KJP suggests videos of Biden's latest mental lapse are 'deepfakes' — but there's nothing fake about these 5 incidents



President Joe Biden joined former President Barack Obama and a handful of Hollywood script-readers in Los Angeles over the weekend to raise money for his re-election campaign. Unlike excerpts of the heavily edited video of the event circulated online by Democratic operatives, Chris Gardner of the Hollywood Reporter shared raw and uninterrupted footage showing the 81-year-old presidential candidate freezing up once again following a shaky interview. In the uncut video, Obama then grabs Biden by the wrist and guides him offstage.

As this was one of a series of instances in recent weeks where Biden appeared stunned and momentarily paralyzed, the White House and Biden boosters further afield — both foreign and domestic — worked vigorously on damage control.

In the White House press briefing Monday, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre leaned on a narrative cooked up in the pages of the Washington Post and other allied publications, which suggests that unflattering videos of Biden are "manipulated."

Jean-Pierre attempted to attribute the term "cheap-fakes" originated with the press, but it was White House senior deputy press secretary Andrew Bates who initially trafficked the term in media statements.

"That's exactly what they are. They are cheap-fakes video," said Jean-Pierre. "They are done in bad faith."

Even though the latest video came from a reporter at a left-leaning publication, Jean-Pierre stressed that "the right-wing critics of the president have a credibility problem because ... fact-checkers have repeatedly caught them pushing misinformation, disinformation."

The American people have far more to go off than recent videos of Biden ostensibly locking up to conclude that his mental decline is worsening; that he is severely limited in his ability to execute the duties of his office; and that he is altogether too old to hold office — as they have concluded in recent polls.

Below are five glaring and well-documented examples of Biden gaffes, lapses, and collapses that might warrant suspicion of the White House's denial.

1. The time-traveling president

After suggesting that "Trump and his MAGA friends" were an obstacle to America realizing its grand potential at a February campaign event in Las Vegas, Biden said, "You know, right, right, right after I was elected, I went to what they call a G7 meeting. All the NATO leaders. And it was in — it was in the south of England. And I sat down and I said, 'America is back.'"

Blaze News previously reported that the 47th G7 Summit in Cornwall, England, was held just months before Biden's deadly withdrawal from Afghanistan.

"And Mitterrand, from Germany — I mean, from France, looked at me and said — said, 'You know, what — why — how long you back for?'" said Biden. "And I looked at him, and the — and the chancellor of Germany said, 'What would you say, Mr. President, if you picked up the paper tomorrow in the London Times, and London Times said, 'A thousand people break through the House of Commons, break down the doors, two bobbies are killed in order to stop the election of the prime minister. What would you say?'"

"I never thought about it from that perspective. What would we say that happened in another democracy around the world? Well, the whole world watched — the whole world watched. And what's going on?" added the president.

Biden not only misstated, corrected, then once again misstated François Mitterrand's nationality but erred in suggesting he was alive.

Mitterrand was not the chancellor of Germany Biden allegedly spoke to but rather a former French president who died in 1996.

Biden revealed on another occasion that he might be mentally at least two years behind the time, noting in 2022, "There's a lot of reason to be hopeful in 2020." Even then, Mitterrand was firmly out of earshot.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people with dementia have problems with memory; attention; communication; reasoning, judgment, and problem solving; and visual perception beyond typical age-related changes in vision. Forgetting names and old memories are among the signs of dementia highlighted by the agency.

2. 'Where's Jackie?'

Republican Rep. Jackie Walorski of Indiana died in a car accident on Aug. 3, 2022.

Biden eulogized her later that day, writing, "Jill and I are shocked and saddened by the death of Congresswoman Jackie Walorski of Indiana along with two members of her staff in a car accident today in Indiana."

The Democratic president noted further, "We may have represented different parties and disagreed on many issues, but she was respected by members of both parties for her work on the House Ways and Means Committee on which she served. She also served as co-chair of the House Hunger Caucus, and my team and I appreciated her partnership as we plan for a historic White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health this fall that will be marked by her deep care for the needs of rural America."

The White House flew the American flag at half-staff for two full days, and Biden even called the family to offer his condolences, reported the New York Post.

While at the White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health the following month, Biden revealed that the memory of a partner's recent passing failed to stick.

"And I want to thank all of you here, including bipartisan elected officials like Representative McGovern, Senator Braun, Senator Booker, Representative — Jackie, are you here? Where's Jackie?" said Biden, according to the White House's own transcript. "I didn't think she was — she wasn't going to be here — to help make this a reality. And thanks to Senator Stabenow, Representative DeLauro for their leadership."

3. Doubling down

Biden, who indicated in an interview years ago that he "could drop dead tomorrow," addressed donors at a swanky Manhattan campaign reception hosted by billionaire real estate heiress Amy Goldman Fowler in September 2023.

Biden shared a revisionist account of what events prompted him to run for office, referencing the "Unite the Right" rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017, and recycling the false claim that former President Donald Trump suggested there were "fine people on both sides" as if to include the white identitarians in Virginia at the time.

According to Jonathan Lemire, White House bureau chief for Politico and political analyst for MSNBC — hardly a right-wing critic — Biden finished telling this story, then told it "again, nearly word for word."

The White House transcript confirmed that Biden repeated the story nearly verbatim.

Jean-Pierre did not suggest the official transcript was a cheap-fake or deny that Biden was ostensibly playing for a crowd on a loop. Instead, she said he was "speaking from his heart."

4. Doubling over

Biden has unfortunately suffered a number of falls and stumbles since taking office in 2021. Three incidents in particular stand out.

On March 19, 2021, the staircase onto Air Force One proved too much for Biden to handle. Video shows the Democrat, then 78 years of age, scaling the stairs with a firm hold on the handrail. His right leg appears to buckle, sending him stumbling forward. Biden then corkscrews onto one knee, regains his footing, then completes the climb.

Blaze News previously reported that Jean-Pierre blamed the fall on the wind.

"It's pretty windy outside," said Jean-Pierre. "It's very windy. I almost fell coming up the steps myself."

On June 1, 2023, Biden made an appearance at the graduation ceremony for the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. After shaking the last of the graduates' hands, Biden collapsed. While White House communications director Ben LaBolt suggested Biden had tripped over a sandbag.

Days after stumbling up the stairs to Air Force One again, Biden went for an ill-fated bike ride near his Delaware beach house in June 2022. He rode up to a crowd, slowed down, then collapsed onto his side.

The White House indicated Biden did not ultimately need medical attention.

5. Regime change

Biden has confused country names, wars, and his sister with his wife. He has accidentally undermined painstakingly crafted American foreign policy and called on people to honor the Holocaust. Biden has also unwittingly snubbed foreign leaders. There was one occasion, however, where Biden confided in his own faculties and went off-script that proved more risky than the others.

One month after Russia invaded Ukraine, Biden delivered an address in Warsaw, Poland, condemning the illegal action and underscoring that the battle ahead against autocracy will take time to win.

Toward the end of his speech, Biden deviated from his prepared remarks and suggested what was then interpreted by many — including those in the Kremlin — to be a call for regime change in Moscow.

"For God's sake, this man cannot remain in power," Biden said in reference to Vladimir Putin.

CNN noted at the time that the White House rushed to correct the president, stating, "The President’s point was that Putin cannot be allowed to exercise power over his neighbors or the region."

"He was not discussing Putin’s power in Russia, or regime change," said a White House official.

"My gosh, I wish they would keep him on script," said Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho). "Any time you say or even, as he did, suggest that the policy was regime change, it's going to cause a huge problem. This administration has done everything they can to stop escalating. There's not a whole lot more you can do to escalate than to call for regime change."

While the suggestion to an antagonistic nuclear power that the U.S. wanted its government overthrown was provocative, Biden accidentally risked provocation a second time that trip, implying to American soldiers in Poland that they were headed into Ukraine.

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Larry Elder FURIOUS that Fox News and RNC allow THIS, but keep him off presidential debate stage



Beloved conservative Larry Elder is in the running for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination but isn’t being allowed to participate in the debates.

“I’ve met the 40,000 individual donor criteria. In fact, I’ve got to have 200 donors from 20 different states. I’ve exceeded that,” Elder tells Glenn Beck.

“The problem is the last one, which is I’ve got to have three national polls where Elder is at least 1% among Republican and Republican-leaning voters. I submitted three,” he continues, but adds that “they rejected one: the Rasmussen poll.”

He was told that poll was “affiliated with Donald Trump” and therefore would not be considered.

Elder says he was also told that any poll affiliated with any candidate is not usable.

“I said, the same Rasmussen that you quote all the time on your Twitter feed? The same Rasmussen that was the most accurate in 2016? And they said, 'Yes,'" Elder adds.

While Elder was unhappy with that decision, he turned in one more poll in which he was above 1% — but it was turned in after the deadline.

“I didn’t realize they were going to reject one of the ones that I turned in, so as far as I’m concerned, all the criteria have been met,” Elder says.

Elder’s lawyer says the RNC and Fox News could be facing a fine of up to $100 million for that decision.

“What I think, Glenn, is they don’t like Larry Elder because I make them feel uncomfortable. I talk about the lie that America’s systemically racist — a lie that Democrats have been using against Republicans time and time again,” he says.

“I think I make them feel uncomfortable because I know the number one social problem in the country is not the epidemic of COVID but the epidemic of fatherlessness. 70% of black kids [come] into the world without a father in the home married to the mother, up from 25% back in 1965. They don’t want to hear about that because they’re definitely afraid of being called a racist,” Elder continues.

“Nothing scares a Republican establishment guy more than being called a racist by the left.”


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'I'm going to be on that debate stage': Larry Elder tells Glenn Beck he'll hit the RNC with an FEC complaint if Republicans keep him off debate stage at last minute



Conservative media figure Larry Elder figured he'd be a shoe-in for the Republican National Committee's first presidential debate in Milwaukee on Wednesday, having ostensibly met its various entry requirements.

However, while en route to Wisconsin, he learned that the RNC was icing him out of its debate on Fox News due to a novel technicality.

Rather than go quietly, Elder is now threatening to file a formal Federal Election Commission complaint against the RNC unless it reverses its decision by 2 p.m. CT and acknowledges that he met all the criteria for entry.

Elder told nationally syndicated radio host and Blaze Media co-founder Glenn Beck Wednesday, "I'm in Milwaukee and I'm going to be on that debate stage, I predict it. I'm not a betting man, but if I were, I would bet my house Larry Elder is going to be up there on the debate stage in some 12 hours from now."

The RNC allegedly revealed at the last moment that Rasmussen Polls — one of the three polls that demonstrated Elder had achieved at least 1% — wouldn't count due to its "ties to former President Donald Trump ... an individual who is not even participating in the upcoming debate."

Elder told Beck and the RNC alike, "Well, it's not affiliated with me," adding that the RNC seems otherwise content to quote Rasmussen "all the time on [its] Twitter feed."

Rasmussen Reports responded to the RNC's apparent allegation, stating, "We have not run a poll suggested by or paid for by President Trump or any of his surrogates - but we'd be pleased to do so," adding it would "run a poll for ANY politician, party or U.S. based political group" under its rules.

Elder's prospective complaint would allege the RNC has run afoul of FEC rules, which require not only that debate guidelines be clearly stated to all candidates in advance and equally applied, but that promotional services cannot be provided to one candidate over another.

According to Craig Engle, legal counsel for Elder's 2024 campaign, this complaint might result in a significant fine for the RNC and possibly for Fox News as well.

Elder noted in a statement on X, "The FEC could deem the RNC’s and FOX News' free national TV airtime and free promotional activities to SELECT candidates as 'ILLEGAL CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTION TO CANDIDATES' — with the premise being that, free national TV airtime comes with an extraordinary real-dollar value to candidates who are arbitrarily allowed onto the stage under a certain set of rules — while other candidates are arbitrarily kept off the stage through a different set of rules."

Elder told Beck that the possible fines on the RNC and Fox News would likely be multiplied by the number of candidates on stage, thereby fitting both with fines costing hundreds of millions of dollars.

As it now stands, the debaters Wednesday include North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, former Vice President Mike Pence, Vivek Ramaswamy, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

Rather than participate in the debate, former President Donald Trump will be featured in an interview with Tucker Carlson, which is expected to run around the time of the RNC's debate.

Elder suggested his exclusion "is designed ... to make sure that Ron DeSantis is the nominee. Anyone other than Trump. This is BS."

The California Republican further suggested that he makes elements of the Republican establishment uncomfortable because he doesn't tolerate knee-jerk accusations of racism; understands that fatherlessness, not COVID, is the the greatest epidemic afflicting America; and desires both a negotiated armistice in Ukraine and an unburdening of America from its various unfair international obligations.

After noting his displeasure at seeing Elder boxed out of the debate, Beck said, "When the GOP selected their leadership here recently, they signaled who they were. ... They are becoming Democrats in every way."

— (@)

While Elder's last run for higher office was unsuccessful, he still managed to make a substantial splash.

In the Sept. 14, 2021, special general election for governor of California, Elder was Gov. Gavin Newsom's top rival, having led other challengers with 48.4% (3.5 million votes). However, on the question of whether ultimately to replace Newsom, the majority of voters chose to stay the course.

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Larry Elder joins expanding 2024 Republican presidential field



Conservative media figure Larry Elder, who previously ran for California governor during the state's 2021 gubernatorial recall contest, has announced a White House bid.

During a Thursday appearance on Fox News Channel's "Tucker Carlson Tonight," Elder said that his father and brothers served in the military and that he was the only person not to serve. "I don't feel good about that," he said, adding that he believes he has a "moral" and "religious" as well as "patriotic duty to give back" to the nation.

He called it a "disgraceful lie" for Democrats to claim that the country is systemically racist.

Elder also wants to draw attention to the problem of fatherless homes and America's welfare system.

"Since the mid-1960s, public policy has incentivized women to marry the government, and incentivized men to abandon their financial and moral responsibility. This is not a problem; it is a crisis," Elder has written.

Larry Elder joins the growing 2024 field www.youtube.com

During California's 2021 gubernatorial recall contest, Elder trounced the field of potential replacement candidates. But Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom was not ultimately recalled by voters — he remained in office and then went on to win re-election during the state's 2022 governor's race.

"America is in decline, but this decline is not inevitable. It is a choice made by detached and cynical politicians. As a California resident, I've seen firsthand how decades of Democrat rule have turned the Golden State, for many, into an unaffordable dystopia. I won’t let them do the same to America. We can enter a new American Golden Age, but we must choose a leader who can bring us there. That's why I’m running for President," Elder noted on elderforpresident.com.

He joins a GOP presidential primary field that includes former President Donald Trump, former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, entrepreneur and author Vivek Ramaswamy, and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is widely expected to jump into the race at some point, and U.S. Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina has announced an exploratory committee, a move that indicates he may eventually throw his hat into the ring.

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