Salon Home
Topic

Joe Biden

Wednesday, Nov 18, 2009 3:19 PM UTC2009-11-18T15:19:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Biden stops by “The Daily Show”

The vice president sits down for an interview with Jon Stewart, and talks

Now that Dick Cheney isn’t in office anymore, the vice president isn’t spending much of his time in an undisclosed location. In fact, on Tuesday night, Joe Biden’s location was very much public — he was in New York City for an appearance on “The Daily Show.”

Biden and Stewart discussed, among other things, the stimulus, the economy, Sarah Palin and the bailouts. The two even found time to get in a little dig at Senate Democrats — Biden said they needed a “100 percent” majority in order to pass anything, though he did try to spun things a little, attributing it to the fact that Republicans have no moderates left, while Democrats do.

Video is below, in two parts.

 

Continue Reading

Alex Koppelman is a staff writer for Salon.  More Alex Koppelman

Monday, Jan 9, 2012 5:59 PM UTC2012-01-09T17:59:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Bill Keller writes newest, dumbest Biden-Clinton 2012 swap piece

Former New York Times editor combines hackneyed analysis with shopworn topic, with predictable results

Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton

Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton  (Credit: AP/Jason Reed)

Bill Keller, a bad opinion columnist, has written a bad opinion column. It is about how Barack Obama will replace Vice President Joe Biden on the 2012 ticket with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, a thing that will not actually happen.

The former New York Times editor has lately been celebrating his return to writing by fearlessly tackling hacky column ideas already exhausted by everyone who was writing bad opinion columns during Keller’s tenure as a person with an actually important job. Having offered his own takes on classics like “The Huffington Post isn’t as good as a real newspaper” and “Twitter is dumb,” Keller today tries the old “running mate switcharoo” scenario.

Continue Reading
Alex Pareene

Alex Pareene writes about politics for Salon. Email him at apareene@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @pareene  More Alex Pareene

Wednesday, Oct 12, 2011 11:34 PM UTC2011-10-12T23:34:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

The rumor that won’t die

Hillary Clinton will not replace Joe Biden as VP

VIDEO
President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton

President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton  (Credit: Joshua Roberts / Reuters)

The Chicago Sun-Times’s Laura Washington revived a perennial non-story this week, in a column speculating that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton might replace Vice President Joe Biden. It’s a numbers game: Washington thinks Clinton could energize her old feminist base and shore up President Obama’s standing with women next year.

But it’s just not going to happen. Clinton says she doesn’t want it, Biden says it’s impossible, and it would damage more than help the president by making him look desperate.

Continue Reading
Joan Walsh

Joan Walsh is Salon's editor at large.  More Joan Walsh

Monday, Jul 4, 2011 3:30 PM UTC2011-07-04T15:30:18Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Follow Joe: Biden takes to Twitter

The V.P. is sending his first-ever tweet Monday, a Fourth of July message

Joe Biden

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden speaks at the Citizens United for Research in Epilepsy annual fundraising event on Tuesday, June 21, 2011 in Chicago. Gov. Pat Quinn and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel were among the 900 people who attended a fundraiser. (AP Photo/Brian Kersey) (Credit: AP)

Vice President Joe Biden is taking to Twitter.

The White House says the vice president is sending his first-ever tweet Monday, a Fourth of July message from himself and wife Jill Biden asking Americans to take time to think of the troops in battle.

The famously verbose and gaffe-prone Biden might seem an unlikely candidate to say it in 140 characters or less. But fear not — like most politicians’ Twitter accounts, Biden’s will be staff-written.

It’s part of the White House’s growing focus on social media. The White House regularly communicates to supporters via Twitter, as does President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign.

On Wednesday the White House will even hold a Twitter town hall. Obama will take questions via Twitter, though he’ll respond verbally.

Biden’s Twitter username is (at)VP.

  More Erica Werner

Tuesday, Jun 28, 2011 3:29 PM UTC2011-06-28T15:29:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Does “Dinner with Barack and Joe” break the rules?

Does the video filmed in the White House promoting Obama's fundraising raffle violate campaign finance law?

Does

President Obama’s reelection campaign released a video Monday with a simple pitch: Donate $5, enter a lottery to win dinner with the president and with Vice President Joe Biden. This is causing some controversy.

Filmed inside the White House by a DNC team, the video prompted Real Clear Politics to ask whether the law prohibiting fundraising by federal employees in federal office buildings had been violated. A White House spokesperson responded to RCP that the video was filmed in the residential quarters of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, which the Department of Justice distinguishes from the official rooms, and that Obama’s predecessors had also filmed campaign ads in the White House:

Continue Reading

Natasha Lennard is Brooklyn-based writer and a project officer for the International News Safety Institute - North America.   More Natasha Lennard

Sunday, Jun 26, 2011 2:08 PM UTC2011-06-26T14:08:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Biden warns GOP on debt ceiling talks

VP says middle class will not "carry the whole burden" of deficit reduction

Joe Biden

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden speaks at the Citizens United for Research in Epilepsy annual fundraising event on Tuesday, June 21, 2011 in Chicago. Gov. Pat Quinn and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel were among the 900 people who attended a fundraiser. (AP Photo/Brian Kersey) (Credit: AP)

Vice President Joe Biden said Saturday the Obama administration wouldn’t let middle class Americans “carry the whole burden” to break a deadlock over the national debt limit, warning that the Republican approach would only benefit the wealthy.

Addressing Ohio Democrats, Biden said there had been great progress in talks with Republican lawmakers on a deficit-reduction plan agreement. But he insisted that his party wouldn’t agree to cuts that would undermine the elderly and middle-class workers.

Continue Reading

  More Ken Thomas

Page 1 of 25 in Joe Biden

Other News