Hillary Clinton is just sitting back and waiting as Democrats are poised to carve each other up tonight during the second series of presidential debates.

NBC News Archives shared a clip of Hillary eating cheesecake in 2016 on National Cheesecake Day.

Clinton, who has repeatedly been talking like a candidate as of late, is nowhere to be found as Democrats are prepping to take on frontrunner Joe Biden tomorrow night.

PJ Media reports:

As the Democratic contenders warm up for the second round of debates, the other candidates’ knives are out for Joe Biden — with the mainstream media helping keep those edges sharp.

This morning the New York Times published a hit piece by Katie Glueck and Jonathan Martin, headlined “Why Joe Biden’s Age Worries Some Democratic Allies and Voters.” Reporting month-old news (that’s how you know it’s a hit piece) on Biden’s previous debate performance, the authors “revealed significant unease” about Biden’s ability to carry the torch against President Donald Trump next year. While there were plenty of people willing to speak badly of Biden without attribution, the only big-name Dem willing to say something negative on the record was consultant Mike Lux. His support for Biden goes all the way back to Biden’s original presidential run in 1988 — I was a college freshman at the time; I’m 50 now — but now Dix says of Biden’s performance: “It felt like he was a step slow, [but] if Joe comes back strong in the next few debates, I think it’ll be fine.”

That’s a big If, considering how badly he did last month. More importantly, the other candidates all smell blood in the water after Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) drew so much of it in the first round. In June, Biden only had to fend off one serious attacker — and failed. Wednesday night the knives will come from every direction.

Over at POLITICO, Natasha Korecki writes that “even the former veep’s supporters wonder whether he can exercise the discipline necessary to execute a debate plan Wednesday.” She quotes former Obama hand David Axelrod arguing, “the big question he has to resolve is if he’s up to this thing, if he’s vigorous and if he’s engaged.” Korecki adds, “Seldom has a candidate so well-equipped for a debate projected so much uncertainty.”

Keep reading the PJ Media analysis here.