Biden Touts Electability Amid Verbal Stumbles

Biden Touts Electability Amid Verbal Stumbles
Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden has lunch at Lindy's Diner in Keene, New Hampshire, on Aug. 24, 2019. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
Reuters
8/27/2019
Updated:
8/27/2019

HANOVER, N.H.—Democratic presidential front-runner Joe Biden came to New Hampshire this past weekend drawing contrasts to his rivals and touting himself as the candidate best positioned to beat President Donald Trump in November 2020.

Biden crisscrossed the state to make four different campaign stops from Hanover to Keene on Aug. 23 and Aug. 24 before attending a fundraiser in New York City. The trip was vintage Biden: folksy anecdotes, lots of handshakes, and a few gaffes.

New Hampshire is an important state for Biden, who could potentially distance himself from the field if he can pull off a win here and Iowa, the first two primary tests next year, said Phillip Barker, a political scientist at New Hampshire’s Keene State College. But, Barker added, Biden could survive losing the Granite State, unlike Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, who hail from neighboring states.

“A win in New Hampshire and Iowa for Biden would make him an extremely formidable candidate,” Barker said.

The tour, which came as most of his rivals attended the party’s annual conference in California, marked his fourth visit to the state since announcing his bid for president in April; he vowed to return so much that people may soon get tired of seeing him.

Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden leaves Lindy's Diner in Keene, New Hampshire, on Aug. 24, 2019. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden leaves Lindy's Diner in Keene, New Hampshire, on Aug. 24, 2019. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz

Biden holds a commanding lead over the large Democratic field in most national polls, but his progressive rivals Warren, a U.S. senator from Massachusetts, and Sanders, a U.S. senator from Vermont, are close behind in New Hampshire.

Biden came into New Hampshire with lingering questions about his ability to energize the party, notably its progressive wing that views him—and his policies—as anachronistic.

Biden told a crowd at Dartmouth College that his health care plan—which preserves the most popular parts of Obamacare and builds on them with a new government-run public insurance option—costs roughly $740 billion, not the multitrillion-dollar price tag of some of his opponents who are pushing Medicare for All plans.

He also said he gives workers options, not ultimatums.

“If you have a plan that is already working, you are entitled to keep it. If you are not satisfied, you will have a public option,” Biden said.

Reuters spoke to roughly 25 attendees at the campaign events, and the overwhelming majority said the biggest draw to Biden is his electability.

Bill Swinburne, a 76-year-old psychiatrist from Marlborough, New Hampshire, said he personally prefers Warren but if the election were held now, he would pull the lever for Biden.

“I just don’t think Warren can win the Midwest states. The Republicans are going to brand her a socialist,” Swinburne said.

Biden on Aug. 24 strolled into Lindy’s Diner—a campaign stop staple in Keene, where he had a grilled cheese sandwich and milkshake—and took a seat with Molly Lane, a 67-year-old retired nonprofit worker.

She hugged him and said, “You need to hustle and get Trump out of the White House.” Biden replied, “I am trying.”

Lane spoke to reporters later and said, “I hugged him; he didn’t hug me,” a nod to criticism about Biden’s history of being “touchy-feely” that has come under new scrutiny in the #MeToo era.

Miscues

Biden took an odd detour at the end of his first event on Aug. 23, when he noted his political heroes, Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy, were assassinated and asked students if they could imagine if Barack Obama had met the same fate.

Biden was asked his feelings about New Hampshire and the town of Keene outside Lindy’s Diner, and he seemed to forget where he was.

“What’s not to love about Vermont in terms of the beauty of it? I mean this is sort of a scenic, beautiful town,” Biden told reporters.

While the gaffes have long been part of Biden’s legacy, at age 76, they raise new questions about his fitness for office for some voters. Several people interviewed at the rallies said they were attending because they wanted to see him in person to judge his crispness and vitality.

“Age is certainly an issue, and I think he needs to show he’s up for the job at this time,” Al Cirone, 71, said while waiting in line for a Biden event on Aug. 23. Cirone said Biden was his top choice, citing his experience and more moderate stance.

Biden was asked by a reporter on Aug. 24 if his age should be a concern. He replied, “I say if they’re concerned, don’t vote for me.”

By Jarrett Renshaw