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The Big Story: Obama introduces running mate Biden
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| AP Photo
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., his wife Michelle Obama, Jill Biden and vice presidential candidate Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., in front of the Old State Capitol in Springfield, Ill. on Saturday. |
Published: Saturday, August 23, 2008 9:59 PM MST
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP)—Barack Obama introduced Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware on Saturday as a man “ready to step in and be president,” and the newly minted running mate quickly converted his debut on the Democratic ticket into a slashing attack on Republicans seeking four more years in the White House.
Arizona Sen. John McCain will have to “figure out which of the seven kitchen tables to sit at” when considering his own economic future, said Biden, jabbing at the man he called his personal friend.
It was a reference to McCain’s recent inartful admission — in a time of economic uncertainty — that he was not sure how many homes he owns.
The McCain campaign quickly produced a television ad featuring Biden’s previous praise for McCain and comments critical of Obama. In an ABC interview last year, Biden had said he stood by an earlier statement that Obama wasn’t yet ready to be president and “the presidency is not something that lends itself to on-the-job training.”
Before a vast crowd spilling out from the front of the Old State Capitol, Obama said Biden was “what many others pretend to be — a statesman with sound judgment who doesn’t have to hide behind bluster to keep America strong.”
Democrats coalesced quickly around the 47-year-old Obama’s selection of the veteran of three decades in the Senate — a choice meant to provide foreign policy heft to the party’s ticket for the fall campaign against McCain and the Republicans.
Obama made a symbolic choice for the site of the ticket’s first joint appearance.
It was a brutally cold winter day more than a year ago when he stood outside the historic structure in the Illinois capital to launch his quest for the White House. He returned this day in sunshine, the party’s improbable nominee-in-waiting, a black man in his first Senate term who outdistanced a crowded field of far better-known and more experienced rivals for the nomination.
The Democratic National Convention opens on in Denver Monday to nominate him as president and Biden as vice president, the ticket that Democrats hope to ride into the White House after eight years of Republican rule.
McCain’s convention opens on Labor Day. He has yet to select a running mate.
Polls indicate a highly competitive race at the end of a summer in which McCain eroded what had been Obama’s slender advantage in the national surveys.
Saturday, Obama brought Biden on stage with his glowing introduction to the strains of Bruce Springsteen’s “The Rising.”
Biden moved center stage in shirt-sleeves at a brisk trot that belied his 65 years, and embraced Obama.
“I’m glad to be here,” said the man who has twice sought the presidency and emerged as Obama’s pick only in the past few days.
Thousands of newly printed signs bearing the words Obama/Biden sprouted in the crowd that waited in anticipation in 90-degree temperatures.
Obama’s remarks were carefully crafted to emphasize Biden’s accomplishments in the Senate, his blue-collar roots and — above all — his experience on foreign policy.
“I can tell you Joe Biden gets it,” he said. “He’s that unique public servant who is at home in a bar in Cedar Rapids and the corridors of the Capitol, in the VFW hall in Concord, and at the center of an international crisis,” he said.
In contrast to the Obamas and the McCains, the Delaware senator isn’t a multimillionaire. Biden and his wife Jill have $59,000 to $366,000 in assets and $140,000 to $365,000 in debts, including a $15,000 to $50,000 line of credit Biden co-signed with his son to cover college expenses, according to a financial disclosure report for 2007, which describes assets and liabilities in ranges.
Obama recounted the personal tragedy that struck Biden more than 30 years ago, within days of his election to the Senate, when his first wife and their child were killed in an automobile accident.
He said Biden raised his surviving children as a single parent, commuting between the Capitol and Delaware daily on the Amtrak train.
“For decades, he has brought change to Washington, but Washington hasn’t changed him,” Obama said, attempting to blunt an emerging Republican line of attack that notes Biden’s three decades in the polished corridors of the Capitol. “He’s an expert on foreign policy whose heart and values are rooted firmly in the middle class.”
In a jab at McCain that foretold Biden’s far sharper criticism, Obama said his political partner “will give us some real straight talk.”
Biden said of McCain.
“You can’t change America and make things better for our senior citizens when you signed on to Bush’s scheme of privatizing Social Security.
“You can’t change America and end this war in Iraq when you declare — and again these are John’s words — ‘No one has supported President Bush in Iraq more than I have,’ end of quote. ladies and gentlemen, you can’t change America, you can’t change America when you know your first four years as president will look exactly like the last eight years of George Bush’s presidency.”
Biden returned to Delaware to prepare for the fall campaign. Obama was returning to Chicago before heading out to a trip across swing states en route to the convention.
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