When the crowd chanted “Thank you Joe,” Biden interrupted, “Thank Kamala too.” That probably pleased Trump, who has been trying to paint Biden’s presidency as an inflation-riddled global disaster – in which Harris is fully complicit.

But by leaving now, and ending a contest between an 81-year-old and a 78-year-old, Biden has allowed his vice president and the new Democratic nominee to run with the aura of the change candidate. Trump is struggling to cope with it. In fact, he’s having a harder time letting Biden go than the Democratic Party is.

Still, Harris faces a fearsome task. While she’s had a strong start and has reversed Biden’s polling deficits, she’s locked in a neck-and-neck race with Trump in swing states and the ex-president remains a feral campaigner.

Biden’s disappointment

President Joe Biden attends the Democratic National Convention at the United Center in Chicago Monday.

Perhaps the welcome in which Biden basked Monday will slake some of the reportedly still raw disappointment that he feels at how his storied career will end. It’s unlikely, however, to ease his inner circle’s sense of betrayal over party elected officials who acted to push him aside after his debate performance validated voter anxiety about his age. (The key figure in the effort to move him on, Nancy Pelosi, told CNN Monday she hoped Biden would “feel the love in this room, it’s overwhelming.” Biden later told reporters he hasn’t spoken to the former House speaker since his decision to bow out of the race.)

For all the adulation that rained down from the rafters of the United Center from party members who now consider Biden a selfless hero and an indisputably great president, the effective ending of his reelection campaign by a party that believed he would lose represents an undeniable act of ruthlessness.

There was just a sense in the short speech by first lady Jill Biden – when she said that her husband had to “dig deep into his soul” to decide not to run again – of the pain of the last month. And when Ashley Biden called her father one of “the most consequential leaders in history,” she seemed to be warning the country what it was about to lose.

But the president insisted he was not angry at those who nudged him aside. In the closest he came to explaining his decision, he said, “It’s been the honor of my lifetime to serve as your president. I love the job, but I love my country more.”

Biden had gone from being the final speaker on the last night of the convention, a spot reserved for the nominee, to its warm-up act on the first night. And Air Force One was poised for an overnight flight west to his California vacation. The main business of the convention will now go on without the sitting president.

The last few months have been cruel to Biden. Yet he has as deep an understanding of the treachery of fate as any political leader alive. His whole life has veered between great heights and tragedy, epitomized by the death of his wife and infant daughter just after he’d won election to the Senate, and then the death of his beloved son Beau from brain cancer while he was vice president.

There’s long been a sense inside Biden’s hugely loyal corps of friends and family that he’s not gotten the credit he deserves in a Washington career that started when Richard Nixon was president. Even when he claimed the Democratic nomination in 2020, at a convention without the traditional balloon drop, and then won the presidency after a lifetime of pursuing it, he didn’t get the full fanfare amid Covid-19 precautions.

But the love Biden received on Monday will change the way history remembers his career. Whenever there’s a Democratic convention, his speech will be recalled, alongside the fabled moments of the party’s past.

And when the achievements he proudly proclaimed Monday have faded, Biden will be remembered for generations — just like the first president, George Washington — as much for the way he left office as for what he did when he held it. -CNN

VIDEO -CNN