President Biden is holding a solo press conference today â his first since November â to conclude the NATO summit in Washington, D.C., Thursday evening. A number of questions heâs received are about whether he should remain at the top of the Democratic ticket. The news conference represents one of his biggest public tests since last monthâs unsteady debate performance, which caused alarm among Democrats on Capitol Hill and raised concerns about whether he should be the partyâs 2024 presidential nominee.
The president has acknowledged he had what he says was a âbad nightâ at the debate and he has been trying to prove he can be the nominee and defeat former President Donald Trump. But the president didnât help his case when, shortly before the press conference, he introduced Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as âPresident Putin,â sparking audible gasps in the room.
The president soon realized his error and corrected himself, retaking the podium. âIâm so focused on beating Putin,â Mr. Biden explained.
The president has a lifelong reputation of being prone to gaffes â but on Thursday night, he canât afford them.
The president began the press conference by touting the successes and history of NATO.
âFor those who thought NATOâs time had passed, they got a rude awakening when Putin invaded Ukraine,â he said.
And the president sought to contrast himself with Trump.
âMeanwhile, my predecessor has made it clear he has no commitment to NATO,â Mr. Biden said.
Biden: Harris is âqualified to be president â thatâs why I picked herâ
As he began to take questions, the president stumbled almost immediately.
The president was asked what concerns he has about the ability of Vice President Kamala to beat Donald Trump if she were at the top of the ticket.
âLook, I wouldnât have picked Vice President Trump to be vice president if I didnât think she was qualified to be vice president,â he responded.
Asked about Harrisâ qualifications later, Mr. Biden said she is âqualified to be president â thatâs why I picked her.â
Biden says running is not about his legacy
CBS News chief White House correspondent Nancy Cordes asked the president if heâs spent time thinking what it would mean for his legacy if he were to stay in the race and then lose to Trump.
âWell look, Iâm not in this for my legacy,â the president replied. âIâm in this to complete the job I started.â
The president pointed to the strength of the economy, and how inflation has stabilized.
What spurred this concern about Bidenâs campaign?
During the debate, Mr. Biden, 81, stumbled early on, flubbing lines as his voice appeared ready to give out. His campaign later said he was suffering from a cold. His voice never recovered throughout the 90-minute debate, he failed to effectively respond to a number of false statements made by Trump during the debate, and at times he lost his train of thought. At one point, he struggled to name Medicare when answering a question about the tax rate for wealthy Americans, and then said that âwe finally beat Medicare.â
Mr. Bidenâs campaign had hoped to allay concerns about his age with the early debate, but instead, that performance is now threatening his political future.
Recently, Mr. Biden said the NATO summit could be a test of his fitness for office, and Democrats on Capitol Hill, Democratic governors and world leaders will be watching, too.
âWhoâs going to be able to hold NATO together like me,â the president challenged ABCâs George Stephanopoulos in an interview last week. He added, âI guess a good way to judge me is youâre going to have now the NATO conference here in the United States next week. Come listen. See what they say.â
Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland told the Washington Post the NATO summit âgives [Mr. Biden] an opportunity to showcase his leadership and foreign policy credentials, and the press conference gives him an opportunity to address concerns.â
The president has declined to agree to take a in-depth neurocognitive test, telling Stephanopoulos on Friday that every day in office is a cognitive test.
âIâm running the world,â the president said.
Aside from the ABC News interview, the president has largely relied on teleprompters to deliver speeches. Some Democrats say they want to see the president unscripted on the campaign trail and to meet with him in person, while reporters have called on the president to hold a press conference as soon as possible.
Whatâs happened at NATO?
Russiaâs war on Ukraine continues to be a key theme for NATO, as Mr. Biden and other world leaders make the case that Russia will not stop at Ukraine. The president announced air defense equipment will be given to Ukraine by the U.S., Germany, the Netherlands, Romania and Italy. In the coming months, the U.S. and its partners will provide Ukraine with dozens of additional tactical air defense systems, he said.
âWe know Putin wonât stop at Ukraine. But make no mistake â Ukraine can and will stop Putin,â the president said of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Latest information about the presidentâs health
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said this week that the president has not been diagnosed with Parkinsonâs disease or any other serious neurological disorder.
On Tuesday, Jean-Pierre said Walter Reed neurologist Dr. Kevin Cannardâs January visit to the White House was not for the purpose of treating the president. But on Tuesday night, the Associated Press reported that Cannard visited Mr. Biden at the White House in January. Jean-Pierre then released a statement saying that Cannard had in fact met with the president at the White House in January, but only as a part of his annual physical, the rest of which was completed in February.
The White House and the president say heâs up for another four years on the job, despite concerns from voters and some Democrats.
How is Biden polling against Trump?
CBS News polling shows Mr. Biden has slipped slightly in head-to-head polling against Trump, although within the margin of error. Trump now has a 3-point edge over Mr. Biden across the battleground states collectively, and a 2-point edge nationally. Thatâs due in part to Democrats saying theyâre less likely than Republicans to âdefinitelyâ vote.
Mr. Biden has cast doubt on polling and his low approval numbers. When Stephanopoulos said heâs never seen a president reelected with a 36% approval rating, the president retorted that he doesnât believe the number.
âWell, I donât believe thatâs my approval rating,â the president told Stephanopoulos. âThatâs not what our polls show,â though he declined to provide any specific numbers.