Obama picks Biden
08.23.2008 8:23am EDT
(Washington) Barack Obama named Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware as his vice presidential running mate early Saturday, balancing his ticket with a seasoned congressional veteran well-versed in foreign policy and defense issues.
Obama announced the pick on his Web site with a photo of the two men and an appeal for donations. A text message went out shortly afterward that said, “Barack has chosen Senator Joe Biden to be our VP nominee.”Biden, 65, has twice sought the White House, and is a Catholic with blue-collar roots, a generally liberal voting record and a reputation as a long-winded orator.
Across more than 30 years in the Senate, he has served at various times not only as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee but also as head of the Judiciary Committee, with its jurisdiction over anti-crime legislation, Supreme Court nominees and Constitutional issues.
In selecting Biden, Obama passed over several other potential running mates, none more prominent than former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, his tenacious rival in dozens of primaries and caucuses.
Obama’s campaign arranged a debut for the newly minted ticket on Saturday outside the Old State Capitol in Springfield, Ill.
Obama’s decision leaked to the media several hours before his aides planned to send a text message announcing the running mate, negating a promise that people who turned over their phone numbers would be the first to know who Obama had chosen. The campaign scrambled to send the text message after the leak, sending phones buzzing at the inconvenient time of just after 3 a.m. on the East coast.
Hundreds of miles to the west, carpenters, electricians, sound stage gurus and others transformed the Pepsi Center in Denver into a made-for-television convention venue.
Tucked away in one corner were thousands of lightweight rolled cardboard tubes, ready-made handles for signs bearing the names of the Democratic ticket – once the identity of Obama’s running mate was known.
While Obama decided against adding Clinton to his ticket, he has gone to great lengths to gain the confidence of her primary voters, agreeing to allow her name to be placed in nomination at the convention and permitting a roll call vote that threatens to expose lingering divisions within the party.
Biden slowly emerged as Obama’s choice across a long day and night of political suspense as other contenders gradually fell away.
First Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine let it be known that he had been ruled out. Then came word that Sen. Evan Bayh of Indiana had also been passed over.
Several aides to Clinton said the Obama campaign had never requested financial or other records from her.
Other finalists in the veep sweepstakes were Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius and Texas Rep. Chet Edwards.
Among those on the short list, Biden brought the most experience in defense or foreign policy – areas in which Obama fares relatively poorly in the polls compared with Republican Sen. John McCain.
While the war in Iraq has been supplanted as the campaign’s top issues by the economy in recent months, the recent Russian invasion of Georgia has returned foreign policy to the forefront.
In addition to foreign policy experience, Biden, a native of Scranton, Pa., has working-class roots that could benefit Obama, who lost the blue-collar vote to Clinton during their competition for the presidential nomination.
Biden was elected to the Senate at the age of 29 in 1972, but personal tragedy struck before he could take office. His wife and their 13-month-old daughter, Naomi, were killed when a tractor-trailer broad-sided her station wagon.
Biden took his oath of office for his first term at the hospital bedside of one of his sons.
On Friday, he spent the day at his home in Delaware with friends and family. The normally loquacious lawmaker maintained a low profile as associates said they believed – but did not know – he would be tapped. They added they had been asked to stand by in case their help was needed.
No sooner had word spread of his selection than McCain’s campaign unleashed its first attack. Spokesman Ben Porritt said in a statement that Biden had “denounced Barack Obama’s poor foreign policy judgment and has strongly argued in his own words what Americans are quickly realizing – that Barack Obama is not ready to be president.”
As evidence, Republicans cited an ABC interview from August 2007, in which Biden said he would stand by an earlier statement that Obama was not ready to serve as president.
Biden is seeking a new Senate term in the fall. there was no immediate word whether he intended to change plans as he reaches for national office.
Michael Silberman, a partner at online communications firm EchoDitto, said the campaign gambled when they made such a high-stakes promise and find themselves in a precarious situation where they could risk a great deal of trust with supporters.
“For Obama supporters, this is like finding out from your neighbor instead of your sister that she’s engaged – not how you want or expect the news to be delivered,” Silberman said.
Biden dropped out of the 2008 race for the Democratic presidential nomination after a poor finish in the Iowa caucuses, but not before he talked dismissively of joining someone else’s ticket.
“I am not running for vice president,” he said in a Fox interview. “I would not accept it if anyone offered it to me. The fact of the matter is I’d rather stay as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee than be vice president.”
He had stumbled on his first day in the race, apologizing for having described Obama as “clean.” Months later, Obama spoke up on Biden’s defense, praising him during a campaign debate for having worked for racial equality.
It was Biden’s second try for the White House. The first ended badly in 1988 when he was caught lifting lines from a speech by British Labor Party leader Neil Kinnock.
In the decades since, he become a power in the Senate, presiding over confirmation proceedings for Supreme Court nominees as well as convening hearings to criticize President Bush’s handling of the Iraq War.
Biden voted to authorize the war, but long ago became one of the Senate’s surest critics of the conflict. Ironically, perhaps, his son, Beau, attorney general of Delaware, is due to spend a tour of duty in Iraq beginning this fall with his National Guard unit.
Obama worked to keep his choice secret, although he addressed the issue broadly during the day in an interview.
“Obviously, the most important question is: Is this person ready to be president?” Obama told “The Early Show” on CBS. Second, he said, was: “Can this person help me govern? Are they going to be an effective partner in creating the kind of economic opportunity here at home and guiding us through some dangerous waters internationally?”
And, he added: “I want somebody who is going to be able to challenge my thinking and not simply be a yes person when it comes to policymaking.




Well If we look at support for our rights, then why the hell should Obama have picked Hillary?
Her husband SIGNED the Defense of Marriage Act! He could have vetoed it and stood up for equality, but he SIGNED it. It wasn’t something that got sneaked in by a Republican, it was “Good ole’ Bubba.”
I don’t see what the Clintons ever did to help us out. DADT? That might have been OK at the time, but even then it was a cowardly move. He should have allowed open service, but he didn’t. It was a wishy-washy concession to conservatives then, and its a gigantic impediment to us now.
All I know is that this election is too important to let sour grapes decide. If Hillary’s voters are stupid enough to boycott Obama, then I swear right here and now I will NEVER support a Clinton EVER AGAIN!
As I’ve said Sarrellec, if you find so many faults in the Greatest Country on Earth, by all means either do not come to the US or else leave upon your first availability.
There certainly is no lack in people wanting to come to the country both legally and even illegally.
If you’re going to trumpet how wonderful some “socialist” systems of government are, that is fine. But you’ll note that more and more of those “wonderful” socialist systems are moving more and more towards US style systems.
I am glad tat Obama pick Biden for is running mate for the democrats. That just made it more better for Mccain to take it. Thanks you democrats for scwewing that up . anothing thing Start packing Sgvmikela for Canada becouse the Republicans are going to take it or are you just full of talk and can’t walk the walk
I’m always tickled when people blithely rattle off that the the USA is the greatest country on earth, because I wonder by what criteria they make this declarative and obviously unsubstantiated statement.
The USA comes in at 37 for healthcare. Americans work longer hours and more days a year than any other citizen of any other first world country.
Americans retirement benefits are pitiful and laughable when compared to the retirement benefits of other citizens of any other first world country.
Americans must go into crushing and crippling debt–unless they’re independently wealthy, of course–to obtain a secondary education whereas virtually every other first world country provides secondary education. They see this as an overall benefit to both the citizenry and society as a whole to educate not just the rich, but those that can actually DO SOMETHING with that education besides becoming the first certifiably idiot president in history.
The USA is the ONLY form of…ahem…democratic government of its kind on the face of the planet. Every other democracy is a parliamentary democracy which does NOT have an electoral college through which to bastardize the will of their citizens and if the politicians screw up, they face a forced election. So, they aren’t stuck with an idiot president for four years, like it or not. AND, the President or Prime Minister either wins or not, regardless of the state or a Supreme court or whatever. The votes are counted and they count. Not so in the USA.
Civil rights in the USA have suffered major losses in the last 10 years and, again, are laughable when compared to the civil rights of over half of the rest of the countries in the free world.
So…just what is it that MAKES this country the “Greatest on Earth”?
Apparently…self-delusion.
Always tickled when I hear people say that they want to leave the Greatest Country on Earth. I say go ahead. If you’re not willing to stay and fight for the things that you believe in, I don’t see where this country needs you. There are certainly many others (from every nation on Earth) that certainly would like to take your place.
One of the posters is thinking of moving to Canada if Republicans win?
Hope if you move to Canada you’re under 45 years of age so they’ll let you become a permanent resident…older than that, they won’t let you. We were grateful to be married there five years ago (together 32 years this year) but we cannot emigrate there since we’re over 45…not enough points to qualify when age is factored in.
So we’ll stay in USA and continue fighting for equality of our marriage that is now recognized in California, Massachusetts, and New York, though not in Pennsyltucky where we live which will be the very last state to recognize our marriage we should live so long!
twohusbands@hotmail.com
First of all, everyone needs to stop whining about Hillary not being the VP choice. Perhaps if she had not been so venomous towards Obama during the primaries he may have considered her more thoroughly. Also keep in mind that her husband and lately become a liability as it appears he has lost his agility to think before he speaks. Secondly the Vice President is supposed to balance the ticket. Tell me how a second person exactly the same as the first is going to pick up the votes lost by any “weakness” the first may have. Its a practical and strategic choice. Lastly, politics ALWAYS has a gay angle, our government leaders affect ALL of our lives, besides this site had a better article then any of the others I read. So what if some if it was pasted from the AP, you’ll be hard pressed to find a news site that doesn’t.