House Democrats circulate letter asking DNC not to rush Biden nomination


President Joe Biden walks out of the Oval Office toward Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, July 15, 2024.

Samuel Corum | Afp | Getty Images

House Democrats are circulating a letter for signatures that urges the Democratic National Committee to slow down its nomination process for President Joe Biden.

The letter asks the DNC to cancel its plan to hold a “virtual roll call” to officially nominate the president. This process could begin as soon as Sunday, weeks ahead of the Democratic convention where the nominee is typically voted on in person.

“Stifling debate and prematurely shutting down any possible change in the Democratic ticket through an unnecessary and unprecedented ‘virtual roll call’ in the days ahead is a terrible idea,” the letter read.

The letter has received over 20 signatures so far, including from Reps. Jared Huffman, D-Ca., Mike Levin, D-Ca. and Susan Wild, D-Pa., two sources told NBC News.

Huffman is one of the several members leading the effort to rally signatures, a spokesperson for his office confirmed to CNBC.

“Rep. Huffman and other members are very concerned with this extraordinary attempt to speed up the nomination, and do not think brute force is the way to achieve enthusiasm,” the spokesperson said.

The signers have a diverse range of stances on Biden’s reelection bid, the sources said. Levin, for example, has openly called on Biden to bow out of the race while Wild has not yet commented publicly.

The DNC decided to move forward with the virtual roll call approach in May, accelerating the nomination timeline to meet the Aug. 7 deadline to get its nominee onto the ballot in Ohio, a state that has become more of a Republican stronghold in recent years.

Ohio has since moved its ballot deadline to the end of August, but the DNC has maintained its expedited nomination plan.

Read more: 2024 U.S. presidential election

In the drafted letter, House Democrats said that without the legal justification of the Ohio ballot deadline, the sped-up nomination process would be viewed as a “purely political maneuver.”

Despite Capitol Hill’s concerns, the DNC doubled down on the virtual roll call decision in a statement: “The suggestion that the timeline for the virtual roll call has been accelerated is false. The timeline for the virtual roll call process remains on schedule and unchanged from when the DNC made that decision in May,” the DNC said.

The Biden campaign also stood by the virtual roll call plan during a Tuesday press conference in Milwaukee.

“I think the answer here is very simple, it is the fact that, you know, there have been virtual roll calls in previous presidential elections,” Biden’s deputy campaign manager Quentin Fulks said. “Ohio Republicans decided to play games…It is our obligation as a campaign to make sure that President Biden is on the ballot.”

The letter comes as some Democrats continue to call on Biden to bow out of the presidential race following his weak debate performance in June against…



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