Current:Home > reviewsMinnesota Rep. Dean Phillips ends Democratic primary challenge and endorses President Joe Biden -MoneyBase
Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips ends Democratic primary challenge and endorses President Joe Biden
View
Date:2025-04-15 07:21:02
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota ended his long-shot 2024 Democratic presidential bid on Wednesday after failing to win a primary contest against President Joe Biden.
Phillips told WCCO Radio in Minneapolis that he was endorsing Biden.
Phillips, a 55-year-old multimillionaire who is among the richest members of Congress, built his White House bid around calls for a new generation of Democratic leadership while spending freely from his personal fortune. But the little-known congressman ultimately failed to resonate with the party’s voters.
Phillips was the only elected Democrat to challenge Biden for the presidency. Phillips’ failure to gain traction is further proof that Democratic voters are behind the 81-year-old Biden even if many have misgivings about his age or his reelection prospects.
What to know today about Super Tuesday elections
- Nikki Haley, Trump’s major GOP challenger, suspends her campaign after being soundly defeated across the country.
- Not-so-Super Tuesday? What the primary elections can tell us about November.
- The Associated Press is the most trusted source of information for elections. See the results for elections across the U.S. here.
The president has long cast himself as uniquely qualified to beat Republican Donald Trump again after his 2020 win, and his reelection campaign largely ignored Phillips except to point out that the congressman voted with the administration nearly 100% of the time in Congress.
Phillips often argued Biden was too old to serve a second term. But in a social media post Wednesday, Phillips noted that Biden had once visited his home while serving as vice president and that his “decency and wisdom were rarities in politics then, and even more so today.”
“We only have two of them,” Phillips told WCCO. “And it’s going to be Donald Trump or Joe Biden. And while indeed I think the president is at a stage in life where his capacities are diminished, he is still a man of competency and decency and integrity. And the alternative, Donald Trump is a very dangerous, dangerous man.”
Phillips’ endorsement of Biden appears to foreclose running as a third-party challenger on a potential No Labels ticket.
A centerpiece of Phillips’ campaign to upset Biden was in New Hampshire, where he campaigned hard, hoping to capitalize on state Democrats’ frustration over a new plan by the Democratic National Committee, championed by Biden, reordering the party’s 2024 presidential primary calendar by leading off with South Carolina on Feb. 3.
But instead of pulling off a New Hampshire surprise, Phillips finished a distant second in the state’s unsanctioned primary, behind a write-in campaign in which Democrats voted for Biden despite his name not appearing on the ballot.
After that defeat, Phillips pressed on to South Carolina and the primary’s formal start. But the DNC didn’t schedule any primary debates, and some states’ Democratic parties, including North Carolina and Florida, are not even planning to hold primaries — making it even more difficult to challenge the sitting president. Phillips lost South Carolina and every other state in which he competed.
Before Minnesota’s primary on Super Tuesday, hardly any of nearly two dozen Democratic voters interviewed in Phillips’ congressional district mentioned his presidential campaign. James Calderaro of Hopkins knew Phillips was a candidate but dismissed him as “a distraction.” Calderaro and others said they were backing Biden for the best chance of stopping Trump in November.
Phillips has already announced he’s not seeking reelection in his suburban Minneapolis congressional district. He is heir to his stepfather’s Phillips Distilling Co. empire and served as that company’s president, but he also ran the gelato maker Talenti. His grandmother was Pauline Phillips, better known as the advice columnist Dear Abby.
Driving a gelato truck helped Phillips win his first House campaign in 2018, when he unseated five-term Republican Erik Paulsen. While Phillips’ district in mostly affluent greater Minneapolis has become more Democratic-leaning, he stressed that he is a moderate focused on his suburban constituents.
While running for president, however, Phillips moved further to the left, endorsing fully government-funded health care through “Medicare for All.”
___
Weissert reported from Washington.
___
Follow the AP’s coverage of the 2024 election at https://apnews.com/hub/election-2024.
veryGood! (13)
Related
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- How George Clooney finally made an 'exciting' rowing movie with 'The Boys in the Boat'
- New York bill could interfere with Chick-fil-A’s long-standing policy to close Sundays
- Chatty robot helps seniors fight loneliness through AI companionship
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Cristina Pacheco, foremost chronicler of street life in Mexico for half a century, has died at 82
- 3 Washington state police officers found not guilty in 2020 death of Black man who said 'I can't breathe'
- Military command ready to track Santa, and everyone can follow along
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- EU pays the final tranche of Ukraine budget support for 2023. Future support is up in the air
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- Matt Patricia takes blame for Seahawks' game-winning score: 'That drive starts with me'
- These now cherished Christmas traditions have a surprising history. It involves paganism.
- Taraji P. Henson says the math ain't mathing on pay equity in entertainment
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Luis Suárez reunites with Lionel Messi, joins Inter Miami on one-year deal
- Humans could have arrived in North America 10,000 years earlier, new research shows
- Live updates | As the death toll passes 20,000, the U.N. again delays a vote on aid to Gaza
Recommendation
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
Former Colombian soldier pleads guilty in 2021 assassination of Haiti’s president
New Hampshire newspaper publisher fined $620 over political advertisement omissions
3 Washington state police officers found not guilty in 2020 death of Black man who said 'I can't breathe'
What to watch: O Jolie night
A British sea monitoring agency says another vessel has been hijacked near Somalia
At least 20 villagers are killed during a rebel attack in northern Central African Republic
Judge: DeSantis spread false information while pushing trans health care ban, restrictions