BIDEN: MY TIME
August 23rd, 2008, 7:09 am · 2 Comments · posted by Dan Lehr

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(Above: Barack Obama introduces Biden in Springfield, Illinois on Saturday.
Below: Joe Biden’s speech)
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(above ‘”Biden” My Time’ by George Gershwin, sung by Judy Garland in 1943’s “Girl Crazy.” Play in conjunction with Biden’s speech above for added effect.)
From ABC News:
Barack Obama has made his vice presidential pick: the first term Senator will tap his more experienced colleague, Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., to join the Democratic ticket.
Biden, 65, brings immediate heft and foreign policy credentials to a ticket topped by the 47-year-old Obama. The Delaware Democrat first won his job in the Senate over 35 years ago — when Obama was only 11 — and has been reelected five times.
…
And though Delaware and the state’s three electoral votes are reliably Democratic, Biden brings vast national political experience to the table.
Read Joe Biden’s Wikipedia entry here.
A few thoughts:
1. If there was any doubt left that geography is off the table as a factor in making a veep selection (a premise that essentially died with the selection of Wyoming’s Dick Cheney in 2000), it is now gone.
2. Speaking of Cheney, this pick is one that is symbolically closer to George Bush’s VP than Kerry’s selection of Edwards, Gore’s selection of Lieberman, or Clinton’s selection of Gore. Biden fills in a lot of “holes” Obama has.
3. The Delaware senator has sometimes been a victim of “foot in mouth” disease (he called Obama “clean” & “articulate” on the campaign trail earlier this year — something you’ll hear a lot more of in the coming days). Thus Obama’s taking a risk by picking him.
4. Biden is an attack dog, very passionate about issues he cares about, & he was clearly chosen partly for this reason. His June 22nd Meet the Press appearance (watch below) was apparently his audition tape:
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5. In addition to foreign policy experience, Biden has a son who has served in Iraq.
6. Another risk, & one that had me discounting Biden altogether: like Obama, he’s a United States Senator.
The last time two (sitting) Senators were on a presidential ticket? Kerry-Edwards, last time around.
Before that?

George McGovern & Thomas Eagleton, 1972 [the ticket was short lived, after word got out that Eagleton had received psychiatric treatment].
The last 2-Senator ticket that voters sent to the White House was Kennedy-Johnson, in 1960, & Kennedy was the last Senator elected president.
THE CASE FOR BIDEN, by David Brooks (conservative) of the New York Times:
Barack Obama has decided upon a vice-presidential running mate. And while I don’t know who it is as I write, for the good of the country, I hope he picked Joe Biden.
Biden’s weaknesses are on the surface. He has said a number of idiotic things over the years and, in the days following his selection, those snippets would be aired again and again.
But that won’t hurt all that much because voters are smart enough to forgive the genuine flaws of genuine people. And over the long haul, Biden provides what Obama needs:
Working-Class Roots. Biden is a lunch-bucket Democrat. His father was rich when he was young — played polo, cavorted on yachts, drove luxury cars. But through a series of bad personal and business decisions, he was broke by the time Joe Jr. came along. They lived with their in-laws in Scranton, Pa., then moved to a dingy working-class area in Wilmington, Del. At one point, the elder Biden cleaned boilers during the week and sold pennants and knickknacks at a farmer’s market on the weekends.
His son was raised with a fierce working-class pride — no one is better than anyone else. Once, when Joe Sr. was working for a car dealership, the owner threw a Christmas party for the staff. Just as the dancing was to begin, the owner scattered silver dollars on the floor and watched from above as the mechanics and salesmen scrambled about for them. Joe Sr. quit that job on the spot.
Even today, after serving for decades in the world’s most pompous workplace, Senator Biden retains an ostentatiously unpretentious manner. He campaigns with an army of Bidens who seem to emerge by the dozens from the old neighborhood in Scranton. He has disdain for privilege and for limousine liberals — the mark of an honest, working-class Democrat.
Democrats in general, and Obama in particular, have trouble connecting with working-class voters, especially Catholic ones. Biden would be the bridge.
Honesty. Biden’s most notorious feature is his mouth. But in his youth, he had a stutter. As a freshman in high school he was exempted from public speaking because of his disability, and was ridiculed by teachers and peers. His nickname was Dash, because of his inability to finish a sentence.
He developed an odd smile as a way to relax his facial muscles (it still shows up while he’s speaking today) and he’s spent his adulthood making up for any comments that may have gone unmade during his youth.
Today, Biden’s conversational style is tiresome to some, but it has one outstanding feature. He is direct. No matter who you are, he tells you exactly what he thinks, before he tells it to you a second, third and fourth time.
Presidents need someone who will be relentlessly direct. Obama, who attracts worshippers, not just staff members, needs that more than most.
Loyalty. Just after Biden was elected to the senate in 1972, his wife, Neilia, and daughter Naomi were killed in a car crash. His career has also been marked by lesser crises. His first presidential run ended in a plagiarism scandal. He nearly died of a brain aneurism.
New administrations are dominated by the young and the arrogant, and benefit from the presence of those who have been through the worst and who have a tinge of perspective. Moreover, there are moments when a president has to go into the cabinet room and announce a decision that nearly everyone else on his team disagrees with. In those moments, he needs a vice president who will provide absolute support. That sort of loyalty comes easiest to people who have been down themselves, and who had to rely on others in their own moments of need.
Experience. When Obama talks about postpartisanship, he talks about a grass-roots movement that will arise and sweep away the old ways of Washington. When John McCain talks about it, he describes a meeting of wise old heads who get together to craft compromises. Obama’s vision is more romantic, but McCain’s is more realistic.
When Biden was a young senator, he was mentored by Hubert Humphrey, Mike Mansfield and the like. He was schooled in senatorial procedure in the days when the Senate was less gridlocked. If Obama hopes to pass energy and health care legislation, he’s going to need someone with that kind of legislative knowledge who can bring the battered old senators together, as in days of yore.
There are other veep choices. Tim Kaine seems like a solid man, but selecting him would be disastrous. It would underline all the anxieties voters have about youth and inexperience. Evan Bayh has impeccably centrist credentials, but the country is not in the mood for dispassionate caution.
Biden’s the one. The only question is whether Obama was wise and self-aware enough to know that.
THE CASE AGAINST BIDEN, by Chris Cillizza (liberal?) of the Washington Post:
Loose Lips Sink Ships
Over the course of his presidential bid, Biden cemented his reputation as — how to put this nicely? — less than disciplined on the campaign trail.
In the summer of 2006, as he was publicly mulling the race, Biden set off a controversy over comments he made about Indian Americans.
“I’ve had a great relationship [with Indian Americans],” Biden said. “In Delaware, the largest growth in population is Indian-Americans moving from India. You cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent. I’m not joking.”
On the day he formally announced his candidacy, a New York Observer story that quoted Biden as calling Obama “articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy” came out, and the resultant uproar effectively undercut any momentum Biden was hoping to build.
While Biden was on his best verbal behavior for much of the rest of the campaign, there is no question that his tendency to shoot from the lip worries some in Obama world. As one Democratic consultant put it: “You know there will be three days in the campaign where someone in Chicago will get a call and respond — ‘What did you say he said?.’”
For a campaign that prides itself on its message discipline, choosing Biden would be introducing a wildcard into the mix. The Obama campaign exudes quiet confidence that if they do the basic political work between now and Nov. 4 the Illinois senator will be president. Do they really want to risk it with Biden?
Plagiarizer In Chief
Way back in 1987, Biden was riding high in the presidential race — widely regarded as a serious contenders for the Democratic party’s nod.
Then Neil Kinnock happened. Biden borrowed passages of a speech given by Kinnock, a leader in Britain’s Labour Party, without attribution — a mistake that led to a detailed examination of Biden’s public statements that turned up several more examples of potential plagiarism and resume inflation. The feeding frenzy eventually chased the Delaware senator from the race.
The incident has become the stuff of political lore — type “Joe Biden and Neil Kinnock” into Google and more than 37,000 hits are returned — even though those close to Biden insist that the actual facts surrounding the incidents are largely overblown.
Maybe. But, while any political junkie worth his (or her) name knows all about the Kinnock incident, it’s a mistake to assume the average voter knows about it. In the words of one Republican strategist: “Old news inside the Beltway, new news outside.”
That reality means that in every story about Biden done in the aftermath of his selection, Kinnock’s name and the allegations of plagiarism would come up. It would complicate the desired flawless roll-out of the new ticket and could even raise questions about Obama’s commitment to a new kind of politics.
Washington Insider
The central tenet of Obama’s campaign message is that if Americans want to change their government, then they have to change the people they send to Washington.
Picking Biden, who has served in the Senate for the better part of the last four decades, seems to run counter to that core message. Biden was elected to the Senate at age 29 and spent only four years after graduating from Syracuse Law School in 1968 working in the private sector before entering public life.
Biden has long been a regular on the Sunday talk show circuit and is one of the pillars of the Democratic party establishment. His accomplishments — of which there are many — all were achieved as a senator operating inside the deepest heart of political Washington.
Biden allies note that despite his long service in Washington he is, at his core, an outsider inside the Beltway. While that may well be true, the optics for Obama aren’t great; he can’t change the fact that in picking Biden he would be going with someone who has spent nearly his entire adult life not only in politics but as a member of the world’s greatest deliberative body.
Joe Loves Joe
One of the most overlooked episodes during the 1987 collapse of Biden’s campaign was a snippet of footage captured by C-Span in which the Delaware senator, in response to a question about where he went to law school and what sort of grades he received, delivered this classic line: “I think I have a much higher IQ than you do.”
While any human being — especially a candidate for president who is constantly being poked and prodded — can be forgiven a momentary flash of temper, Biden’s detractors point to that incident as evidence that the senator thinks he is the bee’s knees and doesn’t care who knows it.
Biden, by his own admission, has the capacity to fall in love with his own voice and wander off on tangents about his life that have nothing to do with the topic at hand.
During the 2006 confirmation hearings for Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito, the Post’s Dana Milbank wrote this of Biden’s performance:
“Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr., in his first 12 minutes of questioning the nominee, managed to get off only one question. Instead, during his 30-minute round of questioning, Biden spoke about his own Irish American roots, his “Grandfather Finnegan,” his son’s application to Princeton (he attended the University of Pennsylvania instead, Biden said), a speech the senator gave on the Princeton campus, the fact that Biden is “not a Princeton fan,” and his views on the eyeglasses of Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.).”
Ouch.
There is evidence from the Democratic primaries that Biden is not only aware of his tendency to go on (and on) about himself but is also able to curb that natural tendency, however. In one of the best moments in an unending series of Democratic debates, Biden was asked by moderator Brian Williams whether he possessed the “discipline” to be the leader of the free world. Biden’s simple response — “yes” — brought the house down and put the Delaware senator in The Fix’s “winners” column for the night.
Now it’s your turn. What do you think of Obama’s choice? Please post a comment, & let’s get a conversation started!
UPDATE: Here’s the first video featuring Biden from Obama’s website:
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August 23rd, 2008 at 6:54 pm
What a great choice! Biden is uniquely suited to bring experience AND change. He brings expierience because he has been in D.C. for so long, but change also because he has not been changed by D.C. I think it is good to have a rounded ticket, and I don’t think it lessens the “change” slogan of Obama’s campaign. Minus any famous Biden verbal gaffes, I don’t think there is many ways to spin this in a negative light.
August 24th, 2008 at 11:33 pm
i disagree with the decision he make.