Houston Chronicle

Why Biden keeps missing his own VP deadlines

- By Katie Glueck

Joe Biden’s campaign staff is making plans to introduce his eventual vice presidenti­al choice to key party constituen­cies. Donors are readying finance events featuring the still-unnamed running mate — “date and time to be announced.” An in-person reveal is being discussed.

But as the political world awaits his announceme­nt, Biden himself hasn’t appeared to be in a big rush — no surprise to those who know him well.

His first self-imposed date for naming a running mate, around Aug. 1, came and went. The first week of August, another timeline he publicly floated, is nearly over, and an aide confirmed that an announceme­nt won’t happen this week.

Biden has reached the final stage of his deliberati­ons and is expected to name his choice shortly before the Democratic National Convention, which begins Aug. 17. And while that’s in keeping with the timeline of the two previous Democratic nominees, it’s at odds with Biden’s own words.

“The deadline for a VP nomination is the convention,” said Rep. Cedric Richmond, a co-chairman of Biden’s campaign. “He’s very deliberati­ve with his decisionma­king. It works.”

This kind of approach — being openly meditative about the issue at hand, with a penchant for missing his own deadlines as he mulls his options — is in line with how Biden has made other big political choices throughout his career.

Those who have worked with him over the years describe nonlinear decision-making processes with input from allies and family members, a barrage of questions from Biden, and a habit of extending deadlines in a way that leaves some Democrats anxious and annoyed, while others say it brings him to a well-considered decision, eventually.

“He knows when what he’s decided really matters,” said Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del. “He takes time to make those decisions well. He doesn’t struggle to make those decisions; he makes them in a series. He listens to the relevant experts. He consults the relevant data.”

In this case, Coons said, Biden has all the data he needs; he knows the results of the vetting process, and his team has heard a range of outside opinions.

And he heads into the weekend with a few important conversati­ons left, including, Coons suggested, with vice presidenti­al contenders and trusted advisers. Biden is weighing who would make a “trusted, reliable, capable partner” — the role, Coons said, Biden filled as Barack Obama’s vice president.

“He’s taking the time to make sure that he gets the inputs that he would value, both a chance to hear from people who know well and have worked closely with the different candidates but also time to talk to them directly,” he said Thursday night, when asked where Biden was in the process.

Yet as the process has stretched out, each day has also brought intensive lobbying, uncertaint­y for the contenders and, increasing­ly, visible factions.

State Sen. Annette Taddeo of Florida said she and other lawmakers and donors had expressed concerns to the campaign about the possible selection of Rep. Karen Bass of California, whose record of travel to Cuba as a young activist and respectful remarks about Fidel Castro when he died could alienate voters in Miami.

“It’s our job not just to speak up on his behalf but to speak up when we believe we can avoid an error in the campaign, and that’s what I’ve been doing,” said Taddeo, a member of Biden’s Latino leadership committee who spoke highly of her fellow Floridian, Rep. Val Demings, and voiced a view privately shared by other prominent Democrats in South Florida.

“We need to hurry up and pick and move on.”

Bass, who is well-liked across the ideologica­l spectrum of the Democratic caucus, has said her views on Cuba had evolved and that she wouldn’t repeat those comments about Castro.

A spokesman pointed to a supportive statement made by the Cuban American mayor of Coral Gables, Fla., Raúl Valdés-Fauli, who praised Bass’ “commitment to democracy” and governing experience and said “the BidenBass

ticket will win Florida.”

Republican­s, in the meantime, are previewing their attacks on several of the potential contenders, including Susan Rice, the former national security adviser; and Democratic opposition research is also flying, aimed at cutting down some contenders in the mix.

Sen. Kamala Harris has faced sharp questionin­g from some Biden supporters about whether she would be loyal to his political agenda — an issue that has played out publicly and created fierce backlash.

“People close to the campaign, to actually start underminin­g these candidates, was just wrong, and so terribly stereotypi­cal, and a throwback to the 1950s,” said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers. “Joe Biden is being more transparen­t than I think virtually any other presidenti­al nominee I’ve seen before, but with that unfortunat­ely comes the politics that these incredibly accomplish­ed women are now facing.”

Names frequently discussed in Biden circles over the last week, according to interviews with top Biden allies, include Harris, Rice and Bass, along with Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan.

Some supporters also remain enthusiast­ic about Demings and Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Tammy Duckworth, among others, but acknowledg­e that there’s a fluid process that only Biden, his wife, his sister and a few close longtime aides probably have full visibility into.

In the meantime, signs of a public rollout have surfaced. Biden’s campaign is increasing­ly considerin­g how the eventual candidate should engage important political constituen­cies and has sought input regarding the community leaders and organizati­ons the running mate should contact and what kinds of events she could do, according to multiple people familiar with the proceeding­s.

In a fundraisin­g appeal sent Thursday, Biden wrote, “I’d like to personally invite you to join me and my running mate for our first grassroots fundraiser together as the official Democratic ticket.”

Details, the message said, will be sent “once they’re finalized.” Another fundraisin­g invitation, hosted by Women for Biden — without specifics on date or time — was headlined, “Introducin­g our running mate.”

Biden, for his part, has rejected the idea that his search process has been slower or messier than those of previous nominees.

“It’s been very orderly,” he said during an interview that aired Thursday with members of the National Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s and National Associatio­n of Hispanic Journalist­s. “Every one of the women we’ve interviewe­d is qualified. And I’ve narrowed it down.”

Added Weingarten: “This is one of those moments where you have to let Joe be Joe, and you have to trust that he knows what he’s looking for and what he needs.”

“This is one of those moments where you have to let Joe be Joe.”

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers

 ?? Michael Brochstein / TNS ?? Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, from left, former national security adviser Susan Rice, Rep. Karen Bass of California, Sen. Kamala Harris of California and Rep. Val Demings of Florida are all among likely contenders to join former Vice President Joe Biden on the Democratic ticket.
Michael Brochstein / TNS Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, from left, former national security adviser Susan Rice, Rep. Karen Bass of California, Sen. Kamala Harris of California and Rep. Val Demings of Florida are all among likely contenders to join former Vice President Joe Biden on the Democratic ticket.
 ?? Anna Moneymaker / New York Times ??
Anna Moneymaker / New York Times
 ?? Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press ??
Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press
 ?? Chip Somodevill­a / Getty Images ??
Chip Somodevill­a / Getty Images
 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ??
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States