Jill Biden’s Shocking Admission About Joe’s Health In Trump Debate
Former first lady Jill Biden is now revealing that she feared her husband, President Joe Biden, may have been suffering a medical emergency during his widely criticized 2024 debate performance against President Donald Trump — despite publicly defending him at the time and dismissing concerns about his condition.
In a new interview with CBS News scheduled to air in full Sunday ahead of the June 2 release of her memoir, “View from the East Wing,” Jill Biden said the debate left her terrified.
“I was frightened, because I had never, ever seen Joe like that before or since. Never,” she said.
“I don’t know what happened,” she added. “As I watched it, I thought, ‘Oh, my God, he’s having a stroke.’ And it scared me to death.”
The June 27, 2024 debate stunned viewers across the country as Biden repeatedly appeared to lose his train of thought, froze mid-answer, stumbled over words, and at times looked disoriented on stage.
Despite the fallout, Jill Biden immediately stepped in afterward to reassure supporters, accompanying the president to an Atlanta Waffle House and praising his debate performance.
“Joe – you did such a great job,” she said during an event with reeling supporters. “You answered every question, you knew all the facts.”
In the days that followed, the first lady continued publicly defending her husband as growing numbers of Democrats and voters questioned whether he was mentally fit to continue his campaign.
Now, some former administration insiders argue that her latest comments come far too late.
“Unfortunately, when you wait this long to tell your own story in your own words, it’s extremely hard to put the toothpaste back in the tube. She owed it to herself to be candid and transparent in the moment or the days after,” said Michael LaRosa, who served as the then-first lady’s communications director during her first year in the East Wing.
“The cake is already baked when it comes to shaping public perception about that time and about her,” he added. “Penning books doesn’t cut it anymore.”
A person close to Jill Biden pushed back on the criticism, saying the memoir and interview simply reflect her effort to address lingering questions surrounding that turbulent period.
“She tried to dig deep and explore the answers to some of the questions she knows that are out there,” this source said.
Several Democrats who worked closely with the administration said they were not surprised by the apparent contradiction between Jill Biden’s public reassurances and her private fears, noting that many inside the White House had long believed she wielded major influence as concerns about the president’s condition intensified.
One former aide mocked the title of her upcoming memoir, joking that a more fitting name would be: “View From the East Wing, Blindfold On.”
“Find it in the fiction aisle of your local bookstore,” this person added.
In the aftermath of the disastrous debate, the White House offered multiple explanations for Biden’s shaky showing. Officials first blamed a cold, later pointed to exhaustion and jet lag from foreign travel weeks earlier, and eventually claimed the president had overloaded himself with debate preparation and mixed up facts.
The political pressure eventually became overwhelming. On July 21, 2024, Biden ended his reelection campaign after mounting calls from within his own party to step aside, later backing then-Vice President Kamala Harris as the Democratic nominee.
Questions surrounding Biden’s age and health had shadowed his campaign from the moment he announced his reelection bid in April 2023. At 81 years old, he was already the oldest person ever elected president.
Throughout that period, Jill Biden remained one of her husband’s fiercest public defenders, repeatedly insisting he was fully capable of serving another term and would “finish the job.”
Privately, however, former White House chief of staff Jeff Zients told congressional investigators that Jill Biden increasingly urged aides to build more rest into the president’s schedule and took on a larger role in managing his daily activities as concerns over his health escalated.
After Joe Biden withdrew from the race, Jill Biden campaigned heavily for Harris, whose eventual loss to Trump included a decisive Electoral College defeat and marked the first time in two decades that a Democratic presidential candidate failed to win the national popular vote.
Neither Jill Biden nor publisher Gallery Books has disclosed the financial terms of the memoir deal.
The Bidens are believed to be relying in part on proceeds from Jill Biden’s memoir and a separate book currently being written by Joe Biden. Financial disclosure forms showed the couple left the White House with liquid assets estimated between $632,000 and $1.38 million, making them among the least wealthy presidential couples in modern history.
At the same time, former first son Hunter Biden accumulated millions of dollars in legal expenses while fighting federal tax and gun-related charges before ultimately receiving a presidential pardon from his father during the closing months of the administration.
{Matzav.com}