Joe Biden, fighting to save his endangered reelection effort, used a highly anticipated TV interview Friday to repeatedly reject taking an independent medical evaluation that would show voters he is up for serving another term in office while blaming his disastrous debate performance on a «bad episode» and saying there were «no indications of any serious condition.»
«Look, I have a cognitive test every single day,» Biden told ABC's George Stephanopoulos, referring to the tasks he faces daily in a rigorous job. «Every day, I have that test. Everything I do. You know, not only am I campaigning, but I'm running the world.»
The 81-year-old Biden made it through the 22-minute interview without any major blunders that would inflict further damage to his imperiled candidacy, but it appeared unlikely to fully tamp down concerns about his age and fitness for another four years and his ability to defeat Donald Trump in November.
It left Biden in a standoff against a not-insignificant faction of his party with four months to go until Election Day, and with just weeks until the Democratic National Convention. The drawn-out spectacle could benefit Biden's efforts to remain in the race by limiting the party's options to replace him. But it also could be a distraction from vital efforts to frame the 2024 race as a referendum on Trump.
During the interview, Biden insisted he was not more frail than earlier in his presidency. He said he undergoes «ongoing assessment» by his personal doctors and they «don't hesitate to tell me»