Biden shows tenderness and temper on 2020 presidential trail
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[February 11, 2020]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and James Oliphant
HAMPTON, N.H. (Reuters) - Joe Biden had
spent much of the weekend ahead of New Hampshire's primary on Tuesday
attacking his top Democratic presidential rivals when a young woman
asked why voters should believe he could win a national election after
his poor showing in Iowa.
What happened next quickly went viral.
The former vice president asked if she had ever been to a caucus. She
said yes.
"No, you haven't. You're a lying dog-faced pony soldier," Biden said,
smiling. "Now you gotta be honest. I'm going to be honest with you."
It was classic Biden, making a joke with phrasing adapted from John
Wayne movies and drawing laughter from his audience. But some observers
in the crowd and watching from the outside found the answer perplexing
and even insulting.
Since he joined the Democratic race last spring to challenge Republican
President Donald Trump in the November 2020 election, Biden has won over
voters with tender moments that brought them to tears, while also
showing flashes of anger that sent others looking for someone else to
support.
The unpredictable performance has again been on display in New
Hampshire, where the once-dominant national front-runner arrived after a
disappointing fourth-place finish in Iowa last week. He immediately
predicted he might suffer another weak finish in Tuesday's primary.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Monday showed Biden slumping 5 points
to 17 percent in national support among Democrats and independents after
Iowa, falling behind U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders.
Biden, 77, is not shy about how he feels. "No one ever doubts that I
mean what I say," he has said. "The problem is, I sometimes say all that
I mean."
He lingers after campaign events, greeting everyone who wants to snap a
photograph. He connects with people who speak about their setbacks in
life, chronic health conditions or relatives who died, sometimes
offering a private phone number if they wished to talk further.
Those who confront him see a different side. Biden called one Iowa voter
"a damn liar" after he made false allegations against Biden and his
son's actions in Ukraine. He pressed his palm into the chest of a
critical Iowa activist last month and said: "Go vote for someone else."
'HOW MUCH FIRE IS THERE'
When an activist demanded at a November campaign stop in South Carolina
that Biden stop deportations, Biden shot back: "You should vote for
Trump." The activist, Carlos E. Rojas Rodriguez, said later he would
join Sanders' presidential campaign.
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Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice
President Joe Biden speaks to supporters at a campaign event in
Manchester, New Hampshire, U.S. February 10, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos
Barria
"Is this some sort of reverse psychology strategy?" Rojas asked on
Facebook after Biden's subsequent confrontation with the Iowa
activist.
On Saturday, Biden delivered a crisp, disciplined performance at a
theater in Manchester, New Hampshire. He blasted former South Bend,
Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Sanders, the top two finishers in
Iowa.
Afterward, Biden held a wide-ranging back-and-forth with reporters
that his staff repeatedly tried to end.
He criticized the Democratic debate format, boasting of his past
debate performances against former Republican vice presidential
candidates Paul Ryan and "that woman from Alaska who could see
Russia," Sarah Palin.
He even offered that he did not really want to attack Buttigieg and
Sanders, and blamed the press for making him do it. "You all judge
on how much fire is there," he complained.
At an event in Hudson, New Hampshire, on Sunday, Biden ignored his
talking points and spoke at length about the hardships he and other
Americans have faced, almost breaking down when talking about the
2015 death of his eldest son, Beau, from brain cancer.
After the event, a formerly undecided voter said Biden had just won
his support.
"This just had me from the beginning," said Charles Feiner, 67.
"I've been to hundreds of these things. ... He really touched me."
Unfortunately for Biden, Feiner lives in New Jersey and will not be
voting on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in Des Moines, Iowa, and Jim Oliphant
in Hampton, New Hampshire; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Peter
Cooney)
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