Joe Biden conducted an in-depth interview with George Stephanopoulos on Friday, following his predictable breakdown during the first presidential debate of 2024 against President Donald Trump.
During the conversation, Stephanopoulos asked Biden if he looked back on the debate after the public defeat.
Joe Biden responded: “I don’t remember.”
This ABC interview was supposed to end discussion of Biden’s decline
He immediately said he couldn’t remember whether he had seen the debate
he’s cooked pic.twitter.com/TsELNFUkdP
— Johnny Maga (@_johnnymaga) July 5, 2024
It was one of the only honest answers he gave during a sit-down with ABC News Democratic operatives.
After the debate, Democrats and their loyal media lackeys suddenly started worrying about Joe’s dementia. They haven’t said anything in several years, but now it’s a problem because the world knows Joe Biden went out to lunch and traditional media has been delivering him water.
On Saturday, The New York Times reported that a fundraiser for Joe Biden in Wisconsin had been canceled.
The New York Times reports:
Some of President Joe Biden’s fundraising events in the coming weeks are in jeopardy, with a potential fundraiser in Wisconsin falling through and a fundraiser in Texas censored over his relationship with Donald J. Trump. J. Trump’s poor debate performance left the debate unresolved.
Biden’s fundraising schedule is often fluid, as the White House and campaign juggle the complex logistics of official events with the competing demands of donors and financial staff. But his debate performance added an extra layer of uncertainty, with a growing number of major donors calling on Biden to abandon his reelection campaign to make way for the top contender.
The Biden campaign had discussed sending Mr. Biden to Wisconsin for a fundraiser in late July. That’s according to three people familiar with the plan. but Shortly after the debate ended, donors who had pledged large sums of money and attended the conference began to withdraw.
The campaign originally hoped to raise $1 million through the event, but after the debate, campaign officials readjusted the goal to $500,000, according to a person involved in arranging the event. Even so, Wisconsin donors proved unwilling to give Mr. Biden more money. Plans for the event have now been cancelled.