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If Biden Wants To Run For President, His Narrow Window Is Closing

Nobody really knows whether Vice President Biden will run, but there's a debate in Democratic circles about whether he can afford to wait.
Chip Somodevilla
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Nobody really knows whether Vice President Biden will run, but there's a debate in Democratic circles about whether he can afford to wait.

This post was updated at 4:00 p.m. ET Thursday

Reading the tea leaves about Vice President Biden's intentions has become a consuming parlor game in Washington.

Political junkies and journalists have been breathlessly speculating about whether Biden will get into the Democratic presidential race. Every phone call from a Biden aide is examined for hidden meaning.

Biden is now included in every Democratic primary poll. And he's doing — theoretically — quite well. In some polls he even beats Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has been giving Hillary Clinton a tougher-than-expected challenge, especially in the key early states of Iowa and New Hampshire.

CNN has said that even if Biden decides to run on Oct. 13, he could still get a spot in the first Democratic debate in Las Vegas that very night. But, Biden is reportedly not preparing for or expected to participate in the Denver debate, according to CNN. And NBC is reporting that Biden could wait until late October or early November to decide.

Biden speaks at the 2015 Global Citizen Festival to end extreme poverty, in New York's Central Park on Saturday.
Theo Wargo / Getty Images
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Getty Images
Biden speaks at the 2015 Global Citizen Festival to end extreme poverty, in New York's Central Park on Saturday.

The truth is that no one in Washington knows what Biden will do, and it's possible even the vice president himself doesn't know yet either, even though The Hill newspaper ran a story this week headlined, "Biden's close friends believe the stars are aligning for his likely presidential bid."

Biden himself was asked about this recently by Stephen Colbert on the Late Show. It was an emotional moment, coming just weeks after his son Beau died of brain cancer. Biden acknowledged he just wasn't there yet.

"I'm being completely honest," Biden said. "Nobody has a right, in my view, to seek that office unless they are willing to give it 110 percent of who they are."

Biden is a beloved figure in the Democratic Party and his appearance on Colbert's show — so raw and authentic — only reminded Democrats why they have so much affection for him.

But what if Biden does get in the race? Does he have anything to offer that Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders doesn't — other than his Regular Joe style? He occupies the same centrist, establishment lane in the party that Clinton does.

And, there's this mystery — vice presidents are usually the heirs apparent, and Biden has now had seven years to lay the foundation for what would be his third try for the presidency.

But he hasn't done any of the spadework necessary to raise money or build an organization.

So why now? Political analysts are eagerly putting Biden on the couch. Maybe it's because Clinton looks weaker than expected. Maybe it's his son's death. Or maybe Biden is also mourning the end of his own political career.

Mo Udall, the former Arizona congressman, once said that the only cure for presidential ambition is embalming fluid. And that suggests Biden might rather run — and lose — again, than decide not to run and be haunted by doubts about what might have happened if he did.

There's also a debate in Democratic circles about whether Biden can afford to wait. In three or four months, it will be clearer if Clinton truly is faltering, and, by then, there might be a real groundswell among establishment types in the party for Biden to get in.

But if he wants to make one last run for the White House, and not wait around for a "Draft Biden" movement among superdelegates to materialize, then he needs to get going now.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Corrected: October 1, 2015 at 11:00 PM CDT
A previous version of this story placed the Oct. 13 Democratic debate in Denver. It will be in Las Vegas.
Mara Liasson is a national political correspondent for NPR. Her reports can be heard regularly on NPR's award-winning newsmagazine programs Morning Edition and All Things Considered. Liasson provides extensive coverage of politics and policy from Washington, DC — focusing on the White House and Congress — and also reports on political trends beyond the Beltway.