Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

World Americas

Update

Who will replace Joe Biden in 2024 White House race?

US President offers full support and endorsement for Kamala to be nominee of the party



US President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.
Image Credit: X / Joe Biden

Washington: Joe Biden's withdrawal from the race for the White House leaves a gap atop the Democratic presidential ticket that the party is now rushing to fill.

Here is a look at potential replacements:

Kamala Harris

She seems like the obvious choice, and Biden has given her his endorsement.

US Vice President Kamala Harris, who has been a heartbeat away from the Oval Office since Biden's January 2021 swearing in, is well positioned to be the Democratic Party's standard-bearer.

Advertisement

The 59-year-old Harris, the daughter of a Jamaican father and an Indian mother, is a trailblazer.

She was the first Black person and the first woman to serve as California's attorney general, and then was the first US senator of South Asian descent.

Biden quits race

She is now the first woman and first Black vice president.

During her career as a prosecutor, Harris had a reputation for being tough - a trait she could use to advantage in a campaign expected to focus on crime and immigration.

Advertisement

But some progressive Democrats have been critical of her strict punishment of minor offenders, saying it disproportionately affected minorities.

Harris also suffers from a dismal approval rating, which could prompt Democrats to find another solution.

Gavin Newsom

There is no rule that a running mate automatically replaces the presidential candidate in the case of a withdrawal. This is why California Governor Gavin Newsom's name keeps popping up.

The 56-year-old Democrat, a former mayor of San Francisco, has been at the helm of the Golden State - the most populous in the United States - for five years, and has made it a haven for abortion access.

Newsom steadfastly supported Biden and dismissed talk of replacing him prior to the Democrat's withdrawal, but he has also made little secret of his own presidential ambitions.

Advertisement

In recent months, he has increased his international travel, run multiple ads touting his record, and invested millions of dollars in a political action committee, fueling speculation that he will run in 2028. So why not 2024?

Gretchen Whitmer

Another possible Democratic candidate is Gretchen Whitmer, the 52-year-old governor of Michigan.

Her state has both a strong working-class population and major Black and Arab American communities - all key groups of voters that Biden struggled to court.

Whitmer, a fierce critic of Trump, is perhaps best known for being the intended target of a kidnapping plot devised by a far-right militia group.

Michigan will be one of the crucial battleground states in the November 5 presidential election - a strong argument, according to her supporters, for naming Whitmer as a candidate.

Advertisement

Josh Shapiro

Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro leads the biggest swing state in November's race.

The 51-year-old, who was elected in November 2022 with a convincing victory over a conservative rival and took office in early 2023, previously was elected twice as the state's attorney general.

He condemned Catholic priests who had sexually abused thousands of children and prosecuted Purdue Pharma, the maker of the powerful opioid painkiller OxyContin.

Shapiro is an effective speechmaker and an avowed centrist - qualities that could propel him to national office.

The rest

Other names circulating include Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, Maryland Governor Wes Moore and Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear, but their chances so far seem limited at best.

Advertisement

Senator Amy Klobuchar and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, who both ran against Biden in the 2020 primaries, have also been mentioned.

Advertisement