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White House to take questions on camera for 1st time since debate

Press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre is expected to hold her first on-camera White House press briefing Tuesday since President Biden's debate flop.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre will address the briefing room Tuesday for the first time since President Biden's rocky debate performance. 

In the aftermath of Thursday's debate in Atlanta, Jean-Pierre did hold a press gaggle aboard Air Force One while en route to Queens, New York, on Friday, but Tuesday will be the first time she returns to the White House briefing room to field questions on camera. Biden returned to the White House Monday night after gathering with family at Camp David in Maryland over the weekend. 

During the press gaggle with Jean-Pierre, campaign communications director Michael Tyler referenced Biden's remarks at a Friday post-debate rally in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Reading from a teleprompter and addressing a live audience, in contrast with the debate, the president told cheering supporters, "I don’t walk as easy as I used to. I don’t speak as smoothly as I used to. I don't debate as well as I used to. But I know what I do know: I know how to tell the truth." 

BIDEN FAMILY BLAME STAFF FOR DEBATE PERFORMANCE AS HE LAYS LOW AGAIN AT CAMP DAVID: REPORTS

"Obviously, I think the president said himself he’s not as good as a debater as he used to be. He doesn’t walk or talk as smoothly as he used to. But he knows how to fight like hell. And I think he showed that today in North Carolina," Tyler said. "And so, that’s what the American people are going to continue to see day in and day out for the remainder of this campaign: a president in Joe Biden who understands he’s never going to stop fighting for the American people, and he’s never going to stop contrasting that against Donald Trump, who every single day is clearly fighting for himself. 

"So, I think the President is honest about his own performance. But as far as what last night’s debate actually provided for the American people, it — it crystallized the threat — it begins to crystallize the threat that Donald Trump poses," he added. 

After a string of campaign events in New York and New Jersey on Saturday, first lady Jill Biden and the president's children and grandchildren gathered at Camp David reportedly to encourage the president to stay in the race despite uproar within the Democratic Party questioning whether the current commander-in-chief is a viable candidate to nominate for a second term. 

Reports said Biden's family on Sunday blamed campaign staffers, arguing they did not adequately prepare the president for the CNN debate against former President Trump. 

BIDEN STAFF 'SCARED S---LESS' OF HIM, SENIOR ADMIN OFFICIAL SAYS; WH HITS BACK

According to a new report by Politico on Tuesday, a senior administration official claimed that some of President Biden's top officials are "scared s---less" of displeasing him in daily briefings. 

"It’s like, ‘You can’t include that, that will set him off,’ or ‘Put that in, he likes that,’" a senior administration official told Politico on background. "It’s a Rorschach test, not a briefing. Because he is not a pleasant person to be around when he’s being briefed. It’s very difficult, and people are scared [s---less] of him."

The official told Politico that Biden is unwilling to take advice from outside his small inner circle, becoming increasingly isolated from wider public opinion and input.

"He doesn’t take advice from anyone other than those few top aides, and it becomes a perfect storm because he just gets more and more isolated from their efforts to control it," the official reportedly told Politico.

White House senior deputy press secretary Andrew Bates pushed back on the Politico report's claim that staff are afraid of the president, telling Fox News Digital, "That’s simply not who [Biden] is." 

Jeane-Pierre's White House press briefing is scheduled to start Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. ET.

Fox News' Timothy H.J. Nerozzi contributed to this report.

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