Times Standard (Eureka)

Hur transcript reveals profound, mundane in Biden presidency

- By Colleen Long and Zeke Miller

>> Special counsel Robert Hur was thanking the president for his time. He understood, Hur said, that there were a lot of things going on that demanded Joe Biden's attention.

“We may be interrupte­d by one,” Biden said, explaining that he'd just gotten off the phone with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. It was Oct. 8, 2023, the day after the attack on Israel by Hamas, and the president was navigating a major multi-task, trying to prevent a wider Mideast conflict while looking out for his own interests at a time of potential legal jeopardy.

Still, Biden told prosecutor­s he hoped they could get through the interview. And Hur let the president know they appreciate­d it.

Their exchange was in a transcript released Tuesday of five hours of Biden interviews with federal prosecutor­s who investigat­ed his handling of classified documents and concluded there was not enough evidence to charge him with any crimes.

While the release of the transcript may not have altered preconceiv­ed notions about Biden, it did offer a rare window into the profound and mundane realities of day-to-day life for the president.

In his conversati­ons with investigat­ors, Biden makes offhand remarks about working in his pajamas as vice president, laments over his oh-so messy garage at his house in Delaware and talks of juggling internatio­nal crises while other matters intrude.

Taken together, they illustrate the idiosyncra­sies of a presidency and showcase a hallmark of Biden's political career: storytelli­ng.

A question about whether he brought classified informatio­n as vice president to his home in Wilmington, Delaware, turned into a 25-paragraph stream of consciousn­ess answer about where he kept photos from his vice presidenti­al days. That in turn morphed into a well-worn tale of that one time he “embarrasse­d the hell” out of the leader of Mongolia, apparently by exceeding expectatio­ns with a bow and arrow.

“And so we're out in the middle of nowhere and they're looking up on the hill and we see this tiny line. You know, it's a 20mile horse race with all these kids under the age of 16 on bareback racing to come down. And you know, there are sumo wrestlers doin' everything they do.”

And then, he says, they walk over and hand him a bow and arrow — there are targets on bales of hay. “I don't know if it was to embarrass me or to make a point, but I get handed the bow and arrow. I'm not a bad archer. … So I — and pure luck, I hit the goddamn target.”

To try to explain how he organizes his papers after meetings, Biden used the example of the just-concluded call with Netanyahu and his subsequent talk with “Jake and Tony” — Sullivan and Blinken, that is, his national security adviser and secretary of state.

“I said, guys, we got to follow up on boom, boom, boom, what's going to happen here. And then I took my papers, looked at what I need, put them in a pile, and they're sitting in the middle of my desk.”

Biden ventured into how working odd hours as vice president influenced his decorating choices at the Naval Observator­y, the Victorian mansion that serves as the vice president's official residence.

“I put a small desk in there so I could (redacted) when I wanted to work in my pajamas,” Biden said of his eight years living there. “My wife did not like it.”

Biden, by his own admission, is something of a hoarder. Think souvenirs, jumbo photos, genealogy records, binders of speeches given over the course of more than 50 years in public life.

“I just warn you all, never make one great eulogy, because you get asked to do everybody's eulogy,” he quipped to Hur's team.

His wife Jill, he said, wanted nothing to do with his filing system, which he said often meant taking unsorted piles from a desk or table and putting them in a cabinet.

The photos of his garage show a cluttered mess of boxes, home furnishing­s and exercise equipment alongside his treasured Corvette.

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