Rep. Dean Phillips calls for Congressional Dems to hold a confidence vote on Biden
In a Wall Street Journal op-ed Sunday, Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn. and former long-shot Democratic presidential candidate, called on Congressional Democrats to hold a confidence vote on President Joe Biden as the party's nominee.
Phillips said that this method would be democratic, because those lawmakers were elected by Americans across the country.

"That’s why I believe House and Senate Democrats, directly elected by voters from across the country, must hold an immediate vote of confidence and share the results directly with Mr. Biden," Phillips wrote in the op-ed. "It can be done by secret ballot, as fear of political retribution still prevents many members from speaking publicly. But a poll of elected Democrats whose electoral fates are closely tied to the president is far superior to one of unelected members of the Democratic National Committee."
If the vote of "confidence" wins, then Democrats should coalesce their support behind the president, Phillips wrote.
"But if ‘no confidence’ is the consensus, the president must end his candidacy," he added.
In the case of a "no confidence vote," Phillips said he thinks Vice President Kamala Harris would become the party's candidate, but Phillips proposed a method to selecting the party's ticket.
"The president and the party could then either endorse and elevate Vice President Kamala Harris to the top of the ticket or promote a one-month ‘miniprimary,’” he wrote.
Phillips also called on Biden to "pass the torch" during an interview on CBS' "Face the Nation" on Sunday.





