Biden shocked his own team with his 2016 announcement
Vice President Joe Biden, with his wife Dr. Jill Biden, and President Barack Obama walks toward the Rose Garden of the White House. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
On Wednesday afternoon, after months of speculation, Vice President Joe Biden finally answered the question that was on everyone’s mind.
A
staffer close to the vice president has relayed a picture of a chaotic
day in the vice president’s office ahead of his blockbuster announcement
that he would not seek the 2016 Democratic presidential nod.
Biden’s statement that he had run “out of” the “the time necessary to mount a winning campaign for the nomination”
was a shock to many members of his closest staff, who made a mad dash
to the White House Rose Garden to see him deliver the remarks.
Wednesday
began as a normal day for Biden’s policy team. The morning followed
months of rising rumors that began when New York Times columnist Maureen
Dowd published a piece on August 1
noting Biden was “talking to friends, family and donors about jumping
in.” Since then, Biden huddled with a small group of advisers and, each
day, his staffers speculated as they shared their first office coffee
about whether and when he would make a final decision.
Many
of the rumors about a potential Biden campaign suggested a decision
would be tied to Hillary Clinton’s testimony before the House Benghazi
committee on Thursday. Because of Clinton’s impending hearing and the
fact the first Democratic presidential debate took place on October 13,
the chatter in the vice president’s office was reaching a fever pitch.
Biden’s staff had been engaged in constant speculation and was aware
that the various deadlines that had been thrown out in media reports
about his potential campaign had come and gone.
It was all coming to a head.
As
Biden staffers settled in to work on Wednesday, many again talked about
where and when the vice president might make an announcement.
With
the clamor surrounding a potential candidacy in mind, Biden’s
communications staff had been doing extensive research ahead of each of
his planned speeches this week. The vice president kept his team on
their toes. One day he’d frame his discussions of policy and initiatives
by making it seem he had no intention of entering the presidential
race. At other times, he’d begin his conversations by asking staff how
they might frame things “If I’d run.”
Biden’s changing tone kept the people in his office guessing. They knew the vice president was scheduled to spend Tuesday at a dinner honoring Walter Mondale, who occupied Biden’s office from 1977 until 1981.
The team knew Mondale’s legacy included a memo to President Jimmy Carter
that they saw as defining the role of the modern vice president.
However, Biden’s office also knew the first note in Mondale’s political
eulogy is his failed 1984 presidential campaign. They weren’t sure
whether the current vice president had this in mind as he feted Mondale,
but Biden’s staff was keenly aware of Mondale’s history as they plotted
his agenda for this week.
When
they tried to guess what their boss might be thinking, Biden’s team
assumed he would not reveal his decision on the day of Mondale’s event.
On
Wednesday morning, many members of Biden’s staff figured he would make
his move on the weekend. They wondered whether his remarks would be
pegged to the Iowa Democratic Party’s annual Jefferson-Jackson Dinner on
Saturday. Others thought he might make a statement in his hometown of
Wilmington, Delaware.
Suddenly,
Biden’s secretary made an announcement. He would be speaking in the
Rose Garden shortly after noon. Biden’s staff had approximately a
fifteen minute warning. Based on the location, they assumed that, if his
statement was related to 2016, he would be exiting the race. They ran
over to hear him speak. After exhausting their minds and bodies, Biden’s
team officially learned the vice president would not enter the fray
along with the rest of the country.
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