Hartford Courant

Election 2024

Trio’s solidarity in contrast to Trump, isolated in his party

- By Chris Megerian

Biden will share stage with Barack Obama and Bill Clinton as he raises money.

WASHINGTON — When President Joe Biden needs advice, there are two people he can turn to who know what it’s like to sit in his chair. Sometimes he will invite Barack Obama over to the White House for a meal or he will get on the phone with Bill Clinton.

The three men share decades of history at the pinnacle of American and Democratic leadership, making them an unusual trio in presidenti­al history. Although there has sometimes been friction as their ambitions and agendas have diverged, they have spent years building toward a similar vision for the country.

On Thursday, their partnershi­p will be on display in what has been described as a one-of-a-kind fundraisin­g extravagan­za in New York City to help Biden build on his already significan­t cash advantage in this year’s presidenti­al election.

It’s a dramatic show of force intended to rally the Democratic Party faithful to secure a second term for Biden, 81, despite his stubbornly low poll numbers and doubts due to his age.

“There is everything to be gained by Joe Biden standing next to Bill Clinton and Barack Obama,” said Leon Panetta, who worked in the administra­tions of both former presidents. “That picture is worth a hell of a lot in politics today.”

The display of solidarity is a sharp contrast to Donald Trump’s isolation from other Republican leaders.

Although Trump has solidified his grip on his party on the way to becoming the presumptiv­e nominee, not even his own former vice president, Mike Pence, is willing to endorse Trump’s bid for another White House term. The only other living Republican president, George W. Bush, is not a supporter, either.

It’s a far different situation with Biden, Obama and Clinton. When they haven’t been campaignin­g against each other, they’ve been working together.

At one point, all three of them were on a collision course during the Democratic presidenti­al primary in 2008. Biden and Obama sought the nomination, as did Clinton’s wife, Hillary. Obama came out on top, and chose Biden as his vice president and Hillary Clinton as his secretary of state.

As Obama’s second term was ending and the 2016 election neared, he nudged Hillary Clinton to the forefront as his preferred successor and dissuaded Biden from running after Biden’s elder son died of cancer. Clinton lost to Trump, who lost to Biden in 2020. Obama privately helped clear a path for Biden to the Democratic nomination that year.

There have been notable splits between the presidents on key issues. Biden was unsuccessf­ul in persuading Obama not to send more troops to Afghanista­n in 2009. U.S. forces remained in the country until 2021, when Biden withdrew them during his first year in office.

The three presidents have often focused on the same goals in a sort of legislativ­e relay race. Clinton failed to significan­tly expand health care access during his 19932001 presidency. Obama picked up the baton when he took office in 2009 and signed the Affordable Care Act into law in 2010.

Biden called the law a “big ... deal” — inserting an infamous expletive in the middle of that thought — and built on it when he began his own term in 2021. He signed legislatio­n that included financial incentives for states to expand Medicaid, prompting North Carolina to take the belated step last year, more than a decade after the Affordable Care Act made it possible.

Between Clinton, Obama and Biden, “they’ve seen the sweep of Democratic history together in ways that not everybody has,” said Gene Sperling, a longtime economic adviser.

Sperling is among the administra­tion officials who have served all three presidents. Also in those ranks is John Podesta, currently a global climate envoy for Biden who was Clinton’s chief of staff and an environmen­tal adviser to Obama.

Podesta said all three have tried to improve the lives of working Americans.

“Each one of them, when they close the door on the Oval Office, that’s what mattered to them the most,” he said.

But their styles aren’t the same. While Obama was more reserved, Biden and Clinton draw energy from chatting up people on rope lines and forging deep personal relationsh­ips.

Panetta suggested that Biden, broadly unpopular in public polling, should try to pick up a few tips from his Democratic predecesso­rs, both of whom served two terms.

“The fundamenta­l reason they got reelected is that they were able to connect with the American people,” he said. “Joe Biden clearly needs to do that.”

The only living Democratic president who will not be in New York for the fundraiser is 99-year-old Jimmy Carter. A spokeswoma­n for Carter confirmed that he remains in home hospice care and is not making any public statements.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP 2010 ?? Then-president Barack Obama, flanked by then-vice President Joe Biden and former President Bill Clinton, stand with the U.S. soccer team at the White House.
SUSAN WALSH/AP 2010 Then-president Barack Obama, flanked by then-vice President Joe Biden and former President Bill Clinton, stand with the U.S. soccer team at the White House.

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