Could Democrats Replace Biden at the Top of the Presidential Ticket?

While it is possible, it would most likely lead to political upheaval in the party unless the president decides to step aside on his own terms.

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Could Democrats Replace Biden at the Top of the Presidential Ticket? | INFBusiness.com

President Biden’s debate performance on Thursday has some Democrats looking at whether — and how — he could be replaced at the top of the ticket.

A once politically far-fetched question — can President Biden be replaced at the top of the Democratic Party presidential ticket — has taken on new urgency after Mr. Biden’s halting debate performance against former President Donald J. Trump.

The short answer is yes — assuming Mr. Biden decides on his own to step aside. But if Mr. Biden decides not to step aside, the short answer is probably no.

Either way, the process would be complicated and would open the door to political upheaval between now and when Democratic delegates gather to vote for a nominee at their convention in August.

Mr. Biden has the power to leave the race and release all the pledged delegates he has accumulated — 3,894 of 3,937 committed so far, according to a tally by The Associated Press — during his march to the nomination. If he were to do so, those delegates would be free to vote for whomever they chose. That would lead to an open convention, a rarity in modern American politics.

The prospect raises many questions.

No. He could certainly endorse a successor, and that would count for something. But once the delegates are free, they are free. Loyalty to Mr. Biden, which runs deep, does not automatically extend beyond him. And there could be a floor fight over who would emerge as the nominee, highlighting already festering ideological divides in the party, and potentially weakening a future Democratic candidate heading into the fall campaign.

ImageIf Mr. Biden were to leave the race, Vice President Kamala Harris would be on a short list of contenders to replace him, but she would not be guaranteed the nomination.Credit…David Walter Banks for The New York Times

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Source: nytimes.com

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