Joe Biden admits mistakes in televised debate against Donald Trump

“I was wrong, I made a mistake,” Joe Biden doesn’t mince words when he says…

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“I was wrong, I made a mistake.” Joe Biden is not mincing words when describing his disastrous television duel with Donald Trump. In a radio interview on “The Eangram show”, recorded yesterday, the American president admitted all his difficulties in the confrontation with the tycoon. A clear defeat that led dozens of Democratic governors to doubt Biden’s candidacy for the White House and to press for his withdrawal. So much so that a meeting was held after which the governor of Minnesota, Tim Walz, said that “all the Democratic governors are on the side of Joe Biden and we all want to win in November.” The meeting with the president and his approximately 30 colleagues in the White House “was a frank and sincere dialogue,” said Walz. Is Biden withdrawing? Kamala Harris is the natural replacement. But voters are cheering for Michelle Obama. “The president assured us that he is running to win,” added the governor of New York State, Kathy Hochul. Representing all their colleagues, New York Governor Kathy Hochul, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Maryland Governor Wes Moore stressed the risks of a second Donald Trump presidency and stressed that the president “is here to win and we have pledged our support to him.” Asked by reporters if he considered Biden “fit” for office, Walz replied with a firm “yes.” Also yesterday, Biden attended a brief ceremony at the White House to posthumously award the Medal of Honor to two Civil War soldiers. The president spoke briefly, assisted by the inevitable screen, and then left the event hall without answering questions shouted by the many journalists present. The New York Times: Sessions starting at 11 a.m. at Camp David and a nap after lunch Justifying himself for the televised confrontation with Trump, Biden said Tuesday evening, at a fundraiser in McLean, Virginia, that he knew it had not been brilliant. “I almost fell asleep on stage, actually. But it’s the fault of the exhausting trips I made beforehand: two trips around the world. I was warned, but I made them anyway: it was not a happy choice. I did too much foreign policy.” And it is the New York Times that scrutinizes his days before the televised confrontation. “The tour de force ended eleven days before the debate, after which there were two days of absolute rest. Then a week at the Camp David ranch, where the work sessions never started before 11 a.m. and were never too intense, because Biden never gave up his afternoon nap.” According to the American newspaper, these are excuses to justify a debacle that was difficult to imagine on the eve. And now? The choice, confirmed for the moment, to run for the White House. At his side his wife Jill, his sister, his son and those advisers from the circle of loyalists. And little more noise around, to avoid being absorbed by negativity. Will it be enough? The polls are relentless and have already given their answer.

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