| Former Vice President Joe Biden said Sunday he would “absolutely” consider serving two terms as president, if elected (The Hill). His response during an ABC News interview amended his previous reference to potentially serving as a “transition president” following the Trump era. Biden will be 78 on Nov. 20 and would be the oldest candidate elected president. If he ran for reelection in 2024, he would be 81. ABC’s David Muir asked if “transition president” meant Biden was committing himself to a single term. “No, it doesn’t mean that,” Biden responded. “So you’re leaving open the possibility you’ll serve eight years?” Muir asked. “Absolutely,” Biden said. During the interview, the candidate acknowledged that age and mental acuity are legitimate considerations for voters in 2020. It was reported last year that Biden signaled to aides that he’d serve a single term, if elected, elevating the importance of his vice presidential pick (Politico). The former vice president released a summary of his medical history on Dec. 17, which described him as “fit to successfully execute the duties of the presidency” (The Hill). President Trump is 74 and has nicknamed his opponent “Sleepy Joe” while his supporters repeatedly taunt Biden as dimmed by age and all but hidden away by campaign aides in his Delaware basement in front of a teleprompter. “Watch me,” Biden told ABC during an interview conducted last week (The Hill). Biden and Trump are scheduled to meet during the first of three debates on Sept. 29. Politico: Biden also told ABC he'd lock down the country if the spread of the coronavirus warranted it. ABC News: Biden to “Good Morning America” on his “you ain’t black” comment made on a radio show in May: “I shouldn’t have said it,” but argues there’s a “fundamental difference” with Trump on the issue of race. “I wouldn't be here without the African American community.” Fox News: Former Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake joins more than two dozen former Republican members of Congress to launch “Republicans for Biden.” Today, Trump and the GOP are prepared to kick off the party’s national convention in a sprint to try to defeat Biden in November. The incumbent president trails in national and battleground polls against his challenger amid the headwinds of a struggling economy and a deadly pandemic. The GOP will officially renominate the president as part of a week-long MAGA celebration that will include events in Charlotte, N.C., the White House, in downtown Washington and at Fort McHenry in Baltimore. The festivities follow an all-virtual Democratic convention last week and a post-convention bump in polls for Biden and running mate Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), according to surveys released on Sunday. As The Hill’s Brett Samuels writes, Trump once again enters the GOP convention as the underdog, facing an increasingly narrow path to reelection as he has found himself on the defensive in multiple states and has had issues defining Biden as effectively as he did Hillary Clinton four years ago. Trump and his allies maintain that the national and state polls paint a different picture than what they see internally, pointing to an intensity among the president’s base they believe is unrivaled on the other side of the aisle. However, the scene is vastly different than it was in 2016. Biden has a net-positive favorability rating, which was not the case for Clinton, and the coronavirus has ravaged the country, tanking the economy, which was among the president’s top selling points prior to March. Niall Stanage: The Memo: Trump bets it all on the base. Peter Baker, The New York Times: After another week of setbacks, Trump looks to change the story line. The Washington Post: Trump looks to Republican convention for campaign reboot. NBC News: White House transforms from people’s house to campaign venue. On Sunday, the Trump campaign rolled out the list of speakers set to appear during each night of the convention, headlined by Trump’s speech on the South Lawn of the White House (seen below) on Thursday. Axios’s Jonathan Swan reported that Trump is expected to make appearances during each night of the confab and that he and his family are set to play starring roles throughout the week. Outside of Trump, the initial list of speakers features multiple GOP heavyweights who are possible contenders for the 2024 GOP nomination whether Trump wins or loses in November, including Vice President Pence, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.). Just as notable is the list of those who are not on the list, including a horde of other potential 2024 possibles, such as Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.), and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.). Florida is a must-win state for Trump, but at the moment, the state’s governor and senators do not have speaking roles at the convention. Also omitted are Senate Republicans who face tough contests in November — except for Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) — and Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), a potential party leader in a post-Trump GOP and the highest ranking woman in the House Republican Conference, who has not shied away from criticizing the president on occasion (The Washington Post).  © Getty Images Like its Democratic counterpart the week prior, the Republican National Convention is taking on a completely different feel as a result of COVID-19, which has forced the parties to rely on virtual events as large gatherings are unable to be held for the foreseeable future. As Morgan Chalfant notes, Trump hasn’t held a traditional rally since the infamous June event in Tulsa, Okla., forcing him to find other ways to get out his message and excite his supporters. In recent months, Trump has turned to official White House events and appearances in either the Rose Garden or the James J. Brady Briefing Room to pan Biden and Democrats or to roll out parts of his agenda. The Associated Press: Trump delivered on some big 2016 promises, but others are unmet. While Trump garners the lion’s share of attention, the week will also provide an opportunity for Pence to step into the spotlight as he is set to deliver his acceptance speech as the vice presidential nominee on Wednesday night. The theme of Wednesday’s programming is “Land of Heroes,” with the vice president likely to pay homage to front-line workers and the country's history during his address from Fort McHenry, the latter a nod to the campaign's messaging that a Democratic win would fundamentally change the country. As Brett Samuels reports, Trump allies and sources close to the campaign acknowledge that Pence does not excite voters in the same way Trump does, or the way Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) may invigorate the Biden campaign. But Pence has remained a steadfast ally of the president, who has returned the favor, with the VP emerging once again as a key player in the quest for a second term. The Washington Post: White House counselor Kellyanne Conway will leave the West Wing at the end of August after working with Trump since he was a candidate for the presidency. Her husband, conservative lawyer George Conway, will step back from his role with the anti-Trump political action committee the Lincoln Project, reports Ashley Parker. The couple said they want to spend more time with their four children. George Conway tweeted that he continues to “passionately” support the defeat of the president in November, but will be doing less tweeting. The Daily Beast: In the last four years, Trump son-in-law and White House adviser Jared Kushner and Russian sovereign wealth fund CEO Kirill Dmitriev, an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, have communicated in private about ways the U.S. and Russia could work together. The New York Times: How Stephen Bannon’s wall group used Trump ties and social media to raise millions of dollars in donations for a project that prosecutors allege included fraud. Evan Osnos, The New Yorker: Can Biden’s center hold? The Hill’s roundup of Sunday talk shows: Leaked audio of Trump’s sister reverberates. The Washington Post: White House officials and the Trump campaign on Sunday dismissed secret audio in which Trump’s sister says “you can’t trust him.”  © Getty Images |