asking Al Gore to run in 2008!
Joe Biden
Posted September 6th, 2008 by Wayne in WA State
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Walter Mondale
From Bloomberg
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601170&refer=special_report&sid...
Biden Sees Mondale, Not Cheney as Vice-Presidential Role Model
By Christopher Stern
Nov. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Vice President-elect Joe Biden relishes ridiculing his new job.
``We all know that the vice president's job ain't much,'' the Delaware senator said at a campaign stop last month in Tacoma, Washington. ``I understood that when I took the job.''
Biden, 65, knows he isn't going to be another Dick Cheney, who wielded so much influence he was sometimes perceived to eclipse his own boss, President George W. Bush.
``Biden will be more interested in carrying out the Obama agenda as opposed to his own agenda,'' said Senator Arlen Specter, a Pennsylvania Republican who has served with Biden in the Senate for 28 years. ``From time to time, Cheney was on his own agenda.''
That doesn't mean Biden won't be a central player in the new administration. His 36 years in the Senate -- including decades of leadership on the foreign affairs and judiciary committees -- fill important gaps for Obama, 47, who spent only two years in the Senate before entering the race for the White House.
``He values Biden's counsel on foreign policy,'' said David Axelrod, Obama's chief campaign strategist. Biden will have a say in major national-security decisions and Cabinet appointments, Axelrod said.
Access to Documents
It is former Vice President Walter Mondale, not Cheney, who is the likely model for Biden. Mondale, who served under President Jimmy Carter in the 1970s, was consulted on almost every appointment and had access to the same documents as the president.
Mondale, 80, met with Biden in August during the Democratic National Convention in Denver, where the two men discussed the vice presidency, Mondale said in an interview. Biden has also read a memo that described the role of the vice president in the Carter White House, Mondale said.
``I was invited to every meeting the president had,'' Mondale said. ``I read all the same materials he did, all the top-secret stuff.''
During his tenure, Mondale said he served as an extension of the presidency, traveling to China and the Middle East on diplomatic missions and advising Carter on international and domestic issues.
National Security
Biden, according to Axelrod and other Obama aides, is expected to be an important adviser on Obama's initial national- security and foreign-policy appointments, as well as on policy questions.
Like Obama, Georgia Governor Carter was inexperienced in Washington. He relied heavily on Mondale, who spent 12 years as a U.S. senator from Minnesota, to guide his congressional agenda.
A Biden adviser said the vice president would be a full partner in governing and involved in all the Obama administration's big decisions.
An example of the unique relationship that vice presidents have with their bosses is the regular weekly lunch that has become a tradition since the 1970s, when Gerald Ford served under Richard Nixon.
The lunch, which only includes the president and the vice president, allows the two leaders to discuss a broad range of issues, Mondale said.
Relationships
Biden will also be able to further Obama's agenda with the skills and relationships built up over more than three decades in Washington.
``He's got as many friends among Senate Republicans as he has in our own caucus,'' Senator John Kerry, a Massachusetts Democrat and his party's 2004 presidential nominee, said in an e- mail.
It's also clear Biden was a political asset for Obama during the campaign, providing balance to a ticket headed by a young candidate who sought to be the nation's first black president.
``Biden helped us greatly,'' Axelrod said. Biden's coal- country origins in Scranton, Pennsylvania, allowed Obama to overcome his difficulty in connecting with white working-class voters. Biden has a ``visceral sense of identifying with middle- class, working people,'' Axelrod said.
In an Oct. 15 Bloomberg/Los Angeles Times poll, 76 percent of registered voters said they believed Biden was prepared to be president, compared with 43 percent who said the same about the Republican vice-presidential candidate, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, 44.
The working-class background coupled with his foreign-policy credentials mesh well with Obama's own message of reviving the middle class while ending the war in Iraq.
Richard Moe, Mondale's former chief of staff, said vice presidents are uniquely positioned to give unvarnished advice to their bosses. They are the only other nationally elected official and are able to rise above squabbling Cabinet officers and other senior officials.
``He has only one agenda, that's the president's agenda, or should be,'' Moe said.
Senator Joe Biden
Er, make that Vice-President Joe Biden!
http://i297.photobucket.com/albums/mm206/WayneinWAState/bidenjoejill.jpg
Along with Barack and Michelle Obama, Joe and Jill Biden will be a fantastic thing for our country
Congratulations all around!!
Biden fan since '02
Wow... it hasn't worn off yet... Michelle and Jill, what a team of first and second ladies!
I've been a fan of Joe Biden ever since I first saw him interviewed, around 2002...
He's done some things I haven't liked since then -- the bankruptcy bill is the main one -- but overall he is still the man, to me. He shoulda run in '04.
time-release capsules
Oh, the post-election euphoria still hasn't worn off..
I mean, the Republicans just seriously got their asses kicked! Lost House seats, lost Senate seats and lost the White House!!
We Have a Winner. President-Elect Barack Obama
McCain taxing healthcare benifits
"Can't Explain" Ad
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdnbFlax3fI
Who won the VP debate: Palin or Joe Biden?
Opinion was split over who won the vice-presidential debate between the Republican Sarah Palin and the Democrat Joe Biden, after neither managed to land a knock-out blow.
By Jon Swaine
Instant polls taken at the end of the event by television channels suggested that despite Mrs Palin managing a more measured performance than many had anticipated, voters were more impressed with Mr Biden.
A poll by CNN and Opinion Research found 51 per cent thought Mr Biden had performed best, with Mrs Palin taking 36 per cent of respondents.
A survey of uncommitted voters for CBS found the split even more pronounced, with Mr Biden on 46, Mrs Palin on 21 and a relatively high proportion stating that neither had impressed or that they could not decide.
When the uncommitted voters were pressed, 18 per cent said they would vote for Barack Obama and Mr Biden following the debate, with only 10 per cent ready to line up for John McCain and Sarah Palin.
Another instant poll done by Fox News, which did not allow for such fence-sitting, had the divide between the two candidates at 61 per cent for Mr Biden and 39 per cent for Mrs Palin.
However a focus group of independent voters gathered by the pollster Frank Luntz, whose analyses on BBC Newsnight have proved influential in British politics in recent years, called the debate in favour of Mrs Palin.
Among the group, half of whom voted for the Democrat John Kerry in 2004, an overwhelmingly majority raised their hands to signal Mrs Palin had won the debate when asked.
While about a dozen said that Mrs Palin had changed their minds and that they would now support Mr McCain, only one person in the group said he had changed his mind in support of Mr Obama.
Other websites ran less scientific measures of voter reaction. A poll by 3,887 readers of Forbes.com found that 73 per cent believed the debate had been won by Mr Obama, with just 23 per cent plumping for Mrs Palin.
However, a similarly rough survey of almost 300,000 readers of the Drudge Report website made the split 69 per cent to 29 per cent in favour of the Republican candidate.
Senator Joe Biden
I want to thank you, Senator Biden, for all you do. May the Force Be With You!
Al Gore Democrats for Obama-Biden 2008
Message from Joe: "What they won't say"
By Christopher Hass - Oct 3rd, 2008 at 12:08 am EDT
Comments | Mail to a Friend | Report Objectionable Content
Shortly after finishing the debate tonight, Joe Biden sent out the following email:
If you saw tonight's debate, you saw Governor Sarah Palin give a spirited defense of the same disastrous policies that have failed us for the past eight years.
She couldn't identify a single area where she or John McCain would change George W. Bush's economic or foreign policy positions.
If you want something different, Barack and I need your help.
Will you make a donation right now to bring about the change we need?
The change we need is fixing this broken economy from the bottom up -- not tax breaks for the wealthy and huge corporations that ship U.S. jobs overseas. We need to focus on defeating al Qaeda and the Taliban and restoring America's standing in the world -- not an unending commitment in Iraq.
Let's be clear: Governor Palin and Senator McCain are offering nothing but more of the same failed Bush policies at home and abroad, trying to disguise them in the rhetoric of change.
Americans need real solutions and real change.
We're in this together and there's a lot to do before Election Day. Please make a donation of $250 or more right now to support this campaign for change:
https://donate.barackobama.com/changeweneed
This is the most important presidential election you'll be part of in your life.
Thank you for all that you're doing.
Now let's get to work and change this country,
Joe
Donate
Denver Joe
Here's a link to Joe Biden's speech in Denver
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/08/27/joe-biden-democratic-conv_n_121...
Go Joe!
Wow!~ He can really pack one!