Los Angeles Times

Biden should own his gaffes

Frequent verbal missteps aren’t the 2020 candidate’s biggest problem

- DOYLE McMANUS Doyle McManus’ column appears on Wednesday and Sunday.

I once sat next to Joe Biden at an event where one of the speakers committed a classic gaffe: He unintentio­nally uttered an obscenity into a live microphone. The offending speaker wasn’t Biden; it was me.

“What do I do now?” I asked the former vice president, figuring he was the world’s leading authority on misstateme­nts.

“Own it,” he advised. “That’s all you can do.”

For much of the summer, the dominant narrative about Biden’s presidenti­al campaign has been about gaffes, including his inartful comparison of poor kids to “white kids” and his garbled line in a stump speech, “We choose truth over facts!”

But verbal missteps aren’t the real problem for Biden. He’s been doing that for years; he owns them, even jokes about them, and moves on. Many voters seem willing to move on with him.

The real problem is that at Biden’s age — he’ll be almost 78 when voters go to the polls next year — worries about his gaffes have become a proxy for a more dangerous question: After almost 50 years in national politics, is he still mentally and physically capable of handling the rigors of the White House?

“There’s no question that there’s a concern about Biden’s age,” a Democratic strategist who isn’t affiliated with a candidate told me. “He looks and sounds like he’s from a different era than almost everyone else on that stage.”

President Trump, with his instinct for the jugular, immediatel­y questioned Biden’s acuity. “Does anybody really believe he is mentally fit to be president?” Trump asked in a tweet. (This, it must be noted, from a man whose secretary of State once used an expletive when describing him as a “moron.”)

Aside from the occasional verbal stumble, Biden looks and sounds at least as capable as Trump, who is sometimes barely coherent himself. But it was a preview of the attacks Biden will face if he wins the Democratic nomination.

That’s why there’s only one remedy for his wobbling campaign: He’s got to charge straight into the problem and own it.

If the question is whether Biden can withstand public scrutiny, he should be doing more public events, not fewer.

That’s what his campaign says he’ll do, beginning with appearance­s in Iowa and New Hampshire this week. They are spinning all this as a plus, saying Biden isn’t over-packaged, that he’s always spoken his mind, unfiltered, and that’s why voters love him.

More difficult, perhaps, is a different dimension of the age problem: Biden’s inescapabl­e identifica­tion with Democratic policies of the past, amplified by his tendency to remind voters of legislatio­n he sponsored in the 1970s and political compromise­s he brokered in the 1990s.

Biden often says that, if elected, he thinks he can persuade Republican­s to abandon scorched-earth politics and return to the bipartisan ways of an earlier time.

“There’s an awful lot of really good Republican­s out there,” he said at a fundraiser in Massachuse­tts last weekend. “I get in trouble for saying that with Democrats.”

Even some of his supporters winced. That’s way of out sync with what many primary voters feel. But it’s how Biden feels, so he’s unlikely to abandon the theme. To Biden and his aides, “authentici­ty” is everything.

Biden has one underappre­ciated strength: His support in the polls, especially among older voters, has been remarkably durable so far despite all the fretting about his stumbles.

Before he announced his candidacy, he had the support of about 29% of Democratic voters, according to the average of national polls compiled by the Real Clear Politics website. After he announced, his support spiked to 41%; after a weak performanc­e in the first Democratic debate, it fell to 26%; now it’s back where he started, at roughly 29%.

But much of that support remains tentative. In a poll released last week by the Pew Research Center, 53% of voters who named Biden as their first choice said they were also enthusiast­ic about one or more of the other candidates, suggesting they could change allegiance.

He’s still the front-runner, but his lead is far from commanding. If he stumbles, there’s still time for another moderate to move up in the polls. Democratic strategist­s name Kamala Harris, Pete Buttigieg and Cory Booker as the three most likely to succeed in that scenario.

Biden has passed two initial tests of resilience. He’s shown that he can take a punch and recover, as he did after Harris attacked his record on busing to achieve school desegregat­ion.

And he’s shown that he knows how to recover from a gaffe — by owning it. After all, he’s had almost half a century of experience.

 ?? Charlie Neibergall Associated Press ?? JOE BIDEN’S campaign is spinning his tendency to goof up as a plus, saying he’s always spoken his mind, unfiltered. Other concerns for 2020 include his age and his link to the Democratic Party of long-past decades.
Charlie Neibergall Associated Press JOE BIDEN’S campaign is spinning his tendency to goof up as a plus, saying he’s always spoken his mind, unfiltered. Other concerns for 2020 include his age and his link to the Democratic Party of long-past decades.
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