Arab Times

Biden ‘battles’ being chronicall­y late again

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WILMINGTON, Del, Sept 23, (AP): Joe Biden was running late. Again.

On a recent Friday, he’d already apologized for the delayed start to a speech, then taken more questions than expected at a subsequent press conference. When it was finally over, Biden’s motorcade sped away quickly enough to leave behind one of the journalist­s traveling with it.

But as the line of armored, black SUVs reached Biden’s home in suburban Wilmington, it suddenly reversed course and headed back out - this time to a nearby M&T bank branch. Biden’s next event was already supposed to be underway, a virtual fundraiser with National Democratic Finance Chair Chris Korge. Instead, he lingered at an ATM.

The former vice president later told the donors gathered online that he was sorry to have been waylaid by a “significan­t press conference.” He omitted the stop to withdraw pocket money.

With their packed schedules, relish for meeting as many people as possible and natural tendency toward verbosity, most presidenti­al candidates – and the commanders in chief they sometimes become – rarely get anywhere, or do anything, on time. Even controllin­g for typical on-the-trail tardiness, however, Biden has been pushing it lately.

He was more than 90 minutes late to a speech and another press conference in Wilmington last week, and arrived at a CNN town hall in Pennsylvan­ia the following day with barely 20 minutes to clip on a microphone and prepare to go on air. Afterward, his motorcade was already in motion but had to stop as Biden hopped out to chat up a group of fire-fighters.

When Biden spoke at Philadelph­ia’s Constituti­on Hall on Sunday, his remarks began 25 minutes late.

“When you get into the fall, every week feels like a month, every day feels like a week, every hour feels like a day, every minute feels like an hour,” said Chris Lehane, a former top political adviser to president Bill Clinton. “Time becomes very elastic.”

Pandemic

The pandemic has made planning and attending events more logistical­ly challengin­g, especially since Biden’s campaign is adhering to rules requiring social distancing and preventing large crowds in a way his opponent, President Donald Trump, has not. But it also means that Biden doesn’t keep big audiences waiting for extended stretches if he falls behind schedule – reducing the consequenc­es for doing so. He was routinely late before the coronaviru­s outbreak, often making those in the crowd – and even some of his own staffers – roll their eyes and mutter about Biden “bidin’ his time.”

Not all presidents, or candidates hoping to occupy the White House, are chronicall­y late. George W. Bush had a rule about always starting on time.

“He was always on time, early. And made fun of people who weren’t,” said Doug Wead, an adviser to both presidents Bush who is now an author and commentato­r. “But I don’t know that it made him any better president.”

Wead remembers George H.W. Bush being inconsiste­nt – sometimes arriving early, sometimes late. Barack Obama was often late. Trump, too, and, in the coronaviru­s era, he’s become fond of tweeting that he’s going to hold White House news conference­s with only a few minutes’ notice – then deleting those and sending updates with later times without explanatio­n.

No commander in chief in recent memory, however, was so often tardy as Clinton. His ignoring of the clock was so common that those who knew him in Arkansas referred to “Clinton Standard Time,” which ran at least 15 minutes behind the rest of the world. By the time Clinton was running for president in 1992, it had become “Elvis

Time,” which meant adding up to an extra hour or two to any scheduled start time.

Clinton also sometimes changed plans entirely on the fly – which isn’t easy when Secret Service, a sizable staff and the presidenti­al press pool went everywhere he did.

In one notorious incident, Clinton’s traveling party flew by helicopter to a Virginia golf resort as part of a daytrip to a Senate retreat. The president liked the place so much that he decided to stay overnight and golf the next day – forcing a van carrying traveling press to make a detour to Kmart so those aboard could buy toothbrush­es and a change of clothes.

While campaignin­g, meanwhile, nearly all politician­s run late because, when they have a chance to get in front of voters, they can’t stand to tear themselves away - knowing each personal interactio­n all but guarantees a vote.

“I have yet to be in a campaign where you can effectivel­y build in those transition­s between events,” Lehane said. “Because the candidate knows every second is important and wants to use all of them trying to connect with voters.”

That was particular­ly true with Clinton. But it is with Biden, too.

“You get used to thinking it’d be a handshake and a quick photo, and that’s not what it is with the vice president,” said John Flynn, who was Biden’s traveling chief of staff during the final years of the Obama administra­tion. “He’s got this sixth sense about him where he would just sense another unique thing about the person – or going on in the person’s life – and really drill down to make a personal connection.”

Virtual

Obama, in a recent virtual discussion with Biden’s running mate, California Sen Kamala Harris, told her to be ready to often run late.

“If you have a joint event,” Obama said, “he may take a little longer than what appears on the schedule cause he will be talking to every single person.”

As an exception, Biden usually stays more or less on time when his wife, Jill, travels with him. Now that presidenti­al voting is underway, however, she is often off campaignin­g on her own.

That leaves her husband to go through his day solo, and his campaign to advise that his scheduled start times are “notional” at best. It’s not a new phenomenon. Lehane recalled being the head of the College Democrats at Amherst College in 1989, when then-Sen Biden visited for what was supposed to be a 45-minute speech. Instead, he spoke for hours, holding personal chats with nearly everyone in the room – and staying so long that a storm blew in and his flight was canceled. Biden headed back to the dorms with everyone else, ordered beer and pizza and slept in a common area that night, under a poster of Bob Marley.

“That was more than 30 years ago,” Lehane said. “He’s the exact same guy today.”

Meanwhile, US House of Representa­tives passed Tuesday evening a bill to avert a government shutdown before the end of the month.

The legalisati­on, which passed with a 359-57 bipartisan vote, would keep the government running through December 11.

The legislatio­n is expected to head to Senate this week for a vote before sending it to President Donald Trump for signing.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement that an agreement has been reached with Republican­s on the Continuing Resolution (CR) “to add nearly USD eight billion in desperatel­y needed nutrition assistance for hungry schoolchil­dren and families.”

For his part, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer tweeted “Im pleased the House passed a CR tonight to fund the government through 12/11.

“It prevents a costly government shutdown and funds nutrition assistance programs to help struggling families,” he added.

He urged the Senate to pass this bill and send it to the President swiftly

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