President Joe Biden has had a pretty solid summer break. With midterm primaries finally finished, Democrats are heading into the general election season with the wind at their backs following a string of wins, both legislatively and politically.
Despite the tailwind, Democrats are wary about having their party’s standard-bearer on the hustings this fall. “I don’t think there’s any Democrat in a competitive district who is clamoring for Biden to come,” an aide to a high-profile Democrat in a tough race told NBC News recently. “The White House wants to show that they’re back or whatever, but there’s just a disconnect.”
Honestly, that wariness makes a certain brutal sense when you consider the dynamics at play in the battle to control the House. But that makes less sense when you consider the struggle for the Senate. And there’s a threat that in trying to put some distance between themselves and the president, candidates may wind up obscuring some of the best arguments out there for sending them to Congress.
Democrats are wary about having their party’s standard-bearer on the hustings this fall.
Just a few weeks ago, Biden had hit the lowest approval rating of his presidency, a terrible place to be when you’re about to beg for votes around the country. But since that nadir, he’s bounced back from “mostly dead” to somewhere in the neighborhood of “yeah, he’s all right, I guess.” Not exactly the best place to be but still around where his most recent predecessors hovered just ahead of the midterms.
But while Republican candidates were tripping over one another to have then-President Donald Trump stump for them in 2018, Democrats’ coolness toward Biden echoes the way they treated then-President Barack Obama in 2014. Democrats had already lost control of the House in a 2010 “shellacking.” With the Senate on the line as well, candidates were wary about linking themselves with the president. Beyond just not wanting him to campaign for them, candidates ran ads highlighting the differences they had with him, with one candidate refusing to say if she’d voted for Obama at all.
As you may recall, that strategy didn’t work out for the Democrats. Their losing the Senate gave the GOP the power it used to block a Supreme Court nominee and dozens of other seats on the federal bench. Many Democrats in 2014 preferred Biden.
“I’ve been invited to go into, well, over 128 races so far,” Biden told CNN back then. “And so there are some places the president is considerably more popular than I am, but there’s some places where I can go in and the president can’t.” My, how the tables have turned, as Obama, not Biden, is prepared to headline a Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee fundraiser next week.








