5 reasons - why Biden?

Search

Life's a bitch, then you die!
Joined
Jul 10, 2007
Messages
28,910
Tokens
Jim VandeHei, Mike Allen Sat Aug 23, 5:26 PM ET
It is easy to overstate the meaning of vice presidential picks. After all, rarely does the selection of a running mate significantly tilt the outcome of an election. But it does provide a unique window into the presidential nominee's decision-making instincts and his strategy for winning in the fall.


Here are five things the selection of Joe Biden tells us about Barack Obama:
1. He's fixing for a fight. Obama has been knocked for being too soft and too enthralled with rhetorical fancy. But the past few weeks provided a glimpse of his tough-guy Chicago side. He went negative the moment his campaign felt wobbly. Biden is a brawler — and the Obama camp is eager to unleash him.

2. He's a lot more conventional than advertised. Obama has promised a different and more consensus-oriented brand of politics but more often than not has done what most politicians do: switched positions to soothe voters, dodged the unpredictability of town hall meetings and gone for the jugular when he sees it. The Biden pick — the most important choice Obama has made to date in his public career — was safe and traditional. Two male career politicians from the Senate is hardly transformational.

3. He’s insecure about security. The Georgia-Russia crisis amplified Obama's shortcomings on national security — both his own experience and the perceptions of voters about his own readiness for command. McCain is making that his calling card, and polls show it's working. Biden offers Obama instant help: He knows this stuff and is more than willing to flaunt it.
4. He’s more worried about Lunchbox Joe than Bubba. Obama was not persuaded by arguments that Democrats for the past 60 years have won the presidency only when they've had a Southerner on the ticket. He seems confident he can put a few states in the Old Confederacy in play by stoking African-American turnout. Perhaps. But he also is calculating that his more urgent concern is working-class whites, especially those in the industrial Midwest. Hillary Rodham Clinton clobbered him in these areas — and white men remain very skeptical of him, if you believe the polls (and his people do). At the public unveiling of the ticket Saturday at Springfield, Ill., Obama called Biden a “scrappy kid from Scranton.”
5. He doesn't hold a grudge — or at least he doesn't let it get in the way. Biden, who pulled out of the Democratic race after finishing fifth in Iowa, raised serious questions about Obama’s readiness to handle national security in the primaries. Biden said things like this a year ago: “If the Democrats think we're going to be able to nominate someone who can win without that person being able to [bring to the] table unimpeachable credentials on national security and foreign policy, I think we're making a tragic mistake.” That criticism hurt then because it echoed the precise case made by Clinton in the nomination contest. It’s hurting now because Republicans are using Biden’s words against Obama in a new ad. Now Obama has to show he can get over the Clinton grudge.
 

RX Senior
Joined
Apr 20, 2002
Messages
47,431
Tokens
I'm happy with the choice, even if it wasn't my prediction.

Biden is a fighter. Intelligent, well spoken guy with a lot of expierence.

Interesting read. Only skimmed it. I'll get the rest later.
 

Banned
Joined
Aug 17, 2008
Messages
5,120
Tokens
Is the Hillary Clinton thing overblown?

What happens to the Hillary camp that swore they wouldn't vote Obama? I would suspect a lot of that was used as leverage they the vast majority still wouldn't vote for an evil republican but there is no doubt Obama lost "some" votes.

Hillary either had more popular votes than Obama or it was VERY close. Even up until the end, she was winning the big states ( cali, NY, Penn, Oh, Florida) while Obama destroyed her in the small states. I don't know how it finished, but it wouldn't shock me if she had more popular votes than him. Even losing a small pct. of people will hurt.
 

RX Senior
Joined
Apr 20, 2002
Messages
47,431
Tokens
C-Gold, wondering that too.

How much support can he actually expect to get from her?! He really didnt even give her any consideration.

Obama is definatly going to lose some votes for it, but he has to be thinking he makes up for that with Biden some how?! I dunno.
 

Banned
Joined
Aug 17, 2008
Messages
5,120
Tokens
I think Obama/Hillary was unstopable. It would have still had womens groups pissed off, but they still would have voted for it.

I think a lot of the womens groups who swore they would go Mccain were bullshitting, they will still pull the blue lever, but what about the undecided women voters out there? They will see this drama unfold on the stage and be pissed.

I think it was a cocky thing to pick Biden, he is basically saying he doesn't need Hillary.
 

Life's a bitch, then you die!
Joined
Jul 10, 2007
Messages
28,910
Tokens
Never, I repeat never underestimate the wrath of a women that has been shunned. Especially if her name is Hillary Rodham Clinton.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,119,947
Messages
13,575,535
Members
100,888
Latest member
bj88gameslife
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com