'I regret that I am not president,' but 'it was the right decision' for family- Biden
Just over
two years ago, then–Vice President Joe Biden announced that he would
not run to succeed President Barack Obama in 2016. This week he admitted he
regrets that he doesn't occupy the Oval Office, given the potential he sees in
the United States.
"I
regret that I am not president because I think there is so much
opportunity," Biden told Oprah Winfrey in a clip from an OWN interview
aired exclusively by "Good Morning America" on Thursday. "I
think America is so incredibly well positioned."
Biden, who
served eight years as Obama's vice president after 36 years in the U.S. Senate,
said he did not have second thoughts, however, about the reasons he passed on the
race.
"I
don't regret the decision I made because it was the right decision for my
family," he said
When Biden
announced in October 2015 that he would not be a candidate in the following
year's Democratic presidential primaries, he was less than five months removed
from the death of his son Beau Biden, a former Delaware attorney general, due
to brain cancer at the age of 46.
Only six
weeks after Joe Biden's first election to the Senate in 1972, his wife, Neila
Biden, and daughter Naomi were killed in an automobile accident that seriously
injured Beau and other son Hunter.
Joe Biden
explained that in order for people to decide whether they will run for
president, they need to be able to answer two questions.
"One,
do they truly believe they are the most qualified person for that moment? I
believed I was," Biden said. "But was I prepared to be able to give
my whole heart, my whole soul and all my attention to the endeavor?
"I knew
I wasn't."
Reflecting
on the tragedies that have befallen him personally as he wrote his forthcoming
book, "Promise Me, Dad: A Year of Hope, Hardship and Purpose," Biden
said he recalled a conversation he had with his mother, Catherine
"Jean" Finnegan Biden, just after the deaths of his wife and
daughter, in which she encouraged him to persevere.
"She
said, 'Joey, grab my hand ... Out of everything horrible, something good will
come if you look hard enough for it,'" he told Winfrey. "That was my
mother's notion. We were taught just to get up. When you get knocked down, just
get up and move forward."
Many of
those early lessons came during Biden's childhood in Scranton, Pennsylvania, a
blue-collar city he mentioned frequently on the campaign trail in 2008 and
2012. Winfrey noted that in those days, he was known as "a boy with a
vision" who knew from a young age the kind of person he wanted to grow up
to be. Asked if he fulfilled his vision, Biden said yes but said it wasn't a
matter of his professional achievements.
"I
wanted to live up to my parent's expectations, and I wanted to be that person
that met my mother's standard, being defined by my courage," he said.
"I wanted to be that person who, no matter what happened, just got back up
and kept going. I wanted to be that person who was there and loyal to people
who were loyal to him."
Biden and
Obama's loyalty to each other was frequently on display in the White House,
with the two going so far as to joke about their bromance. The president
entrusted Biden to be the voice of White House advocacy efforts for victims
of sexual assault and to spearhead a task force aimed at developing
cancer prevention and treatment methods. In an emotional moment in January,
Obama surprised Biden, whom he called his "brother," with the Presidential
Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.
Since
leaving the vice president's office, Biden has not shied from criticizing
President Donald Trump, in particular his handling of the aftermath of a
white nationalist rally in Virginia in August and his efforts at diplomacy. In
the final month of last year's presidential campaign, Biden remarked that he
wished he "could take Trump behind the gym," insinuating that he
wanted to fight the real estate mogul over the recently revealed comments from
2005 in which he boasted of sexually assaulting women.
Though Biden
did not directly refer to Trump in the clips aired by "GMA," he
described for Winfrey what he believes makes for successful leaders.
"They
understand their strengths, and they understand their weaknesses. They play to
their strengths and try to shore up their weaknesses," he said. "And
the people who don't do that are the people who aren't self-aware enough to
know ... because most of the time that abuse ends up in their downfall as
well."
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