The aide told former President Joe Biden that he would discuss Donald Trump from his “standing of strength.” That was not what the June 2024 showdown was.
Trump says Biden is “b-tch’s son” on the Wannial Catraz Tour
President Donald Trump was shot during a tour of the Crocodile Alcatraz during former President Joe Biden’s immigration policy.
WASHINGTON – Joe Biden’s tragic June 2024 debate performance, his reelection campaign was over when the country witnessed the weak president losing his line of thoughts and struggling to finish his sentence.
Now, the newly emerging campaign memo shows how Aides persuaded Biden to argue Donald Trump from his “standing of strength,” and discussed it before early voting began in many battlefield states.
“Choosing the first discussion in the spring will allow us to reach the widest audience possible in the summer months before customs, Olympics and family holidays are prioritized,” said a note revealed by journalists Josh Dorsey, Tyler Paiger and Isaac Earnsdorf.
Through a note published by Politico on July 7, the advisor struggles to repeatedly repeat Biden’s height by calling him “you” in bold capital letters.
The June 2024 debate took place several months before the timeline of autumn debate proposed by the Committee on Presidential Debate.
“And more, if we can discuss it faster, Americans can show the strength of your leadership compared to Trump’s weakness and confusion, so that you can see him standing next to Trump and showing his leadership strength,” says the memo.
That didn’t turn out like that.
In the aftermath of the June 27 disaster, when Biden, then 81, froze at various points before television audiences, he faced pressure from influential donors and lawmakers.
Less than a month later, Biden announced he had stepped aside and approved Vice President Kamala Harris, 59, as a Democratic candidate. Harris, who has conducted the shortest presidential campaign in history, was cut off by Trump in November, closing his astonishing comeback.
Biden’s cover-up?
The notes stand in a keen position in contrast to the story imposed by the Trump administration, which denounced people close to Biden, including former First Lady Jill Biden, by confirming that the former president has minimal public exposure and has lapped his supposed decline in awareness.
James Comer, chairman of the House Oversight Committee, wrote to Biden’s doctors and former White House aides, requesting that he be appear in a transcribed interview as part of an investigation into Biden’s health and the use of autopens to sign presidential documents.
In June, Trump’s Justice Department began an investigation into the amnesty issued on the last day of Biden’s presidency, saying, “whether other people were using an autopen or other means to use him.”
Biden announced last month that he had been diagnosed with “aggressive” prostate cancer.
Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy is a White House correspondent for USA Today. x You can follow her at @swapnavenugopal

