With the 2024 presidential race on the horizon, will US President Joe Biden’s son be a liability on the campaign trail?
Washington, DC – In a White House eager to distance itself from allegations of nepotism, corruption and grifting, Hunter Biden is the problem that simply won’t go away.
US President Joe Biden’s 53-year-old middle child has been a persistent source of the wrong kind of attention for the first family, with questions swirling over whether he used his father’s office for personal gain.
The latest chapter of the Hunter Biden saga came on June 22, when a WhatsApp message was released by a congressional committee investigating the presidential family.
The message, allegedly from Hunter Biden to a Chinese business associate, showed him berating the associate in July 2017, when Joe Biden was a private citizen and former vice president.
“I am sitting here with my father and we would like to understand why the commitment made has not been fulfilled,” Hunter Biden allegedly wrote.
As the message continued, Hunter appeared to threaten the business associate.