New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on June 12th declined to answer whether she’s backing Joe Biden’s 2024 reelection campaign. The radical left-wing legislator was asked on CNN’s “State of the Union” if she will be backing Biden– but evaded the softball question, stating Democrats have to get through the fall’s midterm elections.
“First of all, I’m focused on winning this majority right now and preserving a majority this year in 2022,” Ocasio-Cortez, who represents the Bronx and Queens, told host Dana Bash.
“So we’ll cross that bridge when we get to it,” she continued. “But I think if the president has a vision, then that’s something certainly we’re all willing to entertain and examine when the time comes.”
Bash pushed back, pointing out, “That’s not a yes.”
“Yes, I think we should endorse when we get to it,” Ocasio-Cortez replied. “But I believe that the president has been doing a very good job so far. And should he run again, I think that we will take a look at it.”
The second-term congresswoman, 32, has actually repeatedly alerted Biden, 79, that he runs the risk of losing the assistance of progressive and more youthful party voters, and urged him to fulfill his campaign pledge and use executive action to ‘forgive’ billions or even trillions of dollars in student debt.
According to The Brookings Institute, “In terms of its scale in budget and cost to taxpayers, widespread student loan forgiveness would rank among the largest transfer programs in American history. Based on data from the Department of Education, forgiving all federal loans (as Senator Bernie Sanders proposed) would cost on the order of $1.6 trillion.[1] Forgiving student debt up to $50,000 per borrower (as Senators Elizabeth Warren and Chuck Schumer have proposed) would cost about $1 trillion. Limiting loan forgiveness to $10,000, as President Biden has proposed, would cost about $373 billion. Under each of these proposals, all 43 million borrowers would stand to benefit to differing degrees.”

“But, this is really about the collapse of support among young people, among Democratic base, feeling like they worked overtime to get this president elected and they aren’t necessarily being seen,” she said in an interview this spring.
Ocasio-Cortez’s balking at endorsing Biden comes as a report in the New York Times on Sunday said that Democrats are uneasy with the Biden’s lagging poll numbers and the regime’s hit-or-miss response to inflation and rising gas prices have them looking at alternative candidates in 2024.
The progressive darling also defended her decision to back state Sen. Alessandra Biaggi in her Democratic primary challenge to Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, the chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.
“I think we have seen from prior primaries throughout this year that a motivated, young, multiracial, multiclass base is exactly what the Democratic Party needs in order to win in November,” she told Bash
She brought up Greg Casar, a progressive former city council member in Austin, Texas, who won the Democratic primary in March, and Summer Lee, a state representative in Pennsylvania, who won the Democratic primary in May, as the type of candidates Democrats should be seeking out.
“When we are able to elect representatives that excite the Democratic base, that excite young people, that excite a multiclass, multiracial coalition, then that puts us in an even better position to win in November,” Ocasio-Cortez said.
“I think, right now, there are a lot of voters at home that have quite a bit of anxiety about the enthusiasm right now in terms of turnout for the Democratic Party. And I think one of the best things that we can do is elect people with a proven record of being able to excite a base and turn it out,” she said on CNN.
But Bash asked her if she was “comfortable” endorsing a candidate who is running against a member of the Democratic Party leadership.
“I believe that, every single year, every single one of us as a voter has the possibility to elect a representative that best suits them,” the self-described Democratic socialist said.
She also said that lawmakers should not be “elected in perpetuity.”
“Our party’s dynamic. And, right now, millennials are deeply underrepresented in Congress, compared to baby boomers and Gen X’ers back when they were our age, frankly,” she said. “And, at the end of the day, we need to have a generational shift in the United States Congress in order for us to have a policy shift in the United States Congress.”
H/T The New York Post, Brookings Institute