The NPR Politics Podcast - The Political Legacy Of Joe Biden

Episode Date: December 23, 2024

Joe Biden has been a national political figure for more than 20 percent of the United States' history. His policies and public figure have evolved over time, in ways that reflect how his Democratic Pa...rty also changed. We look back on the legacy of a man who was both one of the youngest senators ever elected, and the oldest person to serve as president. This episode: political correspondent Sarah McCammon, senior political editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro, and senior national political correspondent Mara Liasson.The podcast is produced by Kelli Wessinger, and edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Sarah McKammon. I cover politics. I'm Domenico Montanaro, senior political editor and correspondent. And I'm Mara Liason, senior national political correspondent. Today on the show, we're taking a look back at President Joe Biden's legacy as a political figure within the Democratic Party. Biden first made a name for himself back in 1972, then as one of the youngest
Starting point is 00:00:46 people to be elected to the US Senate. His career will end as the oldest person to ever serve as president of the United States. Mara, Joe Biden has been a national political figure now for more than 20% of this country's entire history. That is just an incredible amount of time. And you know, the country has seen a lot of change during Biden's time in office. His party, the Democratic Party has also changed. I wanna start there, Mara. Where is the party ideologically as Biden leaves office?
Starting point is 00:01:18 Ideologically, I think the party is where it's always been as the party that believes government can be used to help ordinary people. I think the party is much more diverse than when Biden started his career. It's interesting that a party that is this diverse has such an old white guy as the president. But you know, the party has changed a lot since Biden got into office. And you know what? He's changed along with it. And Domenico, what about you? I mean, what stands out to you about how both Biden and his party have changed?
Starting point is 00:01:51 Well, everything, right? I mean, this is a party that you could have seen in the 1990s or before that, you know, quote unquote, pro-life Democrats, people who were against abortion rights. Joe Biden might have counted himself somewhat adjacent in that category as a staunch Catholic, saying that he wouldn't want someone to have an abortion, but he's not going to tell somebody else what to do. That is a far cry from where he is today as somebody who feels like he's, you know, championed progressive causes, including women's reproductive rights. What has also kind of changed politically is Joe Biden is somebody who has always wanted to be a negotiator,
Starting point is 00:02:34 find common ground with people. And we've seen much more, both parties kind of become more ideologically pure. Democrats certainly still more likely to want to compromise than Republicans are, but the party, the politics, all of it has really changed a lot. And you know, Domenico, as you were talking there, I was just thinking about the ways that Biden, the country, and his party have all changed. You mentioned abortion. I mean, he was sworn into the Senate just a couple of weeks in January 1973 before the Roe v. Wade decision was handed down. So he spent most of his career in an environment where abortion was legal nationwide. We saw his position shift in some ways, I
Starting point is 00:03:14 think very arguably, in response to pressure from his own party, from supporters who saw the country shifting, who saw the increasing threat to Roe, which obviously materialized as the overt threat to Roe, which obviously materialized as the overturning of Roe, during that time he was under pressure to shore up his support for abortion rates and do more. So really, you know, you saw Biden changing as the country and the politics changed. I want to focus though on one part of Biden's history that drew criticism from different flanks of his party decades ago. This was during his time as chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee back when Clarence Thomas was nominated to the US Supreme
Starting point is 00:03:51 Court. So as many of us remember, Anita Hill, who worked under Thomas in different federal agencies, testified that Thomas had sexually harassed her. Mara, how did Biden handle that responsibility on the Senate Judiciary Committee and how did he draw criticism for it? Well, I think that Biden came off as somebody who didn't quite know what to do with the Anita Hill charges. And there was some backlash about that. And you could argue that the Anita Hill chapter, Biden's handling of those hearings sparked what we called at the time, the year of the woman, all of a sudden, a lot of women got politically active, ran for office, won seats, you know,
Starting point is 00:04:32 whether they were in Congress or in the States and Biden adjusted. You know, after that he sponsored the violence against women act. Uh, so this story that we're telling here is about a party changing and a party's leader changing. And that's okay. You know, people who are ideologically rigid get left behind. But Joe Biden has tried to keep up with where his party is. So how did that experience affect his larger role in the Democratic Party? I think it just made him more sensitive to the base and to what Democratic voters wanted. That's how you saw him handle the primaries in 2020.
Starting point is 00:05:14 Nobody thought that Joe Biden, who'd run for president twice before and lost, seemed like an old kind of guy from a different era, could be the nominee, but he figured out how to do it. And he made alliances with people like Jim Clyburn, the top African-American leader of the Democrats in the House. So he's somebody who has changed along with his party.
Starting point is 00:05:35 So Biden thought for a long time about becoming president, right? This was sort of a dream of his for decades. And I wanna go back to his first run for presidency back in 1988. Domenico, that was not without criticism. Remind us a little bit about what that run for president was like. Yeah, you know, he was in his 40s and he wound up having to bow out because of a plagiarism
Starting point is 00:05:55 scandal. He essentially borrowed lines from a British lawmaker and used that in a speech and wound up being emblematic of sort of the Joe Biden undisciplined style where he can get a little fast and loose with some things, despite the fact that there are a lot of, I think, things that Democrats would laud about Joe Biden and think of him as somebody who did do a lot of good things, but there are times when you just sit there and say, I'm puzzled by why he would say or do what he did. He's a gaffe machine and he's admitted that about himself all along. Sometimes people just chuckle and say, oh, that's Joe and other times it causes real political problems for him and his party.
Starting point is 00:06:42 Which again, I think just speaks to the way that the politics of the country have changed, right? Joe Biden first ran for president at a time when something like a plagiarism scandal or a gaffe that by today's political standards might be considered minor was a big enough deal to sink a campaign. Well, I think it depends on which party you're talking about, because I think that some of those things would still matter in the Democratic Party. I think we're talking about Republicans really and because of Donald Trump and his multiple affairs, allegations of sexual misconduct, business fraudulent practices that he was convicted of. You know, all of those things are not things that are typical of any politician and may never be typical of another politician
Starting point is 00:07:22 again. Okay, we're going to take a break. And when we come back, Joe Biden's Renaissance. emergency. But through any storm or crisis, radio is a lifeline. Support the resource that's here for you no matter what. Give today at donate.npr.org. All this year NPR traveled the country hearing from voters not just about the issues but about their hopes for the country's future. We should be able to disagree with each other without bullying each other into submission. And what it means to be a part of a democracy. Invest in coverage that moves us forward together by giving today at donate.npr.org. Hi, I'm Katherine Maher, CEO of NPR, where we're guided by a bold mission to create a
Starting point is 00:08:22 more informed public. Join us today by giving at donate.npr.org. Oh, oh, oh, Santa here coming to you from the North Pole. We're the elves in our podcast division of just completed work on this season's best gift for public radio lovers. NPR plus. Give the gift of sponsored free listening and even bonus episodes from your favorite NPR podcasts, all while supporting public media. Learn more at plus dot NPR dot org. And we're back. Biden again launched a run for the presidency in 2008, but that one also quickly fizzled. The eventual nominee that year, though, was, of course, Barack Obama, and he picked Biden
Starting point is 00:09:10 to be his running mate, which was kind of a game changer for Biden. Domenico, what was Obama's reasoning there? You know, we talked about the long arc of Joe Biden's history. Well, Barack Obama didn't have much of an arc of political history when he ran. Barack Obama in 2004 lit up the Democratic National Convention with an amazing speech and was able to capture a kind of lightning in a bottle just four years later. He needed somebody with some experience in Washington, what we would call here a gray beard.
Starting point is 00:09:42 They got along despite, as we talked about Biden's gaffes, Biden calling Obama clean and articulate, talking about needing an Indian accent to go into a 7-11. These are things he said. And then Barack Obama put him on the ticket anyway because he had that sort of grace for him and felt like he was somebody who could also appeal to sort of those union white dudes who Biden was able to win over in 2020. So it was really a legislative pick, a confident pick, and Biden did deliver in a lot of instances because of his relationships on Capitol Hill, being able to get a lot of things passed with someone like Mitch McConnell, the Republican Senate leader who'd been
Starting point is 00:10:22 around almost as long as Joe Biden had been. So that in many ways revitalized Biden's career. He's back in a big way at this point, of course, as vice president. Then after a lot of speculation in 2016, Biden decided he would not run for the presidency that year. He cited the death of his son, Bo, of course, who died of brain cancer. But then after a lot more speculation, Biden jumped in in 2020. And of course, despite not being a front runner, he won that race. Talk to us about the 2020 presidential race and how important that was, not just for Biden, but for Democrats as a party.
Starting point is 00:11:01 Well, Donald Trump was in office and Democrats were absolutely determined to get him out. And don't forget in 2016, instead of anointing Joe Biden, who was the obvious heir apparent, he was the vice president, Obama gave the nod and through his support to Hillary Clinton. So there was a little bit of disappointment on Biden's part there. But in terms of 2020, we were in the midst of a pandemic
Starting point is 00:11:23 that really helped Biden because he didn't have to keep a grueling in-person kind of rally-a-day schedule. And he defeated Donald Trump. And that was a huge, huge thing for Democrats. And all of a sudden, they had a president whose concept of the presidency was as the legislator-in-chief. And he set about passing a lot of stuff and he did pass a lot of stuff.
Starting point is 00:11:47 Yeah, and I think Bo Biden's death was a real turning point in the Joe Biden story because it both made him more determined. I mean, he talks about in the book that he wrote following his son's death, how after dealing with death that you need purpose. And I think that running for president gave him a purpose because he said that Bo on his deathbed told him that he has to run. I also think that it embittered Joe Biden a little bit because he was essentially waved off from running in 2016 by the Obama team, really
Starting point is 00:12:18 wanting to, as Mara noted, lay the foundation for Hillary Clinton to run. And Biden wasn't convinced that she was going to win. And then when she lost, it sort of made him feel like he should double down and stick to his guns and stick to his gut. When just because your guts right once doesn't mean it's always right. And I think it shows you also just how dedicated to family he is. And you can judge him through the lens also of a small state like Delaware, where he came from as a senator, a longest serving senator from the state, which really has an inferiority complex.
Starting point is 00:12:53 I can tell you, as somebody who went to the University of Delaware, that it's a state that, like, you know, it's seen as the small state. And they have to puff their chest out and say, well, we were the first. And Joe really embodies that chip on your shoulder attitude that the state has overall. This is a really, really important point. Joe Biden's origin story is, I'm the guy who's always counted out and they're always wrong and I come back and I win.
Starting point is 00:13:22 He was so invested in that. I think that was part of the reason that he hung on for weeks and weeks after the disastrous debate performance. He just believed in his own origin story. And as Domenico said, that works until it stops working. Yeah. I mean, that disastrous debate performance against former President Trump this summer has to be the one of the worst, if not the worst moment of Biden's political life. It of course was sort of the last straw after he'd faced a lot of pressure to drop out from Democrats who didn't think he was best for the party this year. He drops out.
Starting point is 00:14:01 Vice President Kamala Harris, of course, becomes the nominee, but loses anyway. What does all of this mean for Biden's legacy? Nothing good. Look, he said he was a bridge to the next generation, a transitional figure. That led a lot of people to think he was only gonna serve one term and then step aside. There are a lot of Democrats who think
Starting point is 00:14:21 that his aides covered up his decline, and that if he had dropped out in a timely manner to allow a proper primary, primaries produce strong candidates. Might have been Kamala Harris, might have been somebody else, but whoever they were, they would have had the time to introduce themselves to voters, fix past positions that might have been too liberal or too left for today's voters, as you saw Kamala Harris struggle with. And a lot of Democrats feel that he really hurt the party. He didn't give them the fighting chance that they deserved because he hung on too long.
Starting point is 00:14:56 Yeah. You know, and I think it's a really tragic end to a political career, frankly, because Joe Biden is somebody who always valued and believed in himself as a good debater. This is somebody if you look back at old tape, even just the 2012 campaign, the 2008 campaign, those vice presidential debates, he had a great time with it. And you can see a huge decline from the 2020 debates to what we saw during the 2024 campaign and that debate performance. And, you know, there's a lot that Joe Biden got done as president that's going to be overshadowed by how it ended. I mean, you have to think about the fact that a million people died from COVID in this country.
Starting point is 00:15:36 And, you know, President Trump at the time was viewed as really mishandling that crisis. And Joe Biden came in and, you know, I mean, it's hard to say that the country hasn't recovered fairly well from that overall, despite the fact that there was high inflation and people were upset about it. When you compare it in a macro sense, when you zoom out, historically, the United States recovered better economically than other countries, certainly got, was a leader in distributing vaccines that did start under former President Trump, but was supercharged under Biden as well as getting tests out to people and all of that. He really had his,
Starting point is 00:16:11 uh, the seat sort of taken out from under him with the sort of chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan, where we really saw his approval ratings take a nosedive. You know, that brings me to a, I think final and related, but slightly different question, which is in this moment, Domenico, it feels very much like you say, like a tragic end to a very long political career. At the same time, thinking back over that long career, this is a man who started out his Senate career having just, we didn't even talk about this, but just lost his first wife and daughter in a car accident, which really kind of, you know, shaped a big
Starting point is 00:16:48 part of his story for his political career, a man who navigated grief again and again and had overcome a lot, but had gone through so many ups and downs. Like we just talked about is history going to look at him any differently than maybe we're looking at him right in this moment. Yeah. I don't think that Joe Biden is going to be down there with James Buchanan as like, you know, among the worst presidents in history. And I don't think he's probably going to be up there with Abraham Lincoln or FDR, but he's not going to be in a bad place either because of the
Starting point is 00:17:18 fact that what historians will look at is what did he do in handling the biggest problem within what his administration was handed? And clearly COVID was the big thing and for the most part handled pretty well. And I think that there's a lot in his career that people look back on and have some praise for. I mean, his writing of the Violence Against Women Act, being chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and Senate Foreign Relations Committee and known for his empathy, as you said. You know, I mean, there are a lot of people who leaned on Joe Biden after tragic deaths in their families. I mean, Meghan McCain, daughter of John McCain, talks about how Joe Biden was really one of the principal people who really kind of was a shoulder to lean on. And Joe Biden likes to say, there will come a time when that person
Starting point is 00:18:05 brings a smile to your face rather than a tear to your eye. But I think for a lot of people, he was somebody who was a key figure in the story of the American presidency and in American history. Unfortunately for him, he was just too old at the time that he was up for re-election. You know, history's written in hindsight. It's not a daily news story. And how he's going to be remembered, whether fondly or angrily, by the Democratic Party will really depend a lot on what happens. He passed a lot of things, a lot of very
Starting point is 00:18:35 consequential legislation. As I said, his concept of the presidency was legislator in chief. That's what he'd been his whole career. So the question is, how much of, legislative legacy will be still standing. Donald Trump wants to undo a lot of it. But, uh, what we do know is I think Joe Biden will be remembered as the person who both defeated Donald Trump and paved the way for his return and who had, at
Starting point is 00:18:59 least at the time, a very significant legislative record. We don't know how permanent it will be, but he failed utterly at the time, a very significant legislative record. We don't know how permanent it'll be, but he failed utterly at the performative aspects of the presidency. You know, selling and explaining what he was doing, why it mattered to people's daily lives. That wasn't something that he even prioritized because he was so involved in getting legislation passed. Okay, we're going to leave it there. I'm Sarah McCammon, I cover politics. I'm Domenico Montanaro, senior political editor and correspondent. And I'm Mara Eliason, senior national political correspondent.
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