The Boston Globe

A Biden campaign quip, with a Boston twist

President attributes his ‘almighty’ quote to iconic mayor White, among other sources

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — The TV camera crews had departed Boston City Hall after a news briefing on May 21, 1979, when Mayor Kevin H. White surprised a clutch of lingering reporters and his own aides with an announceme­nt that wasn’t expected for weeks: He was running for reelection that fall.

His impromptu statement didn’t last long and wasn’t captured on audio or video. But a bit of it still echoes in American politics and voters could hear it often this year.

“Don’t compare me to the almighty,” White said in launching his bid for a fourth mayoral term. “Compare me to the alternativ­e.”

President Biden adopted the saying years ago and sometimes attributed it to the late White, a fellow Irish-Catholic politician whom he admired, while other times he cites his father, or no one at all. Ascertaini­ng its true source is complicate­d, but determinin­g its meaning is not. It neatly defines Biden’s political persona — at once religious, pragmatic, self-effacing, and pugnacious — and succinctly frames his challenge in overcoming low approval ratings to win a second term in a likely rematch against Donald Trump.

“It is actually the antithesis of the Trumpian statement, ‘I alone can fix it,’ "said former Biden speechwrit­er Jeff Nussbaum. “Trump says, ‘I alone can fix it,’ and doesn’t. Joe Biden says, ‘Don’t compare me to the almighty’ and comes pretty damn close to getting everything done

‘Don’t compare me to the almighty. Compare me to the alternativ­e.’

SAYING OF BOTH PRESIDENT BIDEN AND FORMER MAYOR KEVIN WHITE

that people hoped for him to do.”

Biden’s frequent use of the almighty comparison has pushed it into the political lexicon, with other politician­s picking it up and some citing him as the source. But as with many political sayings, its origin is unclear.

White himself in 1979 attributed the phrase to the Canadian prime minister at the time, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, according to the Globe’s story on his announceme­nt. But there’s no record in the Canadian media of Trudeau saying it himself and it appears to have first been said about him.

“We don’t have to compare him to the ideal,” Finance Minister John Turner said of Trudeau days before Canada’s 1972 elections, according to The Montreal Star. “We don’t have to compare him to the almighty. We just have to compare him to the alternativ­e.”

Other members of Trudeau’s Liberal Party adopted the saying, and it was used in a party election strategy document reported in news stories in April 1979, just weeks before White quoted it in Boston. Trudeau used a bland variation in a 1978 press conference, “Considerin­g the alternativ­es, I’m the best man,” according to his biographer, John English. But English said in an email that he wouldn’t be surprised if Trudeau adopted it and failed to cite Turner.

“The two of them came to dislike and distrust each other, and Trudeau would never give him credit for the origins of his comment,” said English, a retired history professor at the University of Waterloo in Ontario and former Liberal member of the Canadian Parliament. “He undoubtedl­y knew of it. In fact, Trudeau had a remarkable memory and drew upon it for quips that became identified with him.”

Trudeau was known for his eloquence, as was White, who was Boston mayor from 196884. The trait helped make White a finalist to be the running-mate of Democratic presidenti­al nominee George McGovern in 1972.

White’s former press secretary, Boston public relations executive George Regan, who was his aide for 11 years, said he had never heard him use the almighty comparison before the 1979 reelection announceme­nt. Neither had Micho Spring, his chief of staff from 1978-84.

“He thought it captured the essence of what an election is — a choice between two actual candidates — not between an incumbent and an ideal,” Spring, now a reputation strategy consultant, said in an email.

But Ira Jackson, who was White’s chief of staff from 197275, said he remembered White using it earlier than 1979.

“I think it’s very much the way he viewed himself,” Jackson, who now teaches a course on leadership and social change at Harvard. “Just the fact that he would say, ‘Don’t compare me to the almighty’ suggested that might be a reference point that people had in mind, himself included. But it was a wonderful way of Kevin positionin­g himself: a little bit of humility, a little bit of humor, a lot of Irish and very competitiv­e.”

Those characteri­stics, particular­ly the Irish part, help explain the connection to Biden, who also leans into that heritage.

“He was a very big fan of Kevin White’s. They just really hit it off,” said Ted Kaufman, a longtime Biden aide who was appointed as his Senate replacemen­t when he became vice president. “He was always really respectful of mayors and how difficult that job is.”

As Biden told it during a 2011 forum in Washington, he was in Boston for a Democratic Party event during his first year in the Senate in 1973 and heard White use the slogan as reporters were hounding him.

“And the gaggle of press got him as he came out of the mayor’s office and basically said, ‘Well, wise guy, hot shot ... how do you feel now?’ " Biden said. “And he looked at them. I’ll never forget what he said. He said, ‘Look, don’t compare me to the almighty. Compare me to the alternativ­e.’ ”

Biden was at a Democratic event in Boston in 1973, according to the Globe archives. He was the luncheon speaker at a political seminar at the Sheraton Boston Hotel on Dec. 8, 1973, sponsored by the Democratic State Committee. But White, “who was invited and listed as a panelist, was conspicuou­s by his absence,” the article said.

A search of the Congressio­nal Record, news archives, and White House transcript­s indicates Biden first began using the almighty comparison in public while campaignin­g for Democrats ahead of the 2010 midterm elections.

“You know, there used to be a mayor of Boston ... this is way back in ‘72. His name was Kevin White. He said, ‘Don’t compare me to the almighty; compare me to the alternativ­e,” Biden told the Democratic National Committee’s summer meeting in St. Louis on Aug. 20, 2010, drawing laughter and cheers before repeating the saying for emphasis, according to a transcript.

But Biden, typically careful to attribute other people’s words after a 1987 plagiarism scandal derailed his first White House bid, has shifted the attributio­n from White to his father over the years.

“My dad used to have an expression. He’d say, “Joey, don’t compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternativ­e.” Biden told a Democratic National Committee fund-raiser in Boston on Sept. 12, 2022. And sometimes Biden doesn’t attribute the saying at all.

Kaufman said Biden used it well before he became vice president in 2009, the point when almost all his public comments were chronicled by the White House and news media.

“He doesn’t always attribute it to his father, but that’s how I remember it, especially when he first got started,” Kaufman said. “His father was good at this kind of stuff, so it wouldn’t surprise me that his father told him that.”

A Biden campaign spokesman declined to comment on the origins of the saying. Kaufman said Biden primarily uses it when campaignin­g.

Biden and White have similariti­es that would lead both to embrace the almighty comparison, said Nussbaum, who researched a speech White almost gave, defying Boston’s court-ordered school busing, for his 2022 book, “Undelivere­d: The Never-Heard Speeches That Would Have Rewritten History.”

“Look at [White’s] old speeches, they were this wonderful combinatio­n of progressiv­ism, civic hope, good governance, and idealism, combined with a real political savvy. And, of course, the Irishiness of it all,” said Nussbaum, who was Biden’s speechwrit­er from February 2021 to May 2022 and now is a partner at the Washington public affairs firm Bully Pulpit Internatio­nal. “I think a lot of that is in Biden’s DNA. And White was a peer of a lot of the people who Biden admired and modeled himself after.”

Former Boston mayor Martin J. Walsh said the saying is a perfect fit for Biden.

“It’s coming from his heart, it’s coming from his gut,” said Walsh, who is close to Biden and served as his labor secretary before stepping down in March. “He wouldn’t be running for president if the alternativ­e was stronger, and he’s concerned about the alternativ­e.”

For Jackson, White’s former chief of staff, the almighty comparison indicates Biden is willing to take the fight directly to Trump. And it’s an ideal way to sum up the choice facing Americans next fall, as it was for Bostonians in 1979.

“It’s so useful. It’s so memorable. It’s so penetratin­g. It’s so simple,” Jackson said. “It’s wonderful that Biden occasional­ly attributes it to Kevin White. That’s a sign of his humility and that sort of fraternity of Irish pols who respect one another. But it’s not necessary. And I don’t think Kevin White thought it was necessary to always refer to Pierre Elliott Trudeau. And who knows where Trudeau got it, if he got.”

 ?? DAVID L. RYAN/GLOBE STAFF/1979 ??
DAVID L. RYAN/GLOBE STAFF/1979
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? Former mayor Kevin White of Boston attributed his “almighty” quote to Pierre Trudeau, the former Canadian leader shown in 1981 with President Reagan.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE Former mayor Kevin White of Boston attributed his “almighty” quote to Pierre Trudeau, the former Canadian leader shown in 1981 with President Reagan.

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