President Joe Biden, who dropped out of the race, will jump back into next week with campaign stops in two key battleground states.
President Joe Biden is gearing up to hit the road next week with visits to Wisconsin and Michigan, as he ramps up efforts to showcase his administration’s work on reducing costs for Americans.
These stops are seen as a strategic move to bolster Vice President Kamala Harris’s campaign in key battleground states ahead of the November election, following Biden’s decision to step down from the race.
The White House announced that Biden will travel to Wisconsin next Thursday, where he plans to emphasize the administration’s investments in local communities.
The following day, he will head to Michigan to deliver a similar message.
These visits will follow a Monday rally in Pennsylvania, where Biden will join Harris for their first joint campaign event since she officially took the reins as the Democratic nominee.
This trio of stops marks Biden’s return to the campaign trail after weeks of limited public appearances, focusing his attention on states that form the so-called “Blue Wall.”
Winning these states—Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania—will be crucial for Harris as she faces off against former President Donald Trump in November.
Trump Meets Gabbard in Wisconsin
Trump and Vance have also been focusing on swing states.
Gabbard is a former Democrat who left the party in 2022 and has since endorsed Trump.
He hopes her presence, as well as that of Robert F. Kennedy Jr, will sway independent voters to his side.
At the event, Gabbard discussed her struggle with fertility which allowed Trump to bring up his new proposal for IVF.
“We are going to be — under the Trump administration, we are going to be paying for that treatment,” he said in an earlier interview with NBC News, adding that would apply to “all Americans who get it; all Americans who need it.”
Does crazy Joe know he isn’t the nominee yet?