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President Joe Biden appeared Friday in his first interview since last week's debate, which his supporters saw as key to address his poor performance.
To a crowd of invited supporters, Biden displayed more vigor and clarity than in his recent debate performance.
By Andrea Shalal, Stephanie Kelly and Kanishka Singh MADISON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden again called his debate against Republican opponent Donald Trump "a bad episode," but remained resolute in an interview with ABC News on Friday that he was the candidate to beat Trump in November's election.
President Joe Biden presented further excuses and took ownership for his poor debate performance, saying he was “sick” and “feeling terrible.”
ABC News' George Stephanopolous pressed the president about why he wasn't prepared enough to debate Donald Trump.
In a clip of his first interview appearance since his disastrous debate appearance, President Joe Biden blamed his performance on being "exhausted."
President Joe Biden heads to 2024 battleground Wisconsin on Friday for a closely-watched campaign rally and a critical interview with ABC News that could prove pivotal to his candidacy and presidency.
President Biden defiantly says he's 'staying in the race' during a campaign rally in battleground Wisconsin. In part of an ABC interview, he calls his debate performance last week a 'bad episode.'
President Joe Biden, fighting to save his endangered reelection effort, used a highly anticipated TV interview Friday to repeatedly reject taking an independent medical evaluation that would show voters he is up for serving another term in office while blaming his disastrous debate performance on a “bad episode” and saying there were “no indications of any serious condition.
Ingram asked four questions in his 18-minute interview. He asked if Biden could “speak to to some accomplishments that we may or may not be familiar with about your record, espe
President Joe Biden, in a primetime ABC interview, said he won't drop out of the 2024 election, downplaying his disastrous debate as a "bad night."
Luchando por salvar su campaña de reelección, el presidente estadounidense Joe Biden declaró el viernes en un mitin que seguirá en la contienda, mientras se prepara para una entrevista en una cadena televisiva en la que,
But in Wisconsin, Biden was focused on proving his capacity to remain as president. When asked whether he would halt his campaign, he said he was “completely ruling that out” and said he is “positive” he could serve for another four years.
Biden says he's 'staying in the race' as he scrambles to save candidacy and braces for ABC interview
In front of roughly 300 supporters at a Wisconsin middle school, Biden again acknowledged his subpar debate last week, saying he “can't say it was my best performance” but that amid speculation over what he would do,
President Joe Biden’s make-or-break interview with ABC News appears to have done little to win over skeptics in his party, with Democratic insiders believing he has failed to undo the damage caused by his dismal debate performance.
U.S. President Joe Biden may have seemed more coherent on Friday night's televised interview compared to the debate a week ago, but his odds of
President Biden is sitting with ABC News for an interview airing Friday in response to a poor debate performance that has left Democrats reeling and looking for a new party leader. The interview, conducted by George Stephanopoulos is airing on ABC.
Reaction to the Joe Biden interview from ABC’s George Stephanopoulos on Friday may or may not calm the Democrats clamoring for the president to step aside.
The interview with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos is expected to be intensive and probing, and two people familiar with the president’s efforts said he had been preparing aggressively.
President Joe Biden was set Friday to sit for a make-or-break ABC News interview after in Wisconsin as he seeks to turn his troubled campaign around after last week’s debate. The embattled 81-year-old president planned to answer questions from George Stephanopoulos in what his campaign called a crucial effort to refute concerns he is too old to run for four more year in the White House.
President Joe Biden sat Friday for his first television interview since his poor debate performance, a high-stakes moment of seeking to reassure allies and voters.
At a campaign rally in Madison, Biden gave supporters the pledge many were waiting to hear — and others, perhaps, were dreading.
President Joe Biden is fighting to save his endangered reelection effort Friday as he holds a rally and sits down for a network television interview in a pivotal battleground state, with his every answer sure to be scrutinized for evidence of his competency and fitness to run for office.
Reactions ranged from arguing over the President's mental fitness and interviewer George Stephanopoulos' professionalism The post Biden’s ABC interview Draws Defense, Despair, Some Disgust: ‘No Interview Could Reverse the Damage’ appeared first on TheWrap.
President Joe Biden will sit down for his first one-on-one network TV interview following his widely criticized performance at last week’s debate against former President and Republican nominee Donald Trump.
A defiant President Joe Biden on Friday downplayed his poor performance in last week’s debate in what had become a high-stakes interview on ABC, as questions swirled over the future
President Joe Biden will sit down with ABC News on Friday for his first television interview since last week's presidential debate.
In his first extended interview since a poor debate performance last week, a defiant President Joe Biden contended repeatedly that he had "a bad night" and refused to entertain stepping aside as the Democratic nominee.
President Joe Biden, fighting to save his endangered reelection effort, used a highly anticipated TV interview Friday to repeatedly reject taking an independent medical evaluation.
Joe Biden vowed Friday to stay in the White House race and blamed his dismal debate performance on "feeling terrible" due to a cold, as he sought to save his reelection campaign with a make-or-break TV interview.
The president made it through an ABC interview without any major blunders, but it appeared unlikely to fully tamp down concerns about his age and fitness for another four years and his ability to defeat Donald Trump in November.
During a radio interview Thursday, Biden said “I’m proud to be, as I said, the first vice president, the first Black woman to serve with a Black president” – scrambling some of his often-used lines about his pride in serving with the first Black president and choosing the first Black woman to be vice president.
President Biden is sitting with ABC News for an interview that will air Friday in response to a poor debate performance that has left Democrats reeling and looking for a new party leader. The interview,
President Joe Biden heads to 2024 battleground Wisconsin on Friday for a closely-watched campaign rally and a critical interview with ABC News that could prove pivotal to his candidacy and presidency.
A defiant Joe Biden told supporters Friday he would stay in the White House race and beat Donald Trump, as he readied for a crucial TV interview to persuade doubters