Political Hotsheet
By

Brian Montopoli /

CBS News/ October 24, 2011, 12:53 PM

Will Joe Biden run for president in 2016?

Manuel Balce Ceneta

In an interview that aired on CNN on Sunday, Vice President Joe Biden left the door open to running for president in 2016 - he said he'd "make up my mind on that later" - and suggested he was physically and mentally prepared for the challenge.

"I'm in one of the -- probably the best shape I've been in my life," said Biden. "I'm doing pretty well. I'm enjoying what I'm doing. And as long as I do, I'm going to continue to do it."

If he runs and wins in 2016, Biden would be 73 years old when he took office. His age would be an issue for the electorate - he would be the oldest incoming president in U.S. history - but perhaps not a disqualifying one.

There are two recent instructive examples: 2008 Republican presidential candidate John McCain, who would have been 72 years old when he took office. While McCain's age (and previous health issues) generated some concern, the issue never overshadowed his candidacy. Then there's former president Ronald Reagan, who was reelected in 1984 at the age of 73. Reagan is the most admired Republican president in recent history, but there is continued debate over whether he began suffering the symptoms of Alzheimer's disease before he left office.

Age isn't Biden's only potential roadblock: Based on his two past presidential runs, it's not clear that the Delaware native would be a particularly strong candidate. Biden's lack of discipline in public comments can cause headaches for his staff, as when he suggested in early 2007 that then-candidate Obama was "the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy" to seek the presidency. Biden's loose lips haven't been a significant problem for the Obama administration - his characterization of health care reform as a "big f***ing deal" ultimately went over pretty well - but his off-the-cuff style means he is more likely than most presidential candidates to sink his bid with one ill-considered remark.

And then there's Biden the campaigner. During his 2008 presidential run, I got to see Biden's famed long-windedness up close. At town hall sessions, you'd watch seniors politely trying to stifle their yawns as Biden gave overly detailed, digressive answers (many lasting more than 10 minutes) to relatively simple questions. The crowds in Iowa seemed to like Biden personally, but his style simply didn't galvanize primary voters; he finished fifth in the caucuses, with just one percent of delegates, and was out of the race soon after. (His 1988 run is somewhat less instructive, in large part because it was overtaken by a plagiarism scandal.)

Biden would likely come into the 2016 race with a tailwind, thanks to his high-profile perch if Mr. Obama wins re-election. In the year 2000, Al Gore - who is, to put it nicely, no one's idea of a charismatic campaigner - managed to win his party's nomination (and nearly take the presidency) after eight years as former President Bill Clinton's vice president. George H.W. Bush did the same thing in 1988 after eight years under Mr. Reagan. If Mr. Obama wins a second term, it will be particularly tempting for Biden to try to follow suit.

And depending on the state of the nation's economy in four years, he could potentially be the right candidate for the moment. Biden connects particularly well with blue collar audiences, and while the former senator spent his career as a politically moderate Washington insider, he could plausibly mount a populist campaign similar to the one run by John Edwards in 2008. Indeed, Biden is arguably better at connecting to working class Americans than his boss, whose oratorical skills sometimes spill over into the professorial; for the labor unions that play a significant role in Democratic politics, Biden could make an appealing standard bearer.

The 2016 campaign is still a long way away, of course. Four years from now, Biden may not want to undertake the rigors of a presidential campaign. But he has shown more than once that he has presidential ambitions, and unlike Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, his political appetite shows no sign of diminishing. If Mr. Obama wins re-election, he'll have another profile-enhancing four years in the public eye and a good chance at appropriating the massive fundraising network developed by the president. In light of all that, it isn't easy to imagine a man who has served in Washington since 1973 simply walking away.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
10 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
DeusExVinnie says:
Found this while searching for today's BeQuizzled answer. Check it out, sign up is free and you can win daily prizes like gift cards to your favorite retailers. http://bequizzled.com
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
nojello says:
For a US taxpayer to vote for Joe Biden (or Obama for that matter) is like a chicken voting for Colonel Sanders.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
elmgreen11 says:
last 3 Dem VPs to run: Hubert Humphrey, Walter Mondale, Al Gore....
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
magnumdr says:
Who ever runs for the President of America it will be a "know it all". It is surprizeing that any Government buisness gets done with all of our "know it all's" in Government today!
reply
jdswink replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Jill Biden is a fox. Joe needs 2 get a real job and we do not need another DEMOCRAT in the White House. Make Congress work more days and quit fighting among yourselves.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
cloopy says:
biden is just cow towing to obama now,this explains bidens latest gaff//////the growing crimerate due to republicans//////biden is obamas puppet/do dis do dat,or ur off the 2012 ticket!!!
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
stn_sage says:
His time is past!
He's been so thoroughly co-opted by the wealthy elite, he'd be nothing more than the continuation of incompetent presidents
that we've seen over the last several years!
He'd do more harm, than good,
like his predecessors!
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
wfw3536 says:
And Biden was the guy who was going to keep track of the first stimulus projects, and we know of 2 solar companies one that has gone bankrupt for half a billion and second that is on the hook and near going broke for over 1.2 billion. The guy just can't keep his foot out of his mouth.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
tsigili says:
This guy is a buffoon. No one in their right mind, should vote for him. Not even Democrats.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
AmericanConscious says:
He can give it a shot if he can stop boozing or passing out during meetings or like he does when Obama is giving his Atate of The Union speeches.
Being associated with Obama's failed presidency will kill his chances from day one.
reply