Joe Biden will be the 46th president of the United States. And — counting the votes of people, not just land — it won’t be close. If current trends hold, Biden will see a larger popular vote margin than Hillary Clinton in 2016, Barack Obama in 2012, or George W. Bush in 2004.
Commentary over the past few days has focused on the man he beat, and the incompetent coup being attempted in plain sight. But I want to focus on Biden, who is one of the more misunderstood figures in American politics — including, at times, by me.
Biden has been in national politics for almost five decades. And so, people tend to understand the era of Joe Biden they encountered first — the centrist Senate dealmaker, or the overconfident foreign policy hand, or the meme-able vice president, or the grieving, grave father. But Biden, more so than most politicians, changes. And it’s how he changes, and why, that’s key to understanding his campaign, and his likely presidency.
Evan Osnos is a staff writer at the New Yorker and the author of Joe Biden: The Life, the Run, and What Matters Now, a sharp biography of the next president. Osnos and I discuss:
The mystery of Joe Biden’s first political campaign
Why the Joe Biden who entered the Senate in 1980 is such a radically different person than the Joe Biden who ran for president in 2020
What the Senate taught Biden
Biden’s ideological flexibility, and the theory of politics that drives it
The differences between Biden’s three presidential campaigns -- and what they reveal about how he’s grown
The way Biden views disagreement, and why that’s so central to his understanding of politics
How Biden’s relationship with Barack Obama changed his approach to governance
The similarities — and differences — between how Obama and Biden think about politics
Why Biden is “the perfect weathervane for where the center of the Democratic party is.”
Biden’s relationship with Mitch McConnell
How Biden thinks about foreign policy
Why Biden has become more skeptical about the use of American military might in the last decade
And much more.
Book recommendations:
Amusing Ourselves to Death by Neil Postman
The Field of Blood by Joanne B. Freeman
The Ideas That Made America by Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen
Credits:
Producer/Audio engineer - Jeff Geld
Researcher - Roge Karma
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