June 28, 2024, reaction and analysis of Biden-Trump’s presidential debate | CNN Politics

June 28, 2024, reaction and analysis of Biden-Trump’s presidential debate

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CNN's Daniel Dale fact checks Trump's and Biden's claims made in debate
04:13 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • Not dropping out: President Joe Biden’s campaign says he will not exit the 2024 race following a shaky CNN debate performance. Those in the president’s orbit are working to allay alarm and insist on moving forward amid some calls for a last-minute change. Watch the full debate here and read a transcript here.
  • NYT urges him to exit: In a blow to the president, the New York Times Editorial Board on Friday urged him to leave the race following his debate performance. The Biden campaign downplayed the call, noting the board had not endorsed him in the Democratic primary in 2020.
  • What Trump’s saying: The former president celebrated on Friday. “We had a big victory against a man that is really looking to destroy our country,” Trump said at a Virginia campaign rally. Read fact checks of the candidates’ claims here.
  • Supreme Court decision: Meanwhile, the Supreme Court issued a ruling Friday that limits obstruction charges in the January 6 Capitol rioters case. The court is expected to decide on Trump’s absolute immunity claim on Monday.
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Our live coverage has ended. Follow the latest news or read through the updates below. 

Biden advisers are making calls to ease donors' concerns, source says

President Joe Biden’s advisers spent part of Friday making calls to ease concerns among some Democratic donors following his shaky debate performance as it prepared for a long-planned fundraising push this weekend.           

After a post-debate stop in the battleground state of North Carolina, the president is now in New York City attending a fundraiser with LGBTQ+ supporters. The event is expected to bring in more than $3 million, a source familiar with the matter said. The source noted it’s the most money raised at the LGBTQ+ Gala, typically an annual event taking place around Pride Month. 

Tickets for the event ranged from $250 to $500,000, according to an invitation seen by CNN.

The president and first lady also are set to attend three fundraisers on Saturday – two in the Hamptons and one in Red Bank, New Jersey. 

The fundraising swing comes on the heels of the campaign saying it raised $14 million around debate day. A campaign official said Thursday marked their most successful grassroots fundraising day since the campaigns launch in April 2020. 

Even before his shaky debate performance, Biden was set to face a key fundraising test at month’s end after raising $85 million between his campaign and joint Democratic fundraising committees. Former President Donald Trump raised $141 million that same month, eroding the financial advantage Biden had for most of the cycle. 

"When Joe gets knocked down, Joe gets back up." Jill Biden talks about debate performance at NY fundraiser

First lady Jill Biden speaks at the grand opening ceremony for the Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center on June 28, in New York.

First lady Jill Biden spoke personally about her reaction to President Joe Biden’s debate performance Thursday night, telling a group of supporters at a fundraiser in New York that she reassured her husband. 

Biden has long been one of her husband’s top campaign trail surrogates and fiercest defenders and is expected to continue to use her role in support of the president’s candidacy in the coming months. 

 “What my husband does know how to do is tell the truth,” she said. “When Joe gets knocked down, Joe gets back up, and that’s what we’re doing today.”

Catch up as Biden campaign cleans up and Trump takes a victory lap after Thursday's presidential debate

President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden leave the stage during a campaign rally in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Friday.

Thursday’s presidential debate on CNN sent shockwaves through Joe Biden’s campaign as the president gave a shaky performance. Meanwhile, Donald Trump’s performance gave his campaign and allies a boost of enthusiasm.

The debate was watched by 51.27 million viewers on television, according to Nielsen data.

As the Biden campaign cleans up, staffers indicated that Biden will still participate in the September debate.

Here are the most notable updates since last night’s debate:

Biden’s high-energy rally: Biden gave a rousing speech before a crowd of supporters in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Friday, conceding he’s “not a young man” but making it clear he has no intention of leaving the 2024 race for the White House. Biden criticized Trump, calling the former president a “threat to our freedom, he’s a threat to our democracy, he’s literally a threat for everything America stands for.” He called Trump a “one-man crime wave” who has “no respect for women or the law” and attacked the former president’s debate showing, repeatedly hitting him for falsehoods.

Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally in Chesapeake, Virginia, on Friday.

Trump’s victory lap: At a campaign rally in Virginia, Trump on Friday took a victory lap, saying it was “a big victory against a man that is really looking to destroy our country.” He added that Biden’s problem is not his age. “He’s grossly incompetent. You know, they keep saying old, I know people that are much older than him that are doing unbelievable things,” Trump said.

Biden allies rally behind him: Democratic Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania told his party to “Chill the f**k out.” He wrote on X (not utilizing the asterisks), saying he knows firsthand that “a rough debate is not the sum total of a person and their record.” Democratic leadership also came out in support, including House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and others. Former Presidents Barack Obama and Clinton also spoke in support of Biden. Biden advisers spent Friday morning calling Democratic members of Congress, donors and other key supporters in hopes of allaying some of the widespread panic about the debate.

New York Times Editorial: The newspaper’s editorial board called on Biden to leave the race for the White House. “The president appeared on Thursday night as the shadow of a great public servant. He struggled to explain what he would accomplish in a second term. He struggled to respond to Mr. Trump’s provocations. He struggled to hold Mr. Trump accountable for his lies, his failures and his chilling plans. More than once, he struggled to make it to the end of a sentence,” the Board wrote. “The greatest public service Mr. Biden can now perform is to announce that he will not continue to run for re-election.” The president’s campaign downplayed the editorial, with one adviser saying “the last time Joe Biden lost the New York Times editorial board’s endorsement, it turned out pretty well for him.”

Harris calls Biden a "profound thinker" during fundraiser in Utah

Vice President Kamala Harris reiterated that President Joe Biden’s debate performance got off to “a slow start,” but said that her running mate is a “profound thinker,” according to a pool report from her Utah fundraiser. 

She compared the administration’s accomplishments to a CVS receipt, saying it “just goes on and on and on.” 

Her comments come as CNN has reported Harris has rushed to Biden’s defense. Campaign staffers watching her interviews audibly cheered her on from Wilmington headquarters Thursday night after the debate. 

Second gentleman Doug Emhoff also spoke at the fundraiser, calling on donors to support President Biden.

House Democrats in competitive races are polling on impact of Biden's debate performance

People watch the presidential debate during a watch party at Union Pub in Washington, DC, on Thursday.

House Democrats in competitive races and states are currently polling on the impact of President Joe Biden’s debate performance on their races, according to two sources familiar with the Biden campaign and the response on the Hill.

The sources acknowledged that Biden’s performance was a disaster and that members were worried about the down ballot impact.

A second source said the campaign is circling the wagons but down-ballot Democrats are worried the debate will hurt close races. 

“This f**king sucks,” one source said. “He (Biden) can survive this, but just this.” 

After the State of the Union during which Biden far exceeded expectations, both sources said they were shocked at the debate.

Both sources acknowledged that discussions were going on about whether Biden should step aside, and admitted they were surprised “the dam had held” among Democrats on Capitol Hill. 

The results of the polling are expected early next week and, depending on the numbers, will be shared with the Biden campaign. 

“If the data reveals the House is slipping away” leadership will talk to the White House, said one source. 

“Not everyone is handwringing,” added the source, but “we do need to know how it may hurt Democrats attempt to win back the House.”

Biden campaign downplays New York Times Editorial Board's call for the president to leave the race

President Joe Biden’s campaign is hitting back at the New York Times Editorial Board’s call for the president to leave the 2024 race following his debate performance.

The Times had endorsed two Democratic presidential candidates in 2020: Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Elizabeth Warren.  

Remember: The editorial board said Friday that Biden “is not the man he was four years ago” and criticized his rationale for running, saying it was a “reckless gamble.”

Trump praises Supreme Court decision on January 6 charges

Former President Donald Trump on Friday praised the decision by the US Supreme Court to limit the power of prosecutors to pursue obstruction charges against those who rioted at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, which narrowed a law that could have tacked years onto the sentences of hundreds of defendants.

Trump again called for the release of those jailed in connection to the insurrection. 

Some context: The Supreme Court ruled Friday that the Justice Department overstepped by bringing obstruction charges against hundreds of people who rioted at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, prompting at least some of those cases to be reopened. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the opinion for a 6-3 majority.

Read the court’s full decision.

Fact check: Sea levels already rising faster per year than Trump claims they might rise over "next 497 years"

The Pacific Ocean and coastline are seen in Ventura, California, in 2022.

The day after their CNN presidential debate, former President Donald Trump cited a wildly inaccurate figure about sea levels to mock President Joe Biden’s debate claim that “the only existential threat to humanity is climate change.”

Trump said at a Friday rally in Virginia that “global warming is fine,” rejecting the view of the overwhelming majority of scientists.

And he said of Biden: “He said it again last night, that global warming is an existential threat. And I say that the thing that’s an existential threat is not global warming, where the ocean will rise – maybe, it may go down, also – but it may rise one eighth of an inch in the next 497 years, they say. One eighth.” He added what appeared to be a joke: “Which gives you a little bit more waterfront property if you’re lucky enough though.”

Facts FirstTrump’s claim about the expected pace of sea level rise is not even close to correct. The global average sea level is currently rising more per year than Trump claimed that people say it will rise “in the next 497 years.”

NASA reported in March that the current global average sea level rise in 2023 was 0.17 inches per year, more than double the rate in 1993. And a World Meteorological Organization report this year said the rate of sea level rise between 2014 and 2023 was about 0.19 inches per year.

In other words, sea level rise is already more than an eighth of an inch annually – and it is accelerating. NASA found a jump of 0.3 inches between 2022 and 2023.

Gary Griggs, a University of California, Santa Cruz professor of earth and planetary sciences who studies sea level rise, said last year that Trump’s similar claims “can only be described as totally out of touch with reality” and that Trump “has no idea what he is talking about.”

Sea levels rise by different amounts in different locations. For the US, sea levels are expected to rise particularly fast for the east coast and Gulf of Mexico coast – and Trump’s state of Florida, which is bordered by both of those coasts, is expected to be affected more severely than many other coastal states.

In fact, Trump’s claims about sea levels are highly inaccurate for the area near Mar-a-Lago, which is on the Atlantic. Griggs noted in a June email that data from the closest National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration tide gauge to Mar-a-Lago shows an increase of an eighth of an inch roughly every nine months.

Trump has made similar claims since his last presidential campaign - sometimes saying the estimate is an eighth of an inch increase over 200, 250, 300 or 400 years.

Trump has also previously made the joke about rising seas creating more waterfront property. In reality, rising sea levels are expected to have devastating consequences not only for many seafront properties but for areas further inland – rendering some communities uninhabitable and others more dangerous, increasing the frequency and reach of flooding, making hurricanes more destructive, and damaging infrastructure and ecosystems.

New York Times Editorial Board calls for Biden to leave the race following his debate performance

President Joe Biden debates with former President Donald Trump at CNN's Atlanta studios on Thursday night.

The New York Times Editorial Board is calling on President Joe Biden to leave the race for the White House after his performance at CNN’s presidential debate.

“The president appeared on Thursday night as the shadow of a great public servant. He struggled to explain what he would accomplish in a second term. He struggled to respond to Mr. Trump’s provocations. He struggled to hold Mr. Trump accountable for his lies, his failures and his chilling plans. More than once, he struggled to make it to the end of a sentence,” the Board wrote.

There are Democratic leaders who would make for a “compelling and energetic” alternative to Trump, the Board stated.

“There is no reason for the party to risk the stability and security of the country by forcing voters to choose between Mr. Trump’s deficiencies and those of Mr. Biden. It’s too big a bet to simply hope Americans will overlook or discount Mr. Biden’s age and infirmity that they see with their own eyes,” the Times also said.

The Board goes on to say it would still Biden support as its “unequivocal pick” if the choice remains between him and former President Donald Trump.

Trump says he doesn’t think Biden will drop out and bashes Newsom and Harris

Former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally in Chesapeake, Virginia, on Friday.

Former President Donald Trump on Friday said he didn’t think President Joe Biden would exit the presidential race after his shaky debate performance and bashed California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Vice President Kamala Harris as potential replacements. 

He described Newsom as “one of the worst” governors.

“And of course, Kamala is somebody that will be on the scope. It might’ve been Joe Biden’s single best decision, putting her as vice president. Might’ve been his best, because nobody wants that. I do, I’d be very happy with that,” Trump said.

Some voters says Trump's vice presidency pick weighs more heavily after debate

As voters absorb the CNN debate between former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden, some are considering the vice presidential role more heavily this election cycle – given the ages of both candidates.

Biden is 81 while Trump turned 78 earlier this month

Trump has yet to select a running mate, though he signaled last weekend he’s made up his mind. 

Alissa Baker, who was part of Nikki Haley’s Virginia leadership team, said she would love to see the former South Caroline governor as Trump’s VP. The shortlist candidates don’t really “move the needle” for her right now, but she mentioned Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin as a selection she would support.

Donny Crummet, a conservative from Massachusetts, said the vice president role is fairly important, but won’t determine his vote. 

“Whoever (Trump) picks, it has to be someone strong, but I don’t necessarily think it’s like an overriding issue on whether it’s going to get my vote one way or the other,” he added. 

Crummet said he wants to see Ramaswamy as his running mate, though CNN previously reported he is not in contention for the role but rather for a potential cabinet position.

 After the debate, Baker said a “trust factor” has been diminished with the Biden campaign who have been insisting on the president’s strength. 

 “We see with our own eyes, and it’s like you’re kind of gaslighting us,” Baker said. 

Kari Lake says the debate showed Biden is "not equipped to run this country"

Arizona Republican Senate candidate Kari Lake speaks at a press conference in Laveen Village, Arizona, on Friday.

Arizona Republican Senate candidate Kari Lake on Friday said last night’s debate between President Joe Biden and Donald Trump showed that Biden is “not equipped to run this country.”

Lake said she believes the 25th Amendment, which allows the vice president and majority of the Cabinet to remove the president, should be considered.

“I think they should look into that,” she said, adding later that “as a citizen, I’m concerned about our country with somebody who is in that level of cognitive decline running the show, if indeed he is running the show.”

Analysis: Trump relishes a winning streak on the debate stage and in the courts

Donald Trump used to tell his fans that he’d win so much, they’d get tired of winning.

This week, that might be true for once.

President Joe Biden’s incoherent and painful debate performance in Atlanta on Thursday night gave Trump a massive victory in the most pivotal moment of the 2024 White House campaign so far as he seeks to win a non-consecutive second term and pull off a stunning political comeback.

Hours later, a US Supreme Court ruling that the Justice Department overstepped in charging January 6 Capitol rioters handed the presumptive Republican nominee what he immediately hailed on social media as a “BIG WIN.” The 6-3 decision was a symbolic victory for the ex-president the day after he used the debate to try to whitewash the worst attack on democracy in modern times.

There could also be legal ramifications with some scholars arguing the ruling could narrow the scope of Trump’s federal election interference trial, even if special counsel Jack Smith believes his case can proceed unaffected. The ex-president’s lawyers are already signaling they will seek to get evidence tossed and obstruction counts against the ex-president dismissed.

The court released its decision ahead of an even more critical case that will bear more directly on Trump’s criminal entanglements. On Monday, justices are expected to finally rule on his expansive claim of immunity for acts committed while president. If the long-awaited ruling by the conservative-majority court mandates new litigation in a lower court, it could have the effect of pushing Smith’s election interference trial well beyond November’s election even if it does not immediately curtail aspects of the special counsel’s prosecution.

Read more analysis of Trump’s winning week

Biden receives show of support from NY Democrats as he celebrates LGBTQ+ Americans

President Joe Biden and Sen. Kirstin Gillibrand attend an event at Stonewall Inn in New York on Friday.

President Joe Biden received a notable show of support from two top New York lawmakers Friday after what some Democrats described as a disastrous debate showing.

Speaking at an event at Stonewall Inn commemorating Pride Month and the role of the site in the gay rights movement, Biden recognized New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and Sen. Kirstin Gillibrand, whom he ran against in the 2020 Democratic primary. Biden asked where both were and called them up to the podium, giving each a hug.

Biden otherwise did not address the debate as he heralded the role of LGBTQ+ Americans.

Stonewall Inn, he said, “remains a symbol of the legacy and leadership of the LGBT community – especially trans women of color.”

Biden said he was “proud” to unveil “the first-ever LGBTQ+ visitor center at a national park in America.” 

Biden recalled his own experience watching two men kiss when he was a young man: His father told him, “It’s simple Joey, they love each other,” he said.

“Today, let’s proudly remember who we are: we’re the United States of America,” he said, adding, “Everybody deserves to be treated with dignity and respect, no matter their background.”

Biden told the crowd that he wanted “to say a hell of a lot more, but I’m not going to,” going on to introduce “dear friend” Elton John.

Biden said his family “loves (John’s) iconic music” and heralded the “sheer willpower” with which he helped lead the fight against HIV/AIDS.

Foreign diplomats react with horror to Biden’s dismal debate performance

President Joe Biden’s dismal showing at the CNN presidential debate against former President Donald Trump resonated around the world, with foreign diplomats expressing shock and concern while raising questions about the implications for a consequential US election that could upend the foreign policy status-quo should Trump be reelected.

“Hard to watch,” is how multiple foreign diplomats described the debate between Biden and Trump on Thursday night.

The overwhelming sentiment among more than half a dozen diplomats from Europe, the Middle East and Asia that CNN spoke to was that it was “a bad night for Biden,” as one European diplomat explained.

“Trump ate him alive,” said an Arab diplomat.

“I was shell-shocked. I could not believe my eyes,” an Asian diplomat said of Biden’s performance.

Biden’s debate flop was front page news across Europe, with newspapers left- and right-leaning excoriating the president – even in France, where the country has its own elections coming up this weekend.

Trump takes victory lap after Biden's shaky debate performance

Former President Donald Trump arrives to a rally at Greenbrier Farms on June 28 in Chesapeake, Virginia.

Former President Donald Trump on Friday took a victory lap at a Virginia campaign rally following Thursday night’s CNN presidential debate.

Trump added, “Despite the fact that crooked Joe Biden spent the entire week at Camp David resting, working, studying; he studied very hard, he studied so hard that he didn’t know what the hell he was doing.”

Trump, who is only three years younger than Biden, continued arguing that Biden is not too old to be president and instead said he was “incompetent.” 

“Joe Biden’s problem is not his age; it’s not his anything really, he’s got no problem other than it’s his competence, he’s grossly incompetent. You know, they keep saying old, I know people that are much older than him that are doing unbelievable things,” Trump said.

Harris admits Biden’s weak performance during first post-debate campaign stop as she courts Latino voters

Vice President Kamala Harris acknowledged President Joe Biden’s debate performance last night “was not his best” as she outlined three contrasts between him and Donald Trump while courting Latino voters during her first post-debate campaign stop in Nevada.

“Last night, President Joe Biden and Donald Trump had their first debate, and earlier today the president said himself it was not his best performance. But there are three things that were true yesterday before the debate that are still true today. Let’s level set on this,” Harris said to a crowd in Las Vegas.

Harris blasted Trump for what she referred to as a “nonstop stream of lies” during his debate performance, pointing to some of the more than 30 false claims he made last night. And she reminded voters that Biden narrowly won the battleground state in 2020.

“Let’s not forget he beat Donald Trump once, and in Nevada with your help. We’re going to do it again,” Harris said.

Harris highlighted the stakes for Latinos in the upcoming election, emphasizing issues such as women’s reproductive rights, the economy and upholding democracy. During her roughly 12-minute remarks, she urged Nevadans to vote in November, emphasizing the weight they hold in the election.

Biden’s campaign concedes he "didn't have the best night," but is committed to second debate with Trump

President Joe Biden’s campaign on Friday conceded he “didn’t have the best night” on the debate stage, but an official said the campaign is committed to move past his lackluster performance.

Tyler said the campaign has held “no conversations whatsoever” about Biden dropping from the race. He said Biden is committed to appear in a second debate with Trump on September 10.

Tyler added that the 11 p.m. hour on Thursday was “our most successful grassroots fundraising hour of the entirety of the campaign.” Tyler did not provide a dollar amount.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre confirmed Biden had a cold and sore throat Thursday night.

Biden campaign will hold routine all-staff meeting Friday in wake of debate

The Biden campaign will hold an all-staff meeting Friday afternoon on the heels of President Joe Biden’s disastrous debate performance, two Biden campaign officials told CNN — part of what they say is a routine pattern of Friday meetings. 

Still, the meeting comes at a critical moment for the president and his team as he seeks to chart a path forward following the debate and his energized delivery on Friday in North Carolina. 

For his part, Biden is on his way to New York, where he will attend an event at Stonewall Inn, a historic site for the gay rights movement. He also will attend a series of campaign fundraisers on Friday and Saturday, which come as he will need to reassure donors he is up to the task.