Democratic Frontrunner Joe Biden Falls in Recent Poll. Can He Get Up?

When last we left you, Joe Biden added two more flubs to his ever-growing gaffe list. Along with that were heightened concerns being expressed by Democrats that Biden may no longer be cut out for the rough and tumble of the campaign trail.

Questions have popped up over the last few weeks about Biden’s age, mental acuity, and toughness. Now comes the news that will be even more unwelcomed by his campaign. A new poll released Monday by Monmouth shows a significant drop in his numbers, putting him in a three-way tie:

Joe Biden’s support in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination is slipping, according to a new survey from Monmouth University Poll that shows the former vice president dropping below 20 percent.The survey showed Biden with support from 19 percent of Democratic and Democratic-leaning voters nationally, a double-digit decline from Monmouth’s most recent poll in June when he led the pack with 32 percent.Now, the dynamics have changed, according to the Monmouth survey. Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), the primary field’s top progressive candidates, are each at 20 percent, putting them in a statistical tie with Biden and indicating a tightening three-way race.

Since he entered the race, Biden has suffered some minor ups and downs in polling. However, he has consistently remained on top by large margins. This one is quite different and some Democrats, including Van Jones, say Biden should be “very concerned.”

But could this poll be an outlier, as the Biden campaign suggested? Polling guru Larry Sabato dug into the numbers, and thinks it might be:

On the question of “Can Joe get up?” after taking a fall in the polls, the answer is yes:

Former Vice President Joe Biden increased his lead atop a crowded field of Democratic presidential candidates by 2 points, a new poll finds.Biden now has the support of 33 percent of Democratic primary voters across the nation, according to the Morning Consult survey, 13 percent above the next-most popular candidate, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)Rounding out the top five are Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) at 15 percent, followed by Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) at 8 percent and South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg at 5 percent, the poll shows.[…]The Morning Consult poll surveyed more than 17,300 voters between Aug. 19 and Aug. 25. Its margin of error is 1 percent.

But though the Joementum Express continues to roll on, the Gaffetastic Machine isn’t far behind. Biden was at it again late last week in New Hampshire, and added more flubs to the list:

But at a campaign stop in Croydon, New Hampshire, he tried to assure voters that he was “not going nuts” just because he kept forgetting or misstating things:

2020 presidential hopeful Joe Biden continued his string of gaffes at a campaign stop in New Hampshire on Friday, where he had to reassure the crowd that he wasn’t losing his mind.Biden spoke at the Ivy League college, Dartmouth, several hours before the campaign event, but had trouble remembering the specifics of his surroundings and whether or not he spoke at a medical school.“I just spoke at Dartmouth on health care, at the medical school — or not — I guess it wasn’t actually on the campus but people from the medical school were at the — I want to be clear, I’m not going nuts,” he told the crowd.”I’m not sure whether it’s a medical school or where the hell I spoke, but it was on the campus,” he added, as the crowd laughed.

Watch:

Regarding the age question, during a press gaggle in New Hampshire Saturday Biden told reporters that if voters were that concerned about his age, then they shouldn’t vote for him:

As it turns out, Biden’s age is the one issue voters seem to have with the frontrunner, according to 538’s Nate Silver, who also believes Biden has an “Iowa problem.”

Meanwhile, do we have a scandal brewing in BidenWorld? Politico reports:

Joe Biden’s younger brother told potential business partners that the former vice president would help their firm land business with court systems and would incorporate their health care model into his 2020 presidential campaign, according to new allegations made in a court filing in Tennessee.The allegations are consistent with others made over the years that relatives of Biden have sought to enrich themselves off of his public service. But they go further, representing the first explicit claims that James Biden offered to have the former vice president use his clout to further private business interests.The allegations come in sworn declarations made by executives at firms suing Biden’s brother that were filed in federal court on Friday. They do not allege any wrongdoing by Joe Biden or indicate that the former vice president had knowledge of his brother’s alleged promises.

File that one under “one to watch” in the coming months.

— Stacey Matthews has also written under the pseudonym “Sister Toldjah” and can be reached via Twitter. —

Tags: 2020 Democratic Primary, Democrats, Joe Biden, Polling

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