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Joe Bidenโ€™s name wasnโ€™t on the ballot, but history will likely remember Kamala Harrisโ€™ resounding defeat as his loss too.

As Democrats pick up the pieces after President-elect Trumpโ€™s decisive victory, some of the vice presidentโ€™s backers are expressing frustration that Bidenโ€™s decision to seek reelection until this summer โ€” despite long-standing voter concerns about his age and unease about post-pandemic inflation as well as the U.S.-Mexico border โ€” all but sealed his partyโ€™s surrender of the White House.

โ€œThe biggest onus of this loss is on President Biden,โ€ said Andrew Yang, who ran against Biden in 2020 for the Democratic nomination and endorsed Harrisโ€™ unsuccessful run. โ€œIf he had stepped down in January instead of July, we may be in a very different place.โ€

Biden will leave office after leading the United States out of the worst pandemic in a century, galvanizing international support for Ukraine after Russiaโ€™s invasion and passing a $1-trillion infrastructure bill that will affect communities for years to come.

But having run four years ago against Trump to โ€œrestore the soul of the country,โ€ Biden will make way after just one term for his immediate predecessor, who overcame two impeachments, a felony conviction and an insurrection launched by his supporters. Trump has pledged to radically reshape the federal government and roll back many of Bidenโ€™s priorities.

โ€œMaybe in 20 or 30 years, history will remember Biden for some of these achievements,โ€ said Thom Reilly, co-director of the Center for an Independent and Sustainable Democracy at Arizona State University. โ€œBut in the shorter term, I donโ€™t know he escapes the legacy of being the president who beat Donald Trump only to usher in another Donald Trump administration four years later.โ€

The president on Wednesday stayed out of sight for the second straight day, making congratulatory calls to Democratic lawmakers who won downballot races and to Trump. Biden invited Trump for a White House meeting, and the president-elect accepted.

Biden on Thursday avoided directly addressing the electorateโ€™s seeming repudiation of his presidency. Instead, he noted that Americans will feel the effects of the administrationโ€™s signature legislative efforts for years to come.

โ€œDonโ€™t forget all that we accomplished,โ€ Biden said in a brief Rose Garden address attended by Cabinet members and top aides but not by Harris. โ€œItโ€™s been a historic presidency โ€” not because I am president but because of what weโ€™ve done. What youโ€™ve done.โ€

He issued a statement shortly after Harris delivered her concession speech Wednesday, praising her for running a โ€œhistoric campaignโ€ under โ€œextraordinary circumstances.โ€

Some high-ranking Democrats, including three advisors to the Harris campaign, expressed deep frustration with Biden for failing to recognize earlier in the election cycle that he was not up to the challenge. The advisors spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment publicly.

Biden, 81, ended his reelection campaign in July, weeks after an abysmal debate performance sent his party into a spiral and raised questions about whether he still had the mental acuity and stamina to serve as a credible nominee.

But polling long beforehand showed that many Americans worried about his age. Some 77% of Americans said in August 2023 that Biden was too old to be effective for four more years, according to a poll by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs.

The president bowed out July 21 after getting not-so-subtle nudges from Democratic Party powers, including former President Obama and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco. Biden endorsed Harris and handed over his campaign operation to her.

Yang argued that Democratic Party leaders also deserve blame for taking too long to push out Biden. With few exceptions, most notably Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips, Democrats shied away talking publicly about Bidenโ€™s age.

โ€œWhy was this not coming from any Democratic leaders?โ€ Yang said. โ€œItโ€™s a lack of courage and independence and an excess of careerism, if I just keep my mouth shut, weโ€™ll just keep on trucking along.โ€

The campaign was also saddled by anger among some Arab American and young voters over its approach to Israelโ€™s conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, an ally of Biden and Harris, said in a statement that Democrats lost the thread on working class Americansโ€™ concerns.

โ€œWill the big money interests and well-paid consultants who control the Democratic Party learn any real lessons from this disastrous campaign?โ€ the Vermont independent said. โ€œWill they understand the pain and political alienation that tens of millions of Americans are experiencing?โ€

Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison took to social media Thursday to push back on Sandersโ€™ critique, saying that Biden was โ€œthe most-pro worker President of my life time.โ€

Harris managed to spur far greater enthusiasm than Biden was generating from the partyโ€™s base. But she struggled to distinguish how her administration would differ from Bidenโ€™s.

Appearing on ABCโ€™s โ€œThe Viewโ€ in September, Harris was not able to identify a decision where she would have separated herself from Biden. โ€œThere is not a thing that comes to mind,โ€ Harris said, giving the Trump campaign a sound bite it replayed through election day.

The strategists advising the Harris campaign said the compressed campaign timetable made it even more difficult for Harris to differentiate herself from the president.

Had Biden stepped aside early in the year, they said, it would have given Democrats enough time to hold a primary. Going through the paces of an intraparty contest would have forced Harris or another eventual nominee to more aggressively stake out differences with Biden.

The strategists acknowledged that overcoming broad dissatisfaction among the American electorate about rising costs in the aftermath of the pandemic and broad concerns about the U.S. immigration system weighed heavy on the minds of voters in key states.

Still, they said that Biden had left Democrats in an untenable place.

Harris senior advisor David Plouffe in a posting on X called it a โ€œdevastating loss.โ€ Plouffe did not assign blame and said the Harris campaign โ€œdug out of a deep hole but not enough.โ€ The post was later deleted.

At the vice presidentโ€™s concession speech Wednesday, some Harris supporters said they wished the vice president had had more time to make her pitch to American voters.

โ€œI think that would have made a huge difference,โ€ said Jerushatalla Pallay, a Howard University student who attended the speech at the center of her campus.

Republicans are poised to control the White House and Senate. Control of the House has yet to be determined.

Matt Bennett, executive vice president at the Democratic-aligned group Third Way, said this moment was the most devastating the party has faced in his lifetime.

โ€œHarris was dealt a really bad hand. Some of it was Bidenโ€™s making and some maybe not,โ€ said Bennett, who served as an aide to Vice President Al Gore during the Clinton administration. โ€œWould Democrats fare better if Biden had stepped back earlier? I donโ€™t know if we can say for certain, but itโ€™s a question weโ€™ll be asking ourselves for some time.โ€

Madhani writes for the Associated Press. Associated Press writers Matt Brown and Chris Megerian contributed to this report.

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