In his first extensive public comments about a possible run for
the Democratic presidential nomination, Biden said, "I can't look
you straight in the eye now and say I know I can do it."
Biden, 72, has been huddling with advisers for weeks to determine
whether he will challenge Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton,
who has seen her favorability ratings plummet over her use of a
private email server while working as the nation's top diplomat.
"The most relevant factor in my decision is whether my family and I
have the emotional energy to run," Biden, who lost his son, Beau, to
cancer earlier this year, said in response to a question.
"The factor is, can I do it?" he said. "The honest to God answer is
I just don't know."
Biden was in Atlanta on Thursday night to deliver a foreign policy
lecture after concluding a two-day visit to the political
battleground state of Florida, where he avoided any discussion of a
possible White House run.
Biden said he would not be swayed by questions about whether he
could raise enough money or mount an effective organization after
getting a late start. The only factor, he said, was his and his
family's commitment.
"Can my family undertake what is an arduous commitment?" he said.
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"Unless I can go to my party and the American people and say I am
able to devote my whole heart and soul to this endeavor, it would
not be appropriate."
Biden has stepped up his public schedule, and will travel to
Pittsburgh on Monday for Labor Day celebrations and New York later
in the week to appear on Stephen Colbert's talk show.
But he said he did not know when he would make a decision.
"There is no way to put a timetable on it," he said.
(Reporting by John Whitesides; Editing by Doina Chiacu, Eric Beech
and Ken Wills)
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