It's something along the lines of Democrats trying to wipe their fingerprints off the knife plunged into ole' Stumblebums' back. The phony accolades are pouring in from the very people who pushed Biden to the dumpster. Pelosi: "Joe, we can do this the easy way or the hard way". The Dems / Socialists took ole' Stumblebum to the woodshed to take the presidential bid from his cold, dead hands.
If you actually read journalist reporting on the discussions, it's really anything but what you described.
In Mr. Schumer’s case, he decided to request a personal meeting with the president after a tense session between Democratic senators and members of the president’s team on Capitol Hill in which few senators were enthusiastic about the president’s will to stay in the race. Two days later, on July 13, he met with Mr. Biden, recounting how the vast majority of Senate Democrats in the gathering did not want him to remain a candidate.
Mr. Schumer, the person knowledgeable about the meeting said, urged the president to consider three points as he weighed staying in: the risks to his personal legacy, the future of the country and the impact on Congress if Democrats were to take steep losses in November’s elections. He also exhorted Mr. Biden to think about the impact on the Supreme Court should former President Donald J. Trump be re-elected and allied with a Republican Senate able to confirm new justices — a subject with resonance for Mr. Biden, a former chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
“I do not expect you to walk out of this room making a decision, but I hope you will think about what I said,” Mr. Schumer concluded, according to the person, who asked to remain anonymous given the sensitivity of the meeting.
Mr. Schumer began the private meeting with Mr. Biden by assuring the president he had come out of love and affection and as a friend and colleague, and the two parted with a hug, the person said.
It was a fraught moment for Mr. Schumer given his own long relationship with Mr. Biden, their joint legislative achievements of recent years and Mr. Schumer’s desire to hold on to his narrow Senate majority, one severely threatened by the prospect of a resounding Biden loss.
In the days immediately after the debate, Mr. Schumer held off on making a snap judgment,
torn between his role as Mr. Biden’s champion in the Senate and his political calculations. He invited his colleagues and party donors to convey their concerns to the Biden team but not to make public pronouncements. He feared that putting pressure on the president could backfire.
The person close to Mr. Schumer said that he was in almost daily contact with the president’s top advisers and talked regularly with Representative Hakeem Jeffries, Democrat of New York and the minority leader.
Mr. Schumer also talked on multiple occasions with former President Barack Obama and consulted with Mr. Obama, Mr. Jeffries and Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the influential former House speaker, before traveling to Delaware to see Mr. Biden and deliver his unpleasant message.