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Nolte: Biden Campaign Chair — ‘We Had Two Very, Very, Very…Very Bad Weeks’

Top Points:

  1. Biden Campaign's Struggles: Jen O’Malley Dillon, Biden's campaign chair, admitted to having two very difficult weeks, emphasizing the campaign’s recent struggles and the morale issues within the team. This admission was made during an all-hands campaign call and highlighted by Axios.

  2. Polling and Campaign Resilience: Despite admitting some "slippage" in the polls, Dillon remains optimistic, stating that the race is still within the margin of error and that the campaign is confident about winning North Carolina. She praised Biden’s resilience, noting his ability to keep fighting despite numerous challenges.

  3. Media and Democrat Party Delusions: The Democrat Party and media's belief that they had successfully covered up Biden’s frailty was misguided. The debate performance did not change public perception as expected. The panic within the party and media is primarily driven by the fear of losing to Donald Trump, rather than concerns over Biden’s health.


Full Report:

Jen O’Malley Dillon, the chair of President Joe Biden’s struggling reelection campaign, confessed during a campaign call last week, “We had two very, very, very hard weeks, very bad weeks. I told you I’d level with you, they’ve been bad f***ing weeks.” Notably, this was before the alleged assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump.


This revelation was reported by Axios, which obtained a recording of the call.


Dillon encouraged her team to disregard the “crazy f***ing gossip land world.”


“These two weeks have really sucked, and it is hard, there is no doubt about it,” she continued. “And it’s hard for all of us because we are doing the job.”


Trying to boost the morale of a team already expressing doom and gloom to the media, she said, “If we can get through these two weeks that we’re living through, we can get through anything.”


Dillon shared that Biden’s top political adviser, Mike Donilan, stated he has “never seen a presidential candidate have more thrown at him than Joe Biden and do you know what Joe Biden does every day? He gets up and he keeps fighting.”


Regarding polling, she mentioned “a little bit of slippage, but nothing significant, nothing massive, no bottom falling out” and that public polling aligns with their internal data, showing this is still a margin-of-error race. The campaign remains “bullish” on winning North Carolina.


From my perspective, this isn’t shocking. As I noted post-debate, “I suspect the debate didn’t hurt Biden as much as those freaking out believe[.]” The Democrat Party and corporate media’s attempt to cover up Biden’s mental and physical frailty wasn’t effective. Everyone knew Biden was old and frail. That debate performance wasn’t surprising to anyone outside the CNN bubble.


But Democrats and the media deluded themselves into thinking they had convinced the public, believing Biden’s poor performance would be a game-changer.


It wasn’t.


After the NATO press conference, it’s clear that unless something major happens, Biden will be the nominee. This race remains tight, and the Democrats’ and media’s panic has nothing to do with Biden’s mental state. Their sole concern, as they openly admit, is beating Donald Trump.


If Biden were in a full-blown coma but still leading Trump by five points, we’d be told he’s “sharp as a tack.”


If Biden survives, watching the media’s narrative shift post-Democrat convention will be amusing. They’ll claim, “Nevermind, he’s fine. Fit as a fiddle.”


Original Story by John Nolte, Breitbart

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