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Where Joe Biden stands on issues that matter to voters

WASHINGTON (NewsNation) — After heeding calls from his party to drop out of the 2024 race for the White House, President Joe Biden has passed the torch to Vice President Kamala Harris, but his views may still help shape the Democratic Party platform.

Following his performance in the first debate, Democrats feared Biden would not be able to beat former President Donald Trump in November. Though the president initially resisted pleas to step aside, he eventually passed the torch to Harris, who has energized Democratic voters.


Ahead of the 2024 election, NewsNation is committed to covering the issues that matter most to voters so they can make the most informed choices possible at the polls. You can also read similar policy breakdowns for former President Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Here’s a look at Biden’s policy positions and political views:

What the polls said

Trump maintained steady support in the 2024 election as the presumptive Republican nominee when Biden was in the race, leading Biden 47% to 45% across seven key states following the first presidential debate of 2024, according to a recent Bloomberg/Morning Consult poll.

New York Times analysis of recent polling from July also showed that if the election were held then, Trump would have won with 312 Electoral College votes, taking nearly every swing state with him along the way.

The Cook Political Report predicted Trump would win a trio of critical swing states: Nevada, Georgia and Arizona. Biden won all three of those states in 2020.

While the Cook Political Report listed Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin as toss-ups prior to Biden’s departure, Trump led in those polls in all three states. Biden won all three in 2020, and those states could prove critical in determining a winner this November, too.

Many of those polls have been revised since Harris became the nominee. The Cook Political Report revised Arizona, Georgia and Nevada predictions, labeling those states a toss-up rather than leaning Republican.

Polling from The New York Times/Siena College also shifted, with Harris leading in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, though results were within the margin of error.

Biden’s political tenure

A longtime senator and later vice president in former President Barack Obama’s administration, Biden ran in 2020 as a “uniter in chief” seeking to heal the country from what he contended was years of division under Trump.

Since taking office, Biden has signed legislation that provided stimulus money in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, invested in infrastructure projects across the country and bolstered American clean energy initiatives.

Much of his first term, though, has been mired by high inflation, a record number of migrants crossing the southern border — two years in a row — and a spike in violent crime in many major cities.

Student loan forgiveness, education

Inflation, economy and national debt

Violent crime, mental health

Gun reform, ghost guns

Border crisis and immigration

Stance on Israel and Palestine, war in Ukraine

China’s military aggression, role in fentanyl production

Child care availability and costs

Abortion, birth control

Fentanyl crisis, opioid epidemic

Climate change, global warming

Social Security, Medicare

Rural development

NewsNation’s Devan Markham contributed to this report.