By MARSHA MERCER
At the annual Gridiron Club dinner put on
by Washington journalists Saturday night, a singer portraying Joe Biden bragged
about the tough jobs he has tackled as vice president.
“I’m not Barack! I am Joe Biden,” he sang to
the tune of “I am a Rock.” He’ll serve President Obama’s second term, the Biden
character proclaimed. “Not gonna wait til two-thousand sixteen.”
Don’t let anyone tell you “There are no
second acts in American lives.” F. Scott Fitzgerald, who wrote that puzzling
line, never knew Joe Biden.
Biden is on track to be one of the most
influential vice presidents in history. And, no, that’s not damning with faint
praise.
It’s a great time to be Joe Biden.
While the boss’s position was still
“evolving,” Biden said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” in May that he himself was
“absolutely comfortable” with gay marriage. Nudged, Obama came around a few
days later, electrifying gay supporters.
After the Newtown massacre, Obama turned to
Biden to explore gun control efforts. While prospects are dim of much action on
Capitol Hill, Biden has kept gun control advocates allied with the president.
And it was Biden who rescued the nation
from the fiscal cliff. Drawing on his four decades in Washington, Biden
negotiated a deal with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., just
hours before the Jan. 1 deadline.
No second acts? By proving his own worth as
Obama’s right-hand man, Biden’s own star is rising as a leading presidential
contender in 2016. Not bad for a guy who had to abandon his 1988 presidential
quest amid charges that he had plagiarized other politicians’ speeches.
A video surfaced showing parts of Biden’s
campaign speech and parts of a speech by British Labor Party leader Neil
Kinnock. Biden insisted that he’d failed to attribute the passages to Kinnock
only that once, but reporters uncovered similarities with other politicians’
speeches and an unfortunate F in law school for plagiarism.
Voters had all but forgotten that
unpleasantness by 2008, when Biden ran again for president. This time he made
news by saying what he actually thought about another Democratic contender.
“You got the first mainstream African
American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy,” Biden
told an interviewer in January 2007. “”I mean that’s storybook, man.”
In Washington, saying what you think is a
gaffe, and Biden is a gaffe machine. He’s a character – a boisterous,
deal-making politician of the old school who loves to hear himself talk. Obama
obviously didn’t hold a grudge, and Biden’s loose lips never seem fatal
.
Biden has known great personal tragedy. He was
29, married with three little kids when he was elected to the Senate in 1972. Weeks
later, just before Christmas, his wife and one-year-old daughter were killed in
a car crash in Delaware. His young sons, Beau, 4, and Hunter, 3, survived with
serious injuries. Biden was on Capitol Hill that afternoon, interviewing potential
staffers.
In his shock and grief, Biden planned to
give up his Senate seat and return home, but he was persuaded to keep his job. He
took the official oath in his sons’ hospital room and began the daily Amtrak commute
from Wilmington to Washington. He continued the
routine for 36 years.
No second acts? Biden married Jill Jacobs in
1977, and their daughter Ashley was born in 1981.
After decades in public life, Biden has no
shortage of critics. Fox News chief Roger Ailes is quoted in a new book calling
Biden “dumb as an ashtray.”
Love him or loathe him, Biden, 70, always
seems to be having more fun than most people. At the ceremonial swearing-in of
new senators in the old Senate chamber in January, Biden was a jovial, joking
host.
“Spread your legs,” he told a new senator’s
husband. “You’re going to be frisked.”
Biden’s entertainment quotient was so high
that fans petitioned for a C-SPAN reality show trailing him on his daily
rounds.
No second acts? Biden perseveres. He may
yet have a third.
© 2013 Marsha Mercer. All rights reserved.
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Thank you for your even-hnaded report on Jos Biden. I learned things I didn't know and I can say I appreciate Joe more now than I evern did. Nice work, Ms. Mercer.
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