Biden is skipping a Super Bowl interview. His advisers say it's part of the plan.

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WASHINGTON — For the second year in a row, President Joe Biden is passing on the opportunity to sit down for a Super Bowl interview that could reach millions of Americans on Sunday — a move his advisers say is part of their larger communication strategy.

Biden's aides believe many voters — already exhausted from a bruising political season — simply want to tune into the game. And that seeing the president pop up while waiting for kickoff might turn them off.

But some in his party worry about his decision to skip the opportunity so speak to millions of Americans.

Joe Biden at the White House  on June 26, 2023. (Brendan Smialowski / AFP - Getty Images file)
Joe Biden at the White House on June 26, 2023. (Brendan Smialowski / AFP - Getty Images file)

"Either he doesn’t have anything to say or his team is worried about what he might say or how he’d say it," said a veteran Democratic campaign operative, adding that Biden should have given a national address after recent retaliatory strikes in the Middle East. “Regardless, it’s a problem.”

The broadcast networks rotate who carries the Super Bowl each year, and for much of the past 15 years, they also booked a sit-down interview with the president to air before the opening kickoff. CBS, which has the rights this year, offered the president a 15-minute interview that would air online, a senior administration official said.

The network told the White House that it would air three or four minutes of that interview during Super Bowl coverage, the official said. The White House did not feel inclined to do the interview at the start of what may be the longest general election in modern history, the official said.

“We hope viewers enjoy watching what they tuned in for — the game,” White House communications director Ben LaBolt said in a statement.

Biden's decision not to do the interview drew a quick response from his expected November rival, former President Donald Trump, who posted online that he would be happy to sit for the interview instead and that Biden's decision was evidence of his cognitive state, a frequent GOP line of attack.

“First of all, these offers are only for presidents — not for the loser,” Biden campaign communications director Michael Tyler said in response to the Trump comment. “Second of all, no one tuning in to watch football this Sunday wants to hear Donald Trump say a damn thing about anything.”

Biden’s aides argue he has done network interviews in the past and will do so again when they deem it best serves their messaging. They believe the president has had an aggressive travel schedule in recent weeks, with plenty of engagements that have collectively reached millions of voters.

The Biden campaign hasn’t stayed away from the NFL this season, though. It aired ads during the first game last fall and on Thanksgiving Day in media markets in the key battlegrounds of Michigan and Wisconsin.

Last year, Biden’s team went back and forth with Fox News about a potential interview. Instead, the White House ultimately agreed to sit down with the network’s little-known streaming channel Fox Soul.

Overall, Biden has participated in far fewer interviews compared with his predecessors. Since becoming president, he has done 86 interviews, versus 300 for Trump and 422 for Barack Obama at this point in their presidencies, according to data collected by The White House Transition Project’s Martha Kumar.

Trump skipped one year of pre-Super Bowl interviews during his time in office. Obama largely established the tradition, participating in the interviews each year during his two terms.

Biden did partake in a Super Bowl interview with CBS in 2021, just weeks after being sworn in, and in 2022, when NBC broadcast the game.

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com