Joe Biden is expected to be the Democratic front-runner but his baggage could slow him down - Action News
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Joe Biden is expected to be the Democratic front-runner but his baggage could slow him down

To some, Joe Biden is a steady political hand and seasoned U.S. statesman; to others, he is an occasional punchline and invader of personal space, with a spotty political record. Come Thursday, he likely will be seen by many as the early front-runner to become the Democratic presidential nominee.

Former vice-president will reportedly announce on Thursday he is taking a 4th swing at the Oval Office

Former U.S. vice-president Joe Biden is expected to announce on Thursday that he is entering the race to become the Democratic presidential nominee. (Yuri Gripas/Reuters)

After more than 45years in politics, the public has seen many sides of Joe Biden.

To some, he is a steady political hand and seasoned U.S. statesman, with a special ability to connect with people; to others, he is an occasionalpunchline and invader of personal space, with a spotty political record.

And, come Thursday, Biden will likely be seen by many as the early front-runner in the crowded race to become the Democratic presidential nominee.

It will be the former senator and two-term vice-president's fourth swing at the Oval Office, after attempts in 1984, 1988 and 2008. At 76 years old, it would likely be his last chance to mount a viable White House bid.

Biden is expected to declare his candidacy in a video on Thursday. Heintended to be the last big nameto announce a bid for the presidency.

If he's going to challenge President Donald Trump, he'll need to first defeat the most diverse Democratic presidential field in U.S. history as a straight, whitemale septuagenarian with ample political experience plus the baggage to match.

Here's what to keep in mind:

Biden is polling as the Democratic front-runner

Despite not having announced his candidacy, polling shows Biden is at the head of the crowded field of Democratic hopefuls. (Chase Stevens/Las Vegas Review-Journal via Associated Press)

Tuesday's Morning Consult poll showed Biden with 30 per cent support, despite nothaving announced his candidacy. He was followedby Bernie Sanders with 24 per cent.

"Out of the gate, there's no question he'll be the front-runner," said Democratic strategist Kevin Walling, who has long self-identified as a "fan of Joe Biden."

That said, front-runner status fluctuates throughout a campaign and there are 19 months to go until November 2020.

He has a long political history

A 1997 file photo shows Sen. Joe Biden, right, listening to President Bill Clinton, centre, during a NATO expansion meeting. (Reuters)

There's no shortage of experience among the Democratic contenders. Bernie Sanders has served as Vermont senator since 2007.Kamala Harris was elected attorney general of California in 2011 and served there for six years before becominga California senator. Massachusetts senatorElizabeth Warren assumed office in 2013, following decades of work asa prominent legal scholar and crusader forconsumer protections.

But Biden would be the most experienced politician in the race.

He became a U.S. senator at age 30. He wasone of the youngest people ever to be elected to the upper chamber, where he represented Delaware for 36 years. He chaired the Senate judiciary committee in the 1990s and the foreign relations committee in the 2000s,before his two terms asvice-president to Barack Obama a time that some voters who left the Democrats for Trump in 2016 might look back upon with nostalgia.

Biden, Walling said, "has this ability to lead from Day 1," with friends in the Senate and respect among world leaders.

There's a downside to career longevity

One doesn't serve for decadesin government without accumulating baggage.

A plagiarism scandal during Biden's 1988 presidential run doomed his campaign. He was accused of lifting passages from a British Labour Party leader's speech.

His vote in favour of authorizing the 2003 invasion of Iraq, widely seen as a major foreign policy blunder that helped to destabilize the Middle East, is another weak point. Biden has since said he regrets hisvote.

"I don't think you can look at his record in the Senate and go, 'Wow, what a record.' He wasn't a Sen. Ted Kennedy," said Rachel Gorlin, a Democratic strategist who has questioned Biden's electabilityin the primary. "There's no Biden legacy that was exemplary or really extraordinary."

Anita Hill will haunt him

In this Oct. 11, 1991, file photo, University of Oklahoma law professor Anita Hill testifies before the Senate judiciary committee on the nomination of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court. (Associated Press)

Biden was chair of the Judiciary committeein 1991, when law professor Anita Hill testified against Clarence Thomas during his Supreme Court confirmation hearing. She accused her former boss of sexual harassment; Thomas denied the allegations.

Hill faced a skeptical all-male panel,and Biden, as committee chair, did not permit other witnesses to testify and potentially corroborate her testimony.

"To this day, I regret I couldn't come up with a way to get her the kind of hearing she deserved," Biden lamented last month.

The year after Hill's testimony, Biden appointed Senate newcomers Dianne Feinstein and Carol Moseley Braun to the previously all-male committee.

For those who recall his stewardship of the judiciary committee at the time, Gorlin said, "You could argue Biden was way behind the times during the hearings."

Potential to bridgea Democratic divide?

A man holds two 'Run Joe Run' signs ahead of an appearance by Biden at a rally with striking Stop and Shop workers in Boston on April 18. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)

Biden grew up in Scranton, Pa., during the 1950s. Working-class Middle America is part of his origin story. His father struggled to find steady work.

"He's middle-class Joe," said Antjuan Seawright, a South Carolina-based Democratic strategist. Heviews Biden as a candidate who can win broad support among white and black voters, afterserving two terms as the first African-American president's right-hand man.

Recent polling shows Bidenwith a 77 per cent favourability among black Democrats.

Biden's ability to connect with blue-collar voters could help win back voters from Rust Belt states who voted for Obama in 2012 and Trump in 2016.

"People know him as America's Uncle," Seawright said.

"I think he's the best person to bring our party together on a united front."

Don't underestimate his ability to connect

Biden embraces Tami Haught during an HIV/AIDS candlelight vigil at the University of Northern Iowa in this 2007 file photo. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)

The Biden Effect is very real, said Kate Andersen Brower, author of First in Line: Presidents, Vice Presidents, and the Pursuit of Power.

"When we left his office after I interviewed him, there was a group of people standing outside to greet him, and he just kind of came alive when he was with these adoring fans," she said. "He feeds off that."

Brower, who travelled with Biden to Japan following the Sendai tsunami in 2011, was "amazed" to watch Biden embrace elderly men and women who had lost their homes. They seemed "genuinely moved" by the gesture from the American vice-president, she said.

"It's the essence of who he is, that old-school politician who is hugging babies and old ladies."

His behaviour might also be a problem

A 2015 picture of Biden with Stephanie Carter, wife of former secretary of defence Ash Carter, has been circulated on the internet as the former vice-president faces questions about his behaviour around women. Stephanie Carter recently defended Biden and said there was nothing untoward about the picture in question. (Gary Cameron/Reuters)

Biden has a history of personal tragedy, having lost his first wife and infant daughter in a motor vehicle accident. His son, Beau, died after battling brain cancer four years ago.

"He's had such a tough personal story, and he empathizes with people, and he's going up and he's hugging people" in challenging times, Brower said.

But several women have also accused Biden of violating theirpersonal space. In one instance, former Nevada assemblywoman Lucy Flores alleged Biden "inappropriately kissed" the back of her head "and touched her" without her consent at a Las Vegas rally in 2014.

"He's very huggy and touchy," Brower said. "But he is a little out of touch. In the #MeToo movement, it's something that people in his generation see kind of backfiring on him."

He'll have to convince Democrats he's the face of the party

Biden would be 77 years old were he to be elected president in 2020.

He is two years older than Trump and a year younger than hisprimary rival, Bernie Sanders.

The leaders of each House of Congress,Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi andRepublican Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, are both older than Biden, and yet neither has faced criticisms thatthey aren't up to the challenges of their jobs due to age.

Meanwhile, progressive voters have been energized by a young, diverse field with bold liberal ideas such as free college tuition. Biden has not endorsed ideas such as Medicare for all, but has not dismissed themeither.

Walling, the strategist andself-described Biden fan, said the electorate will have to make a choice between idealism and pragmatism.

"What are Democrats looking for? Are they looking for Medicare for all, a Green New Deal, ending student debt?" he said. "Or are they really thinking about who could best beat Donald Trump next year?"

Biden facing allegations of inappropriate behaviour

6 years ago
Duration 14:18
Several women have come forward to accuse the former U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden of violating their personal space. Plus, Robert Mueller's team is expressing frustration over the summary released by Attorney General William Barr. Linda Feldmann with the Christian Science Monitor, and Jill Lawrence from USA TODAY, discuss the latest with Michael Serapio on CBC News Network.