The senator will not vote for the former president and believes Biden has gone âtoo far to the left.’
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) vowed to back whoever wins the 2024 presidential race, even if it is former President Donald Trump.
âWhenever our president is elected, duly elected by the people, which Joe Biden was done, which Donald Trump was done in 2016, Iâm going to do everything I can to help my president be successful,â Mr. Manchin said in a Feb. 24 interview with Fox. He was responding to whether he had any âfears for the countryâ if the Republican candidate was to win a second term. Mr. Manchin clarified that he will support President Trump if he wins the 2024 race, but âIâm not going to vote for Donald Trump.â
When asked about President Trump being potentially vindictive after his victory, Mr. Manchin said he would work with the GOP candidate to ensure that such things do not happen.
âYou’d hope that we could have reasons, sit down and make sure he doesnât use the vengeful vindictive tone heâs been touting right now, and use a common decency that we all have and have to have in this type of civility, in a civil country that we have,â he said.
âSo, letâs see what happens there. I will not support someone whoâs told me what theyâre going to do and how theyâre going to govern. But if theyâre in that position, Iâm going to try to work with them to bring them back to common sensibility.â
Commenting about President Joe Biden, Mr. Machin said he hopes the Democrat âwould come back to what he said he was in 2020, the person Iâve known forever and be more centrist, center-left maybe.â
âIâm trying to do everything I can to make sure that we have a pathway forward where the center of this country is going to be represented … thatâs the center-left and center-right. Thatâs where the decisions [are], thatâs where people live their lives. Thatâs the type of government they want. They donât want the extremes.â
Biden âToo Far Leftâ
In his interview with CNN, Mr. Manchin made it clear that he will not endorse President Biden in the 2024 White House race.
âIâm not endorsing anybody right now. Weâre going to see what all happens,â he said. âIâve had this conversation with him and with his people that heâs gone too far to the left. Theyâve pushed him and pulled him, and whatever. But thatâs not where America is. Thatâs not where our country is,â he explained.
âIâm hoping the Joe Biden that we saw in 2020 will be the Joe Biden we see in 2024 if that can be done. If not, itâs going to be a long road for everybody.â
President Biden is not the person to unite the country as he doesnât have the knowledge or ability to do so, he said.
Speaking to NPR, Mr. Manchin suggested President Biden and his campaign should tone down their âextremeâ leftist leanings.
âHow did he win in 2020? Look at the rhetoric that was used back then. Itâs not extreme. Everything that was said and everything he showed people was what he’d done through his experience being in the Senate and then being vice president,â he said.
âAnd [voters] said, âYeah, this man is more moderate than most, heâs easy to work with. He looks at the facts and makes decisions.â Thatâs what he had been known for. And now I think people believe that he has gone too far to the left.â
He criticized President Bidenâs campaign team for âplaying to the baseâ rather than the moderate, centrist, independent voters who he thinks will decide the 2024 race. âTheyâre not talking to them.â
In the poll, 45 percent of such people said they would vote for President Trump in the 2024 race, a four percentage point lead over President Bidenâs 41 percent. Among independents, President Trump had an eight-point lead.
In November, Mr. Manchin announced that he had no intention to run for another term in the Senate, a seat that he has occupied for more than a decade since 2010.
âAfter months of deliberation and long conversation with my family, I believe in my heart of hearts that I have accomplished what I have set out to do for West Virginia … I have made one of the toughest decisions of my life and decided that I will not be running for reelection to the United States Senate,â he said in a video announcement on X (formerly Twitter).
âI will be involved in making sure that we secure a president that has the knowledge, and has the passion, and has the ability to bring this country together.â
Even though the 76-year-old explored a third-party run, he finally decided against it. âThe system right now is not set up for [it]. [In] the long game, maybe we can make a third-party viable where it has a process and opportunity. Right now, itâs very challenging.â
âAnd Iâm not going to be a deal breaker, if you will, spoiler, whatever you want to call it,â he said. âI just donât think itâs the right time.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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