campaign is in disarray.
“We invite everyone concerned about the existential threat that Donald Trump and MAGA Republicans pose to our freedom and democracy to channel their energy toward organizing, donating and talking to their friends about the stakes of this election,” Kevin Munoz, a Biden campaign spokesman, told the New York Times.