in uncharted territory. the party is waking up this morning to one mounting question. is it time to bail on president biden? all attention will be on his campaign rally later today in north carolina. good morning, i m dana perino. bill hemmer is off today and glad to have you with me good. bret: talk about historic night and historic morning, we ll see. bret baier, welcome to america s newsroom. the president struggling to clearly articulate his message at last night s debate sending democrats into full panic mode and calls to replace him at the top of the ticket are getting even louder. take a look at this at some of today s front pages. blistering in their assessment of the president s performance. disaster, disoriented, death con one all used to describe this. even the president s steadfast supporters in the mainstream media struggling to find a silver lining. up until now you have seen democrats in the media shaming any warning of biden s confusion as, quote, manipula
The dissatisfaction with the presidential front-runners among a key coalition of voters who may vote third party or not at all poses a serious threat to the president’s re-election effort.
The first time Lucy VanDyke voted for president, she reluctantly supported Joe Biden. But she says she won’t be doing that again. Like many young voters, VanDyke, a 23-year-old independent from Grand Rapids, Michigan, is unhappy with Biden’s stewardship of the economy and his support for Israel’s military campaign in the Gaza Strip, and she has concerns about his age. Should Biden face Donald Trump again, VanDyke said she would support a third-party candidate. “I don’t want a Biden-Trump rematch
G.O.P. presidential candidates have not aggressively courted Gen Z, even as young voters increasingly show an openness to new candidates and a concern for new ideas.