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Imagine growing up in a city where three future Hall of Fame center fielders play.

Imagine walking out of your apartment and to the street corner, where you argue with your friends over a soda or an ice cream about which one of those three is the best.

Imagine going a few more blocks and seeing all three center fielders, and everyone they played against, right in front of you, in the epicenter of the national pastime.

Terry Cashman, who lived these experiences as boy, once put them into a song about New York baseball in the 1950s.

We’re talkin’ baseball!

Kluszewski, Campanella.

Talkin’ baseball!

The Man and Bobby Feller.

The Scooter, the Barber, and the Newc,

They knew ’em all from Boston to Dubuque.

Especially Willie, Mickey, and the Duke.

The title of Cashman’s 1981 creation, “Talkin’ Baseball,” became a part of the sport’s lexicon. Its words always come back to three men: Willie Mays, Mickey Mantle and the Duke Snider. The song’s message is especially poignant now, on Hall of Fame induction weekend, because they are all gone. This summer, we lost Willie Mays, who was 93 and the last living member of New York’s super center field trio.

Cashman got to know all three men in adulthood, and they lived up to his childhood imagination, especially one of them.

“There was nobody like him,” Cashman, now 83, says of Mays.

The singer was a former baseball player himself who didn’t quite make it as a pro. Yet Cashman’s story is one of maintaining your love for a sport, and your faith in your hero, even when you learn everything about both of them isn’t perfect.

He spoke with USA TODAY Sports about what it was like to know Mays, as well as Mickey and the Duke, and what today’s young athletes (and their parents) can learn from their memories.

(Questions and responses are edited for length and clarity.)

1. Share your love: Sports bring families together

Dennis Minogue, Cashman’s given name, was born into a family of New York Giants baseball fans. His brother Tommy, just back from World War II, took Dennis to his first game – a Bob Feller no-hitter at Yankee Stadium – when he wasn’t quite five years old. When Dennis got older, he was greeted after school by the sounds of afternoon Giants games drifting from his mother’s kitchen radio.

That team was mostly an afterthought in those day until a life-changing player arrived in 1951. Dennis’ two older brothers nudged him to watch Willie Mays. Mays seemed to be a step ahead of everyone else, anticipating where the ball would go and going after it hard over every inch of the Polo Grounds’ monstrous center field.

Dennis, who would change his name to Terry Cashman in the music business, couldn’t take his eyes off of him.

USA TODAY: Talk about how you became a Mays fan.

Terry Cashman: Bobby Thomson was my favorite player. Then one day in 1951, this guy shows up, his name is Willie Mays. And right away, just that name excited me, and I was 10 years old and started following him. And the first couple of weeks weren’t very good (Mays went hitless in his first three games). But he still was the Giants’ centerfielder and replaced Thomson, whom they moved to third base. Tommy took me to an afternoon game, and they were playing the Boston Braves. Willie got up against Warren Spahn and hit a ball that’s still going. He hit it over the roof in left field and that was his first hit. And I fell in love with him that day. And from then on, I just followed everything he did.

I rooted for him very hard when he had bad times. I would suffer myself and wait for him to get back on the ball, which he always did. He was so exciting, the way he ran the bases and the catches that he made in the outfield.

USA TODAY: He seemed like a good player for kids to look up because he hustled and he had a good attitude. Did you notice those things when you were a kid?

TC: I don’t think you really notice because he didn’t do anything wrong. He played the game the way you should play the game. What I found out later was his knowledge of the game and the way that he would position players defensively and would tell other players where [opponents] would hit the ball. But just the way he played and the way he hustled was unique.

I really felt that I knew him as a ballplayer. You’ve probably seen films of him playing stickball with the kids in Harlem, so that endeared him to everybody. He seemed like a really happy-go-lucky, nice guy.

2. Follow your passion: Love for a sport can push us forward long after we’re done playing

Before and after games in the 1950s, Mays played stickball and got ice cream with kids at 155th Street and St. Nicholas Place, where he lived, with the approval of Giants manager Leo Durocher.

“Leo used to give me the money to buy the ice cream, so we had no problem,” Mays told sportscaster Warner Wolf in 1981. “It kept me off the streets, so I enjoyed it very much.”

He flashed a gleaming smile. It was that hero’s look and feel that inspired another boy in Northern Manhattan to play baseball. That boy pitched in the Detroit Tigers organization in 1960 but it ultimately found another path that truly made him happy.

USA TODAY: You were a pretty good ballplayer yourself. Did you still love playing when you got to the minor leagues?

Terry Cashman: I was 18 when I got signed and I should have waited and played a couple more years in college. I really wasn’t ready for the minor leagues. I didn’t like playing for money. That’s all that anybody talked about was how much money you make. Of course I wanted to make money as a professional but I didn’t take it as seriously as some of the guys I was around.

There was a pitcher named Gary Waslewski who played in the major leagues. He was on a Pirates farm team that we played against. He was pitching against us and there was about as much chance of us winning that game as going to the moon. And the pitcher on our team came into the dugout and said something like, “I gotta get this guy out of the game.” And the next time Gary got up, he hit him in the head. And I said, “I couldn’t do that if that’s what you have to do to get ahead in this game.” Not everybody did that but it was a terrible thing. I thought I’d better stay in school and pursue music, which I loved as much as baseball.

3. Be yourself: Sports heroes are humans, not deities

Cashman was an English major in college who found music, hitting it big when he co-wrote the song, “Sunday Will never Be the Same.” He still daydreamed about baseball. He found himself one day years later staring into a picture of Mays, Mantle, Snider and Joe DiMaggio together.

He drifted off to sleep that night thinking about his childhood and woke up with a song in his head. He wrote it in 20 minutes. DiMaggio, who had been in his prime in the 1940s, didn’t fit into it. It was all about Willie, Mickey and the Duke.

Singing about them opened up a world he could never have imagined. Snider, then a broadcaster with the Montreal Expos, showed up at his front door and they went to dinner. Cashman was invited to meet Mantle at an event and was called to a hotel to do a press conference with Mays he would never forget.

USA TODAY: What was that like, getting to meet him after you admired him for all those years?

TC: It’s something that I treasure until this day. He was working at Bally’s. (Mantle also worked for a casino.) We had given Duke and Mickey checks for $2,500 each so this was an opportunity to bring the check for Willie. Rusty Staub was a very good friend of mine and he said, “Willie’s nickname is ‘Buck,’ and he’s probably gonna expect something from you for using him in a song.’ I went in the room with a number of people from the press and I sat down at a table. They’re playing the song over speakers. And in comes Willie. He sits down next to me and he says, “Do you have a release for this song?” And I said, “Willie, I just want you to know that I’ve loved you since I’m 10 years old and I would never do anything to hurt you.” And I reached in my pocket and I pulled out the check. He looked down, took the check and stood up and said, “You know, this song’s got a good beat.” (Laughs.)

He sat back down and said, “I want to take you to lunch.” At lunch, I said to Willie, “Everybody talks about the catch on Wertz in the ’54 World Series, but I think the greatest catch you ever made was on Bobby Morgan in ’52.” (Mays) made a catch in Ebbets Field where he dove on the warning track and caught the ball and knocked himself out by hitting his head on the wall. And he said, “You saw that catch?’ He laughed and he said, ‘You know more about me than I do.”

And every time I saw him after that, he was always very friendly to me.

4. Be nice: Your ultimate legacy is how you treat people, not how well you play

Tom House, a pitching and throwing coach for famous baseball and football players, loves to work with kids. He posted recently on social media about how much a compliment can help a young athlete’s confidence.

The words especially resonate when they come from a person of stature on the team. Al Downing, the Yankees’ first African American pitcher, recalls how he felt in his first full season (1963) after Mantle returned from a long injury stint and approached him in the clubhouse.

“Great job,” Mantle said. “Keep it up.”

“One of the biggest boosts I got,” Downing, who pitched in the big leagues for 14 more seasons, told me in 2022. “You don’t get that from the star of a team.”

When Mays started his career with the Giants by going 0-for-12, he found comfort in Durocher, his manager.

“I was crying,” Mays told Wolf, the New York sportscaster, during the interview in 1981, “and Leo came to me and he says, ‘Son, as long as I’m manager here, you’re my center fielder. Don’t worry about hitting. You just go out and field. We’ve got enough hitters for you.’ That carried me over.”

The Wolf interview brought Mays, Mantle and Snider together for the first time on the same television show. They came across as regular guys: Charming and grounded in the reality that stars weren’t paid enough in their day and had to work in retirement.

They realized what Cashman did for them, too.

USA TODAY: There’s something still so poetic about Willie, Mickey and Duke. Was there a certain way about the three of them that differentiated them from others?

TC: To have three Hall of fame center fielders in the same city at the same time, putting up record numbers, had never been done before, and it will never be done again. I wrote (the song) because it captured a certain time. We paid them royalties and we give them a share – those were advances – because I didn’t want anybody saying that we took advantage of these guys to make money. They all we’re very grateful.

The three of them were so good to me. I saw Duke at an autograph signing session. I would see Mickey all the time because he had had a restaurant in New York. He was always very nice to me. And like Willie, he would sign anything that I would ask him. I would like people to know that they were terrific people. And three of the three of the greatest players who ever lived.

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for a high schooler and middle schooler. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

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A list of former President Obama’s allies and former advisers helped lead the charge in calling on President Biden to drop out of the 2024 race before he officially ended his campaign on Sunday afternoon.

Biden officially dropped out of the 2024 race after weeks of increasing pressure from traditional Democrat allies to bow out after his disastrous debate performance against former President Trump last month, which put concerns surrounding his mental acuity and 81 years of age under increasing scrutiny. 

‘My fellow Democrats, I have decided not to accept the nomination and to focus all my energies on my duties as President for the remainder of my term,’ Biden posted on X after he dropped out of the race on Sunday afternoon.

‘My very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my Vice President. And it’s been the best decision I’ve made. Today I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year. Democrats — it’s time to come together and beat Trump. Let’s do this,’ he said in a separate social media post.

Among some of the most noteworthy voices calling on Biden to bow out were allies of Obama’s, including his former adviser, David Axelrod, who said this month that Biden is ‘not winning this race.’ Biden served as Obama’s vice president from 2009 to 2017. 

‘There are certain immutable facts of life,’ Axelrod said in an interview with CNN while discussing Biden’s age and leadership. ‘Those were painfully obvious on that debate stage. The president just … hasn’t come to grips with it. He’s not winning this race.’

Axelrod formerly served as Obama’s chief campaign strategist, and he said Biden is used to fighting ‘his way back from political defeats and against the odds.’

‘So, his psyche is that he can beat anybody and any long odds,’ he said this month. ‘What he can’t beat is Father Time.’ 

‘And that’s really the concern here. It’s not about his record,’ Axelrod continued.

Axelrod was soon followed by actor George Clooney calling on Biden to drop out of the race in a bombshell op-ed that was published just weeks after the Hollywood star co-hosted Biden, alongside Obama, for a ritzy campaign event in Los Angeles. Clooney has long had a personal friendship with Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama, including vacationing with the first couple in previous years.

‘It’s devastating to say it, but the Joe Biden I was with three weeks ago at the fundraiser was not the Joe ‘big F-ing deal’ Biden of 2010,’ Clooney wrote in a New York Times op-ed. ‘He wasn’t even the Joe Biden of 2020. He was the same man we all witnessed at the debate.’

Another ally in Obama’s orbit, Jon Favreau, who served as former director of speech writing for Obama, also called on Biden to drop out of the race this month, saying he attended the fundraiser in L.A. with Clooney and Obama and saw Biden’s state of mental acuity.

‘It was not surprising to any of us who were at the fundraiser. I was there. Clooney was exactly right, and every single person I talked to at the fundraiser thought the same thing, except for the people working for Joe Biden, or at least they didn’t say that,’ Jon Favreau said during an appearance on CNN this month. 

‘I remember my wife, Emily, turned to me after the fundraiser and said, ‘What are we going to do?’ And I said, ‘Well, there is a debate in a week. Either he’ll do well in the debate, and we’ll think he was just tired because he flew all the way back from Europe, and that’ll be that, or he’ll be like this at the debate and then the whole country will be talking about it. So, here we are.’

Favreau, alongside former Obama advisers Jon Lovett and Tommy Vietor – known collectively as the ‘Obama Bros’ when they worked in the White House – dedicated the majority of a podcast episode of ‘Pod Save America’ this month to trashing Biden. 

‘I thought it was bad, and at times very hard to watch,’ Vietor said, referring to Biden’s sit-down interview with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos after Biden’s debate performance. 

Vietor said it ‘seems like a clear-cut choice that we’d have a better chance with someone else,’ while Lovett added that Biden wasn’t ‘delivering the message effectively.’

Up until Sunday afternoon, Biden and his campaign remained adamant that the president would not bow out of the race. 

Obama has remained relatively silent while Biden weighed his options for the election, coming to Biden’s defense after his recent debate performance but not responding to media reports that he was working behind the scenes to promote Biden’s exit.

‘Bad debate nights happen. Trust me, I know. But this election is still a choice between someone who has fought for ordinary folks his entire life and someone who only cares about himself. Between someone who tells the truth; who knows right from wrong and will give it to the American people straight — and someone who lies through his teeth for his own benefit. Last night didn’t change that, and it’s why so much is at stake in November,’ he posted on X at the time. 

As media reports circulated that Obama was working ‘behind the scenes’ to oust Biden from the race, the 44th president remained mum, not denying the reports. Politico reported that Clooney even gave Obama a ‘heads-up’ that his op-ed calling on Biden to bow out of the race was set to publish, with Obama reportedly not objecting to the opinion piece.

Obama released a statement on Sunday commending Biden for his work in the Oval Office, but he did not tip his hand as to who he believes should pick up the mantle now that the president is no longer running for re-election. Biden, as well as the Clintons and other powerful Democrats, announced their endorsement of Vice President Harris shortly after Biden’s announcement.

‘We will be navigating uncharted waters in the days ahead. But I have extraordinary confidence that the leaders of our party will be able to create a process from which an outstanding nominee emerges. I believe that Joe Biden’s vision of a generous, prosperous, and united America that provides opportunity for everyone will be on full display at the Democratic Convention in August. And I expect that every single one of us are prepared to carry that message of hope and progress forward into November and beyond,’ Obama wrote on Sunday in a lengthy statement. 

‘Joe Biden has been one of America’s most consequential presidents, as well as a dear friend and partner to me. Today, we’ve also been reminded — again — that he’s a patriot of the highest order,’ Obama added. 

Amid the speculation that Biden would drop out, the Associated Press reported that Obama, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi were reportedly working in the background to encourage Biden to drop out due to concerns he could not defeat Trump. 

Pelosi notably suggested this month that Biden’s previously adamant resolve to remain in the race was not his final decision.

‘It’s up to the president to decide if he is going to run,’ she said this month on MSNBC. ‘We’re all encouraging him to make that decision because time is running short.’

Obama had joined Biden for a handful of campaign events since last year, but long before joining Biden on the campaign trail – or even endorsing his former running mate – Obama cautioned Biden against seeking the White House, citing fears that the campaign could ‘damage his legacy,’ according to a 2019 New York Times report.

‘You don’t have to do this, Joe, you really don’t,’ Obama reportedly told Biden in 2019.

‘Win or lose, they needed to make sure Mr. Biden did not ‘embarrass himself’ or ‘damage his legacy’ during the campaign,’ the New York Times reported, citing two people with knowledge of the conversation.

Biden had made a series of gaffes before becoming Obama’s running mate in 2008, including in 2007 when Biden was about to declare his own run for the White House. On the eve of his announcement, Biden described Obama to a reporter as ‘the first mainstream African American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy.’

Obama had remained coy about who he would endorse in the 2020 election, saying he would not back anyone during the primary. As Democrat contenders such as Pete Buttigieg, Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Sen. Bernie Sanders dropped out of the primary race and cleared a path for Biden, Obama endorsed his former veep in August 2020.

As Democrats suss out who they will officially nominate for the 2024 election, some in the president’s orbit have pinned blame on his failed 2024 race on donors and ‘electeds.’

‘Now that the donors and electeds have pushed out the only candidate who has ever beaten Trump, it’s time to end the political fantasy games and unite behind the only veteran of a national campaign — our outstanding @vp @KamalaHarris!! Let’s get real and win in November!,’ former White House chief of staff Ron Klain posted on X. 

After Biden’s announcement, Republicans have demanded the president resign from office, arguing that if he is unable to run for another term, he’s unable to fulfill his duties as president for the rest of his term.

‘If Joe Biden is not fit to run for President, he is not fit to serve as President. He must resign the office immediately. November 5 cannot arrive soon enough,’ House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said in a statement on Sunday.

‘If the Democrat party has deemed Joe Biden unfit to run for re-election, he’s certainly unfit to control our nuclear codes,’ House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn., added. ‘Biden must step down from office immediately.’

Trump’s running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, also called on Biden to resign hours before he officially announced he was dropping out.

‘If Joe Biden ends his reelection campaign, how can he justify remaining President? Not running for reelection would be a clear admission that President Trump was right all along about Biden not being mentally fit enough to serve as Commander-in-Chief. There is no middle ground,’ Vance tweeted Sunday morning.

Fox News Digital’s Brandon Gillespie and Liz Elkind contributed to this report.

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Former President Barack Obama released a statement Sunday afternoon, praising President Biden after he dropped out of the 2024 race.

Obama referred to Biden as a ‘dear friend and partner’ as well as a ‘patriot of the highest order.’

‘Sixteen years ago, when I began my search for a vice president, I knew about Joe’s remarkable career in public service. But what I came to admire even more was his character — his deep empathy and hard-earned resilience; his fundamental decency and belief that everyone counts,’ Obama said.

The former president also cited Biden’s track record in the 3½ years he has served as commander-in-chief, saying ‘he helped end the pandemic, created millions of jobs, lowered the cost of prescription drugs, passed the first major piece of gun safety legislation in 30 years, made the biggest investment to address climate change in history, and fought to ensure the rights of working people to organize for fair wages and benefits.’

Obama also referenced former President Donald Trump in his statement, referring to the 45th president’s administration as ‘four years of chaos, falsehood, and division.’
 
While Obama referred to President Biden’s track record as ‘outstanding,’ he said ‘Joe understands better than anyone the stakes in this election.’

Obama stressed that ‘everything that the Democratic Party stands for, will be at risk if we allow Donald Trump back in the White House and give Republicans control of Congress.’

‘I also know Joe has never backed down from a fight. For him to look at the political landscape and decide that he should pass the torch to a new nominee is surely one of the toughest in his life. But I know he wouldn’t make this decision unless he believed it was right for America.’

Obama shared, ‘I have extraordinary confidence that the leaders of our party will be able to create a process from which an outstanding nominee emerges. I believe that Joe Biden’s vision of a generous, prosperous, and united America that provides opportunity for everyone will be on full display at the Democratic Convention in August.’

The Democratic National Convention will happen in Chicago beginning August 19 through August 22.
 
The former president finished his statement with a note of thanks to both President Biden and Jill Biden.

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Days before President Biden announced his exit from the 2024 presidential race on Sunday, Fox News Digital spoke to delegates and attendees in Milwaukee at the Republican National Convention last week about who they think would take his place. 

Mike Stieben, a delegate from Kansas, predicted the Democrats would put forward Vice President Harris if Biden dropped out, but he added that it doesn’t matter at all because I think she’s a very weak candidate.’

Stieben added that it would be ‘really problematic for them’ if Democrats decided to push Harris to the side in favor of an alternate candidate.

Patti O’Brien, a delegate at the convention, said she didn’t believe Biden would actually drop out because no quality candidate was ‘waiting in the wings’ to take his place.

But probably it should go to Kamala,’ she told Fox News Digital.

‘I think [former President] Trump’s going to mop the floor with anybody they put up,’ one attendee said, adding that it seemed Biden was ‘on the way out the door.’

One attendee said it would be ‘totally fine’ if Harris became the nominee or even California Gov. Gavin Newsom or former first lady Michelle Obama: ‘The people, I think, are waking up to know that that’s just not the party of the people anymore. So, it doesn’t matter.’

‘I think he understands, and his compatriots understand, he needs to drop out. So, I think he will. I have no idea who they’re going to put up, you know, to replace him. I would hope it wouldn’t be Kamala, but I have no idea,’ another attendee said. 

Another attendee told Fox News Digital that she has ‘mixed thoughts’ on who would replace Biden, given that Harris is believed to be the only candidate who can immediately access funds in the Biden war chest: ‘It’s a really unusual situation.’

Biden announced Sunday that he will suspend his 2024 re-election campaign amid mounting pressure from within the Democratic Party for the president to drop out after a disastrous debate performance against Trump last month.

The unprecedented announcement also came as an increasing number of Democrat lawmakers publicly called for Biden to step aside and the party’s leadership reportedly engaged in efforts to convince the president, 81, he could not win in November’s general election against former Trump, the 2024 GOP nominee who Biden defeated four years ago to win the White House.

‘It has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as your president,’ Biden, who endorsed Harris, wrote in a public letter. ‘While it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interests of my party and the country for me to stand down and focus solely on fulfilling my duties as president for the remainder of my term.’

Biden said he will formally address the nation about his decision this week.

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser and Brooke Singman contributed to this report.

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World leaders have quickly responded to the long-awaited news that President Biden has decided not to run for a second term, which took many by surprise despite the reports over the past two weeks.

‘I respect President Biden’s decision and I look forward to us working together during the remainder of his presidency,’ British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, elected and appointed to office less than three weeks ago, wrote on social media platform X. 

‘I know that, as he has done throughout his remarkable career, he will have made his decision based on what he believes is best for the American people,’ he added. 

Biden issued a statement at around 2 p.m. EST on Sunday, by all accounts keeping his decision very private up until the moment he published his statement online. Reports indicate that his campaign staff were still geared up to continue this coming week when they heard the news. 

But reports had indicated that Biden was increasingly likely to decide to stand down, as major donors threatened to pull support and over three dozen elected Democrats in Congress urged Biden to stand aside and let the party put forward a new candidate. 

Former British prime minister and current member of parliament Rishi Sunak wrote that ‘working with Joe Biden, I saw firsthand his love for America and dedication to service.’

‘Our partnership has led to significant achievements, including AUKUS, steadfast support for Israel and joint efforts in defending our people from Houthi threats,’ Sunak wrote. ‘I wish him all the best.’ 

And another former Conservative Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, wrote that he would ‘salute Joe Biden for the bravery of his decision and also for all he has done as president.’ 

‘He has been a staunch Atlanticist and friend to Britain throughout his career and it was a privilege to work with him,’ Johnson added. 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy posted on X his thanks to Biden, writing in part, ‘We will always be thankful for President Biden’s leadership. He supported our country during the most dramatic moment in history, assisted us in preventing Putin from occupying our country, and has continued to support us throughout this terrible war.’

Aside from Zelenskyy, a centrist, and Sunak and Johnson, mainly left-leaning European and world leaders have issued statements of thanks to Biden, praising his brave decision to step back from the election at his party’s insistence. 

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese paid respects to Biden, thanking him for his ‘leadership and ongoing service’ and touting the U.S.-Australia alliance as stronger than ever ‘with our shared commitment to democratic values, international security, economic prosperity and climate action for this and future generations.’ 

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called Biden a ‘great man,’ adding that ‘everything he does is guided by his love for his country.’

‘As president, he is a partner to Canadians – and a true friend,’ Trudeau wrote on X. ‘To President Biden and the First Lady: Thank you.’ 

Biden will meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu later this week, but Israeli President Isaac Herzog issued some immediate thoughts on X, writing to ‘extend my heartfelt thanks to POTUS Joe Biden for his friendship and steadfast support for the Israeli people over his decades long career.’

‘As the first US President to visit Israel in wartime, as a recipient of the Israeli Presidential Medal of Honor, and as a true ally of the Jewish people, he is a symbol of the unbreakable bond between our two peoples,’ Herzog wrote. ‘I send him, FLOTUS Jill Biden, and all his family, my warmest wishes from Jerusalem.’ 

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz wrote on X that his ‘friend’ Biden ‘has achieved a lot: For his country, for Europe, for the world.’ 

‘Thanks to him, transatlantic cooperation is close, NATO is strong and the USA is a good and reliable partner for us,’ Scholz wrote. ‘His decision not to run again deserves respect.’

Irish Taoiseach Simon Harris issued a statement ‘on behalf of the people and government of Ireland,’ a country that Biden has strong familial ties to and great admiration for, saying that ‘I wish you, Mrs. Biden and your family every success and I look forward to working with you for the remainder of your presidency.’ 

‘I … would like to thank you Mr. President for your global leadership and your friendship as you make your announcement that you will not stand in the 2024 US presidential election,’ Harris wrote. 

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez wrote of all his ‘admiration and recognition for the brave and dignified decision of the President Joe Biden.’ 

‘Thanks to its determination and leadership, the US overcame the economic crisis after the pandemic and the serious assault on the Capitol and has been exemplary in its support for Ukraine in the face of Putin’s Russian aggression,’ Sanchez wrote on X, according to a translation. 

‘A great gesture from a great president who has always fought for democracy and freedom,’ Sanchez added. 

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk praised Biden for making ‘many difficult decisions’ that have made ‘the world … safer, and democracy stronger.’

‘I know you were driven by the same motivations when announcing your final decision,’ Tusk wrote on X. ‘Probably the most difficult one in your life.’ 

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Democrats in the House’s far-left ‘Squad’ are lining up behind Vice President Kamala Harris to replace President Biden after he made the bombshell announcement that he is dropping out of the 2024 White House race.

The group of young progressives who made a name for themselves by rebelling against traditional Democratic Party leaders are quickly falling in line behind 81-year-old Biden’s chosen successor.

‘This was the president’s decision to make and I’m grateful for his years of service to our country. Thrilled to support [Harris] as our Democratic nominee and remain committed to working alongside her to defeat Donald Trump in November,’ Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., wrote on X.

Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., who recently lost his re-election bid to a more moderate primary challenger, said on X, ‘Now that President Biden has suspended his campaign, Vice President Kamala Harris is the most qualified and best choice to lead us forward.’

Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., facing a similarly tough re-election bid, said in a statement, ‘When we say trust Black women, we mean it. Black women are the backbone of the Democratic Party and it is past time for us to lead our country forward. Kamala Harris is more than ready to lead at this moment.’

Two notable figures who have been silent on the matter as of late afternoon on Sunday are Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich.

Tlaib is one of the Biden administration’s harshest critics in terms of its handling of the war between Israel and Hamas.

Ocasio-Cortez, who has backed Biden amid mounting pressure from fellow Democrats for him to drop out, hosted a live feed on Instagram just after former President Trump’s speech at the Republican National Convention (RNC) last week. 

She said on video that high-dollar Democratic donors were to blame for pressuring Biden, and that those same people did not want Harris to run either.

‘I’m here to tell you that a huge amount of the donor class and a huge amount of these elites and a huge amount of these folks in these rooms that I see that are pushing for President Biden to not be the nominee also are not interested in seeing Vice President being the nominee,’ she said.

Fox News Digital reached out to Ocasio-Cortez to ask if she would be endorsing Harris.

Biden has been under mounting pressure to drop out of the 2024 presidential race in the wake of his disastrous debate performance against Trump last month. 

His weak showing spurred concerns over whether he had the mental and physical stability to run a campaign and serve another four-year term. 

Biden bowed to that pressure on Sunday, writing in a public letter, ‘It has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as your President. And while it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as President for the remainder of my term.’

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Former President Trump has a narrow edge over President Biden after the 46th president’s disastrous debate performance last month, a Fox News poll found, but the election cycle was thrown into disarray Sunday when Biden announced he won’t seek re-election. 

‘It has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as your President. And while it has been my intention to seek re-election, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as President for the remainder of my term,’ Biden said in his letter posted to X on Sunday afternoon. 

Biden was ahead by two points last month (50%-48%), and now Trump is ahead by 1 point (49%-48%), which is also exactly where things stood in May, a Fox News national survey published last week found. 

Democrat strategist Julian Epstein told Fox News Digital that a ‘ham sandwich’ would likely perform better in polls than Biden when asked how Trump would fare against a candidate other than the president.

‘At this point, a ham sandwich would probably have a greater likelihood of success in the general election than Biden,’ he said. ‘There are generic polls out there that suggest a young candidate versus Trump does well.’

‘If the Democrats were smart, they would find a younger, attractive governor [in] their 40s or 50s who was in the political center. But Democrats being smart in the circumstance is giving them a huge benefit of the doubt,’ Epstein added.

Biden endorsed Harris shortly after his announcement. Other Democrats such as California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have been floated as viable candidates.

Harris appears to be the likely replacement for Biden as she gains additional endorsements from heavy-hitting Democrats such as former President Clinton and Hillary Clinton.

Harris notably has a lower favorability rating than Trump, according to a new ABC News/Ipsos poll. Trump recorded his highest favorability rating in the history of the poll at 40%, up from the low to mid 30% range the former president typically hovered in the poll. Harris received a lower favorability than Trump at 35%.

Fox News Digital asked Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene during the RNC in Milwaukee last week if a candidate other than Biden would diminish Trump’s shot at the White House, which she shot down, arguing that whoever takes the mantle will have to run on Biden’s record in the White House.

‘No matter who they put at the top of the ticket, that candidate has to run with the job record that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have brought the several past years, because Democrats are fully aligned behind those policies,’ Greene said.

‘I think America really came to one mindset and got resolved behind President Trump and behind the Republican Party after seeing him almost assassinated on Saturday. It’s a moment that everyone will always remember where they were when that happened, similar to 9/11. Everyone remembers where they were when that happened. I also think people are just really fed up with the border invasion that’s happening every day. The fact that people can’t afford food, can’t afford rent and inflation is really crippling a lot of people,’ she added.

Harris has a long history as a California liberal stalwart, serving as San Francisco’s district attorney in the early 2000s, then serving as the state attorney general under former Democrat Gov. Jerry Brown, and U.S. senator from the Golden State before her 2020 election as vice president.

If Harris takes up the party’s 2024 presidential election mantle, it is unlikely Harris’ policies would drastically differ from Biden’s platforms, though she could swing harder to the left on issues such as immigration, abortion and foreign policy.

Three Democrat delegates expressed support for Harris in comments to Fox News Digital on Sunday, with one saying the party is ‘100% supporting Kamala Harris.’

‘I can tell you that the delegation in Florida that I’m speaking with … people are 100% on board following President Biden’s endorsement of Kamala Harris,’ said Samantha Hope Herring, a Democrat delegate and elected member of the DNC from Florida.

Echoing Herring, Karl Gentles, a Democrat delegate from Arizona, told Fox he supports Harris and will vote for her at the party’s convention.

‘While it is disappointing news that Biden has decided to not seek re-election, he has demonstrated that leadership starts with putting country first above all else. He understands what’s at stake for the future of our country and the imperative of winning this election,’ he said. ‘I support VP Harris and will be casting my vote for her at the DNC Convention.’

Trump responded to the news of Biden dropping out by slamming him as the ‘worst president’ in U.S. history.

‘He is the worst president in the history of our country,’ Trump told Fox News Digital in a phone interview on Sunday afternoon. ‘There has never been a president so bad.’

‘He is not fit to serve,’ Trump continued. ‘And I ask: Who is going to be running the country for the next five months?’ 

Trump added in comments to CNN on Sunday that he believes defeating Harris, if she emerges as the official nominee, would be an easier feat than defeating Biden in November.

Just two days before the RNC kicked off, Trump survived an assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania. The shooting injured Trump and two others and killed 50-year-old local father Corey Comperatore.

Epstein said that for Democrats, Biden ‘is only half their problem.’

‘The other half is that the American people don’t like the results of their governing for the last four years. That’s true on every single issue other than abortion,’ he said.

He argued that with Democrats ‘course correcting,’ they ‘shouldn’t half-a– it with a stand-in for Biden. They should do a complete correction and find the political center with the younger candidate.’ 

Calls had mounted for weeks that Biden should drop out of the race after his disastrous debate performance against Trump on June 27, when he stumbled over his responses and appeared much more subdued in his demeanor than during other public events.

Fox News Digital’s Michael Lee contributed to this report.

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Vice President Kamala Harris confirmed that she will run for the Democratic nomination for president after President Biden’s decision to suspend his re-election campaign.

‘I am honored to have the President’s endorsement and my intention is to earn and win this nomination,’ Harris said in a statement on Sunday. 

Shortly after Biden posted a letter on X revealing his intention to end his re-election bid, he sent out a separate post endorsing Harris for the Democratic nomination. ‘Today I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year,’ he said. 

The vice president called Biden’s decision a ‘selfless and patriotic act,’ adding that he is ‘doing what he has done throughout his life of service: putting the American people and our country above everything else.’

Harris has also received endorsements from former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, as well as several Democratic lawmakers. However, many Democrats have issued statements on Biden’s decision without making mention of Harris or endorsing her. 

Democratic strategists noted to Fox News Digital that the vice president is in the best position to take on former President Trump with just months to the election. Several Democratic operatives pointed to the fact that Harris was voted for by the same primary voters that chose Biden, and she has already established a campaign and fundraising infrastructure going into the crucial contest. 

Biden’s decision to step aside comes after several weeks of mounting pressure for him to do so following a poor debate performance last month against former President Trump. Before his announcement, 37 congressional Democrats and those who caucus with them had pressed Biden to drop out. 

However, Biden had remained adamant that he was going to stay in the campaign up until his post to X. 

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Vice President Kamala Harris is rapidly emerging as the logical successor to President Biden, Democratic strategists said soon after the 81-year-old leader announced he would drop out of the 2024 election.

Meanwhile, leaders in the Democratic Party, including Biden himself, are already coalescing around Harris, strengthening her position as the president’s heir apparent.

‘I think that the only practical, logical and ethical thing we do is to coalesce around Kamala Harris in this moment,’ former Obama administration Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs to the House Joel Rubin told Fox News Digital. 

Rubin said Harris was ‘vetted and experienced,’ having gone through much of the Democratic primary process already, and pointed out that she stands to inherit the Biden campaign’s vast infrastructure and $240 million war chest. 

‘Nothing gets upended that way,’ Rubin said. That point was echoed by strategist Antjuan Seawright, who urged Democrats to unify swiftly around the vice president, so the party could remain ‘focused on the message’ for the remainder of the election.

‘She is the only person that can inherit the operation that’s been built, as well as the… finances that have been built,’ Seawright said. ‘So I think that’s important, and quite frankly, because 14 million voters have spoken, decisively about the two of them. And in any situation, if it becomes two minus one, she becomes the one.’

Harris’ case is also bolstered by endorsements from former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton,  Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., and the Congressional Black Caucus.

‘We join millions of Americans in thanking President Biden for all he has accomplished, standing up for America time and time again, with his North Star always being what’s best for the country,’ the Clintons said in a joint statement. ‘We are honored to join the President in endorsing Vice President Harris and will do whatever we can to support her.’

Biden was under mounting pressure from fellow Democrats to drop out of the 2024 race after his disastrous performance in the CNN Presidential Debate last month. His weak showing spurred concerns among his allies about whether Biden is mentally and physically fit to run a campaign and serve another four years.

Jim Kessler, a former senior aide to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Harris clinching Biden’s blessing is ‘significant’ in cementing her place as his successor.

‘I think no matter which Democrats decide to get in the race, Harris is in the pole position,’ Kessler told Fox News Digital. ‘Just remember, like, these are —these are Biden-Harris delegates going to the convention. And there’s a ton of loyalty among convention delegates towards Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.’

‘I can’t predict whether other Democrats will get in the race, but she has by far the strongest position going into the convention… It’s the Biden-Harris administration, and they were voting for the Biden-Harris ticket, and she’s been out… there campaigning.’

Other Democrats – Sens. Jon Tester, D-Mont., and Pete Welch, D-Vt., as well as Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., to name a few – have also voiced support for a ‘mini-primary’ process to select a new nominee.

Harris herself has signaled she would take up Biden’s mantle and thanked him for his endorsement.

‘I am honored to have the President’s endorsement and my intention is to earn and win this nomination. Over the past year, I have traveled across the country, talking with Americans about the clear choice in this momentous election. And that is what I will continue to do in the days and weeks ahead. I will do everything in my power to unite the Democratic Party — and unite our nation —to defeat Donald Trump and his extreme Project 2025 agenda,’ Harris said in a campaign statement. ‘We have 107 days until Election Day. Together, we will fight. And together, we will win.’

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Former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced Sunday that they are endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris for the Democratic nomination for president after President Biden said he would not seek re-election.

Biden announced Sunday that he is suspending his 2024 re-election campaign and announced his ‘full support and endorsement’ for Harris to take over as the party’s presidential nominee.

In a statement, the Clintons said Biden ‘has capped his extraordinary career of service with a Presidency that has lifted America out of an unprecedented pandemic, created millions of new jobs, rebuilt a battered economy, strengthened our democracy, and restored our standing in the world. By any measure, he has advanced our founders’ charge to build a more perfect union and his own stated goal of restoring the soul of our nation.’

‘We join millions of Americans in thanking President Biden for all he has accomplished, standing up for America time and again, with his North Star always being what’s best for the country,’ they said in their joint statement. ‘We are honored to join the President in endorsing Vice President Harris and will do whatever we can to support her.’

‘We’ve lived through many ups and downs, but nothing has made us more worried for our country than the threat posed by a second Trump term. He has promised to be a dictator on day one, and the recent ruling by his servile Supreme Court will only embolden him to further shred the Constitution. Now is the time to support Kamala Harris and fight with everything we’ve got to elect her. America’s future depends on it.’

Biden’s announcement came after weeks of speculation and pressure from Democrats for him to step aside after a disastrous presidential debate performance against Republican nominee and former President Donald Trump. 

‘It has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as your president,’ Biden wrote in a public letter. ‘While it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interests of my party and the country for me to stand down and focus solely on fulfilling my duties as president for the remainder of my term.’

In a social media post after the letter, Biden backed Harris to take over as the party’s standard-bearer.

‘My very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my Vice President. And it’s been the best decision I’ve made. Today I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year. Democrats — it’s time to come together and beat Trump. Let’s do this,’ Biden wrote.

The president’s endorsement, along with power players like the Clintons, may dissuade any serious completion from other Democrats who may have mulled a bid for the presidential nomination and could clear a path for the vice president to succeed Biden as the party’s nominee.

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser and Brooke Singman contributed to this report.

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