A leaked memo first obtained by The Washington Post has revealed that Sen. Bernie Sanders has not ruled out a run for the White House in 2024 if President Joe Biden declines to run for re-election.
If Sanders believes that the third time’s a charm, it wouldn’t be entirely without reason.
Given that the primary reason Biden wouldn’t run again is because of his age — he was already the oldest president to be sworn into office, and he would be 81 on Election Day 2024 — it raises the question of why Sanders would throw his hat in the ring. The democratic socialist from Vermont would break Biden’s record for oldest president if he won — Sanders would be 83 by Election Day 2024.
It’s unclear how likely this scenario is, since Biden may indeed run again, and Sanders said in May 2020 that the likelihood that he runs again for president is “very, very slim.”
But to the extent that it’s a possibility, there are at least three potential factors here. Here’s a quick rundown.
(1) Politicians often run for the same office over and over again in hopes of finding an opening. Biden didn’t get anywhere in the Democratic primaries in his first two tries for president, but he decisively won the nomination on his third attempt. Sanders has a stronger record of failures. When he made his first attempt in 2016, he shocked everyone in the nation — including himself — with how well he fared against Hillary Clinton. In the initial primaries of 2020 he looked even better, and appeared to be on the path to potentially win the Democratic primaries until the moderates in the field all dropped out and consolidated behind Biden ahead of Super Tuesday.
Without Biden in the running, Sanders would arguably for the first time not be competing against a presumed nominee or dominant front-runner veteran of Democratic politics. (It’s worth noting that Vice President Kamala Harris could evolve into that role, but she got no traction in the 2020 primary season and doesn’t command the consensus of the party establishment as of now.) If Sanders believes that the third time’s a charm, it wouldn’t be entirely without reason.
(2) Sanders hasn’t identified anyone yet to carry his torch. The democratic socialist wing of the party has grown in the last few election cycles with the emergence of The Squad in the House’s Democratic caucus. But while some of these politicians, like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, have widespread name recognition, they’re still new to national politics and it’s unclear if any of them harbor presidential ambitions in the near or long term.








