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David Corn: Obama Picks Biden: A Conventional But Effective Choice?

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-24-08 07:07 AM
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David Corn: Obama Picks Biden: A Conventional But Effective Choice?
Obama Picks Biden: A Conventional But Effective Choice?

By David Corn | August 23, 2008 10:37 AM


In the end, Barack Obama used unconventional means to announce a conventional choice for his running-mate.

Via a three A.M. text message sent to the cell phones of his supporters, donors and volunteers, Obama's campaign declared that he had chosen Senator Joe Biden, the Delaware Democrat, to be "our" veep nominee. (Three in the morning--was this a dig at Senator Hillary Clinton or just a coincidence?) With this I'll-let-you-know-first gimmick, Obama had snagged millions of cell numbers and email addresses his campaign can use in the weeks ahead to motivate voters and push them to the polls on Election Day. So in purely tactical terms, his running-mate rollout was indeed pioneering and widely successful. What remains to be seen, of course, is whether he made a smart pick by attaching his campaign for change to a fellow who has worked Washington's ways in the Senate for 35 years.

Sometimes going conventional is not the wrong course. During the past weeks of veep-frenzy, Biden's assets and liabilities have been dissected repeatedly. He possesses extensive foreign policy experience (which Obama does not). He can do straight-talk relatively well for a senator (while Obama has been accused of not fully connecting with working-class voters). Then again, Biden has suffered in the past from both verbal diarrhea and gaffe-itis. I've attended many committee hearings in the Senate when Biden turned a question into a long-winded monologue that drove people in the room to want to shout, "Question, Senator, do you have a question?!!" And there are times when Biden's mental filter has switched off and he has said the dumbest thing, such as when he famously called Obama "the first mainstream African American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy." (The Daily Mail headlined its account of Obama's pick this way: "Obama names 'gaffe-prone' Joe Biden as his running mate.")

But Biden is a smart legislator who has shown that he can suppress his own faults when he must. He had a good campaign this past year as a presidential candidate. He won few votes but performed well at the debates and demonstrated he could keep his infamous verbosity under control. At the confirmation hearing for Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, while other Democrats got bogged down in legal jargon practically indecipherable to the average person, Biden peppered Roberts with straightforward questions about Roberts' claim that he merely wanted to be an umpire on the bench who calls constitutional balls and strikes. "Much as I respect your metaphor," Biden countered, "it's not very apt, because you get to determine the strike zone. The founders never set a strike zone." It was the best moment of the hearing.


On foreign policy, Biden has always been an activist, thinking and engaging with the issues and crises generating headlines and those that don't make the evening news. He has a fancy for cooking up proposals. And even if he devises ideas that may raise objections--such as his plan to partition Iraq--he often deserves credit for the effort. (He issued his proposal for splitting up Iraq at a time when the Bush administration was doing nothing but "staying the course.")

One of Biden's better moments came in the run-up to the war with Iraq. In the fall of 2002, the Bush administration, claiming Saddam Hussein had amassed loads of WMDs that he could hand to al Qaeda for attacks against the United States, was demanding that the House and Senate grant Bush the authority to invade Iraq whenever he wanted. Rather than cave to Bush, Biden, the chairman of the foreign relations committee, worked with Republican Senators Richard Lugar and Chuck Hagel to craft an alternative: a resolution that would allow Bush to attack Iraq only for the purposes of destroying Iraq's WMDs and only after seeking UN approval. If the UN withheld permission, Bush would have to come back to Congress and prove that the threat was so "grave" that only military action could eliminate it. This was a wily legislative maneuver that could have averted a war. (And Biden told me and Michael Isikoff during an interview for our book, Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq War, that he had received backdoor encouragement from Secretary of State Colin Powell.) But Biden's bipartisan measure was ultimately derailed by a fellow Democrat: House minority leader Richard Gephardt, who essentially accepted the White House's blank-check approach. After Gephardt did that, Republican senators told Biden, How can we be to the left of Dick Gephardt? "I was so angry," Biden later said. "I was frustrated. But I never second-guess another man's political judgment."

more...

http://blogs.cqpolitics.com/davidcorn/2008/08/obama-picks-biden-veep.html
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CrispyQ Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-24-08 08:12 AM
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1. Thanks for this.
I wasn't aware of the Richard Gephardt story.
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Stop Cornyn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-24-08 08:20 AM
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2. The Daily Mail hit piece referenced by David Corn was BRUTAL:
Edited on Sun Aug-24-08 08:21 AM by Stop Cornyn
Barack Obama has rejected Hillary Clinton and chosen 65-year-old Senator Joe Biden – one of his fiercest critics – to become his vice-presidential running mate in the race for the White House.

The highly controversial selection will infuriate Mrs Clinton’s millions of supporters as the Democratic Party opens its nominating convention in Denver, Colorado, this week.

Mr Biden is also recognised as being gaffe-prone, and was forced to drop out as a candidate for President in 1988 after it was discovered his best speech had been plagiarised from then British Labour Party leader Neil – now Lord – Kinnock.

...

This year Mr Biden, again running as a presidential candidate, denounced Mr Obama by declaring he simply didn’t have enough experience for the top job.

‘Obama is not ready to be President,’ he said in a TV interview now certain to become the centrepiece of Republican Party advertising as they focus their attacks on America’s first major black presidential candidate.

Mr Biden went on to point out that Mr Obama, 47, didn’t have enough experience of foreign policy. And asked if he would consider running as Vice-President, he said: ‘I would not accept it if anyone offered it to me.’

Those close to the Delaware senator say he now regrets his remarks, as Mr Obama has proven in the last three months that he is ‘the right man at the right time’, and Biden is ‘deeply proud’ to be his running mate.

Mr Obama has chosen Mr Biden because of his enormous foreign policy and defence experience – he is chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

He hopes it will balance his own lack of foreign policy background and help counter Republican charges that the world is far too dangerous to trust the White House to such a newcomer.




http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1048511/Obama-picks-senator-stole-Neil-Kinnocks-speech-running-mate.html
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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-24-08 09:01 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. I heard that was a British rag; now I'm sure of it! nt
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