Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) appears on “Meet the Press” on Sunday, July 7, 2024, in Washington, DC.
William Plowman | NBC Universal | Getty Images
Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., on Wednesday urged President Joe Biden to withdraw from the race for the 2024 presidential election.
Schiff said in a statement that he had “serious concerns about the president’s ability to defeat Donald Trump in November.”
“While the choice to withdraw from the race is President Biden’s alone, I believe it is his time to pass the torch,” Democratic candidate Schiff said. United States Senate The seat from California is the favorite to win in November.
“Doing so will allow us to defeat Donald Trump in the upcoming election and thereby secure his leadership,” Schiff said.
The lawmakers’ public statement comes a day after New York Times According to reports, he warned Democratic donors in Long Island, New York, on Saturday that if Biden becomes the presidential candidate, the party may lose its existing majority in the Senate and fail to gain control of the House of Representatives.
“I think if he was our nominee, I think we would fail,” Schiff reportedly told donors.
Schiff was one of the most prominent Democrats to publicly call on Biden to drop out of the race after the president’s poor performance in a debate with Republican nominee Trump in late June.
Since that debate, Biden has been adamant that he will not withdraw, despite concerns that his mental acuity has deteriorated during his three years in the White House. The president said last week he would not give up the campaign unless polls showed “you can’t win,” adding, “There are no polls showing that.”
CNBC has asked the Biden campaign to comment on Schiff’s statement.
Schiff said in a statement that Biden “is one of the most important presidents in our country’s history” and that the president “has changed our country for the better during his lifetime as a senator, vice president and now president.”
“But our country is at a crossroads,” Schiff said. “A second term as president would undermine the foundation of our democracy, and I am deeply concerned about the president’s ability to defeat Donald Trump in November.”
The congressman added, “But make no mistake, whoever our party ultimately nominates, or if the nomination remains up to the president, I will do everything in my power to help them succeed.”
“There is only one goal: defeat Donald Trump,” he said. “The stakes are too high.”