Joe Biden’s re-election campaign faces new challenges: it’s not 2020
- Joe Biden’s clear path to the 2024 nomination will be a markedly different experience from four years ago when Covid sharply limited travel
- This time, 80-year-old Biden will have to juggle running for office while running the country, likely with more traditional campaign stops

It won’t be a campaign from the basement this time.
As US President Joe Biden gears up for a bruising re-election battle, the realities of the 2024 race and differences with 2020 at the height of the coronavirus pandemic create new challenges for him.
In 2020, Biden kept a low profile as the spread of Covid-19 caused havoc to most aspects of American life, including the election campaign that pitted him against then-President Donald Trump, a Republican.
Trump still spoke at big rallies, but Biden did much of his campaigning virtually from the basement of his home in Wilmington, Delaware, largely avoiding crowds to prevent the spread of disease and reduce his own risk of catching the virus.
That will change this time around. Gone will be the aversion to public events, large and small, likely replaced by traditional campaign stops at diners, factories and union halls with handshakes, selfies, and crowds of people.