Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Old pol and new tricks

- Washington ▶ Maureen Dowd is a New York Times columnist.

Joe Biden never had a seat at the cool kids’ table at the Obama White House.

Heading into 2016 and 2020, if you told the hotshots from Obamaworld that you thought Biden would be a good candidate, they would offer a look of infinite patience, tolerance and condescens­ion.

The message was unmistakab­le: Biden was not part of the Obama entourage. He was a member of an older, outmoded generation. In other words, uncool.

The West Wing attitude was that Biden should simply be grateful that the Great Obama had handed him a ticket to ride. Biden was viewed as a past-his-sell-by-date pol who needed the president’s guiding hand to keep Uncle Joe from making a fool of himself.

In 2012, Biden faced “friendly fire” from the West Wing, as one outraged Biden family member put it back then. Obama aides were furious when Biden went on “Meet the Press” and made a glorious gaffe, blurting out support for gay marriage while his boss was still dragging his feet. They trashed him to reporters, froze him out of meetings and barred him from doing some national media.

“Being managed into a box by Obama’s cocky campaign team only exacerbate­d Biden’s innate insecurity and drive for independen­ce,” Glenn Thrush wrote in Politico in 2014.

In eight years, Biden said in a recent reveal that stunned Anderson Cooper — and left Washington gasping — he and Jill were never invited by the Obamas to their private digs in the White House.

Despite a secret poll to see if he should be dropped as veep in favor of Hillary in 2012, despite being pushed aside by Barack Obama for Hillary in 2016, and despite not getting an endorsemen­t from his erstwhile partner in his uphill primary fight in 2020 until he was the last candidate standing, Biden refused to go gentle into that good night.

With a boost from Black Democrats, Biden achieved what pretty much no one — especially bratty Obama disciples — had thought possible. At 78, nearly half a century after he arrived in D.C. as a senator, he became the oldest man sworn in as president.

Now comes a delicious twist: Biden is being hailed as a transforma­tional, once-ina-generation progressiv­e champion, with comparison­s to LBJ and FDR aplenty, while Obama has become a cautionary tale about what happens when Democrats get the keys to the car but don’t put their foot on the gas.

The collective smirk was wiped off the face of Obamaworld this past week, as former aides expressed their irritation at the retrospect­ive dissing, and while Biden’s inner circle enjoyed schadenfre­ude. Friendly fire once aimed at Biden is coming toward Obama.

All month long, Democrats have been trashing Obama for the size of his itty-bitty 2009 stimulus bill — Charles Schumer called it “small” and “measly” — and his refusal to sell it to the public.

Now, after Biden passed the $1.9 trillion cornucopia of liberal delights, Democrats are thinking that if he keeps it up, they’ll soon carve his face on Mount Rushmore.

Old-fashioned Joe moved fast and broke things. Unlike the sleek, modern Obama, who kept trying to work with obstructio­nist Republican­s, Biden blew them off.

Progressiv­es, who had fretted that Biden would govern in a centrist hell, trapped in a sepia, split-the-difference Washington where Mitch Mcconnell would eat his lunch, were pleasantly surprised.

The lackluster Democratic response to the Great Recession, Alexandria Ocasio-cortez told The Times’ Astead Herndon, “created so much damage economical­ly, for people, but it also created a lot of political damage for the party.”

Obama’s failure to go big and to send the tumbrels rolling down Wall Street greased the runway for Donald Trump. The paradox of Obama is that Americans embraced radical change by electing him but then he held himself in check.

As vice president, Biden worried that the Obama and Valerie Jarrett crowd at the cool table were too cerebral sometimes, that they’d rather be right than win.

Once Obama had spoken, he expected others to come along. If the policies were good, they’d sell themselves. The president, as it turned out, hated politickin­g.

Obama seems more comfortabl­e as Netflix talent, chit-chatting with Bruce Springstee­n in their new Spotify podcast, “Renegades: Born in the USA.”

Biden, by contrast, is a natural-born salesman, who loves to mingle with the masses.

Democrats think it’s really kind of cool. Imagine that.

 ??  ?? MAUREEN DOWD
MAUREEN DOWD

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States