tv Headliners MSNBC April 28, 2019 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT
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good night from washington. could joe biden have defeated donald trump. >> oh, i don't know. >> this is the great what-if. >> i say to democrats and republicans and independents alike, don't sell this country short, folks. >> joe biden has spent a lifetime as a political power player. >> he just had encyclopedic knowledge of foreign policy. >> one thing i know about joe biden, this is a guy i would take on a long patrol. >> he celebrated triumphs. >> i accept your nomination to run and serve with barack obama! >> weathered setbacks. >> you were on the verge of dying, weren't you? >> the hearings caused an incredible backlash.
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>> and endured devastating personal tragedies. >> we can always get another senator but they can't get another father. >> you cannot lose a child and three months later get on the campaign trail. >> this was a tough one. he said beau was his soul. >> he has stepped off the political stage but doesn't hold back when it comes to an unconventional president. >> we are in the battle for this nation. >> i don't think the tombing was ever right for joe biden, but now might be the time. >> a number of women said his public conduct with them made them uncomfortable. >> joe biden tonight is grappling with another woman's accusation of unwanted touching. >> does joe biden still have what it takes to make history?
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♪ it's a question people have been asking joe biden for decades. do you think you could go to your grave never having run for president? >> oh, man, you're tough. >> you going to run for president? >> are you going to run? >> is there no scenario in which you could see yourself getting into this race? >> absolutely not? >> i'm not going to run for president. >> i don't know. >> the answer is a lot is at stake and i might. >> you look like you're going to run for president. are you? >> do i regret not being president? yes. >> that's why today i am announcing my candidacy for president of the united states. >> it's an announcement 50 years in the making. >> which democrat as of now poses the greatest threat to donald trump. >> despite a packed democratic field, observers on both sides of the aisle wond per the former vice president is the democrats best chance of taking over the
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presidency. >> he is an authentic guy. >> he's be a formidable opponent. i think people like joe biden. >> there was considerable thinking that he would have been a more formidable candidate than hillary clinton. >> if only. a lot of democrats are thinking that. >> could joe biden have defeated donald trump? >> i don't know. >> the rust belt, your home territory. >> i don't know. >> regrets? >> no. i just wasn't prepared to do it after i lost my son. >> condolences are pouring in for vice president joe biden and his family, after he announced that his son, beau had lost his battle with brain cancer.
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>> beau did not want his illness to stand in the way of his dad's running. he wanted joe to run, but of course you can't do it. i mean you cannot lose a child and three months later say, oh, yeah, i'm going to get on the campaign trail. you just can't do it. >> after the 2016 election, vice president joe biden became a private citizen. >> instead of using the full might of the executive branch to secure justice and safety for all, the president uses the white house as a literal, literal bully pulpit. >> when the president of the united states stiff-arm and moved and then stood like this, that was the image of america, almost the image of the ugly american. it has such resonance. >> ah, i don't know what i said, ah. >> whether it was making fun of a reporter or denigrating women
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or saying things that would be hurtful, that's against everything joe biden stands for. >> throughout his political career, joe biden made the rights of women one of his signature issues. >> violence against women is a crime, pure and simple. >> if you want to see joe biden emotional, it is going to be on that issue. >> awe you tapes surfaced today. >> during the 2016 election biden appears outraged by the secretly recorded remarks made by then candidate trump. >> what he said he did and does is a textbook definition of sexual assault. >> former nevada assemblywoman accused joe biden of inappropriately touching and kissing her without her consent.
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>> three more women came forward. >> he came forward fairly quickly and said i don't believe that i was inappropriate. but throughout my fire life as a politician, i have been extraordinarily affectionate with my constituents and votes. that seems to be a relic of his time as a politician. he's been a senator since he was 29. it's a more direct way of interacting with your constituents. >> i think joe is joe and everybody who knows him well knows he is always in your space. he connects. he connects not only by being empathetic but also by touching people. >> in a tweet, biden acknowledges social norms are changing. i understand that. and i will be more mindful about respecting personal space in the future. >> i think it will take him fully recognizing how uncomfortable this makes people in order for him to win the
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nomination. >> despite that, biden feels he's the true populist to rally the electorate. >> given his experience, history with the campaign and the presidency of barack obama and given his years of service and his life story, he could be the soul of america in this campaign. i do think the moment could be right for joe biden. >> now, biden wants another chance. and the resiliency he's shown in overcoming intense personal setbacks. >> coming up. >> november 7th we were sitting on top of the world. december 18th our world has collapsed. you wouldn't accept an incomplete job
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the scrappy kid from scranton, who became delaware's favorite son. you were the first decision i made as a nominee, and it was the best. [ cheering and applause ] >> joseph robinette biden jr. is born to a businessman and homemaker in scranton, pennsylvania on november 20, 1942. looking for better opportunities, his parents moved 10-year-old joe and his younger siblings, valerie, james and frank, to delaware. >> there was no sense of entitlement in my family. there was an imperative that we get an education. >> in high school, biden is nicknamed "dash" because of a debilitating stutter. >> they had an all-star football team. everybody signed the winning football, and one guy put dash, dash, dash biden.
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it was because it was j-j-joe biden. >> i was one of the few people exempted from public speaking class because i stuttered so badly. >> knowing what it felt like to be the object of someone's joke or disdain gave him an even greater ability to walk in somebody else's skin and to know how they felt. >> i am today announcing my candidacy -- >> in 1960 john f. kennedy runs for president and inspires 17-year-old biden to consider politics. >> i remember getting out the congressional digest where it lists the biographies of all of the senators and congressmen. everyone was either independently wealthy or a lawyer, and that's when i decided i wanted to go to law school. >> biden wins junior and senior class president, and by high school graduation he has overcome his stutter. >> one of the nuns i had used to tell me that the way to get it
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under control was to sort of get a rhythm to the way you read and the way you spoke, and i memorized a great deal. >> biden begins college at the university of delaware and works as the only white life guard at an all-black pool. >> that was the beginning of his education about the black community. biden would walk the streets, be with folks, protest with folks, go around with us, joke with us like one of us. >> biden goes to syracuse law school in 1965 and marries nelia hunter a year later. when he graduates, biden begins practicing law in delaware. with two sons, beau and hunter, in 1970 biden runs for the newcastle county council. >> he was going for it and so i knew i was going for it with him. >> biden wins the county council seat. two years later after having a third child, naomi, he runs for his seat in the u.s. senate.
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>> i was his campaign manager. my brother, jimmy biden, was the fundraiser. my brother frankie biden was the volunteer coordinator, my mom was the coffee chair. >> biden's opponent is veteran republican senator caleb boggs who has run undefeated for 25 years. >> nobody took us seriously. the press called us "the children's crusade." >> i'll tell you how bad it was. on labor day we had a serious poll come in, boggs 47, biden 19. >> just two months later in one of the biggest upsets in senate history, 29-year-old biden defeats 63-year-old caleb boggs. >> they announced he won, i thought to myself, i will never, ever believe again that something is impossible. >> biden is one of the youngest senators ever elected. just after election day he turns 30, and in december heads to washington. nelia and the children stay home to prepare for christmas.
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>> i was with my brother and we were hiring staff. jimmy biden called and said, come home. i said, we have to go. and we both -- we went home. >> after buying a christmas tree, nelia and the children are in a car accident. in an instant everything changes. >> the two boys were in the back seat of the car and the new baby was in the front seat of the car, and she was hit by a hay truck. >> uh-huh. it was, unfortunately, the most graphic demonstration in the world for me as to how little control one has over their lives and their destiny, how much a role fate plays and how vulnerable we all are.
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>> nelia and the baby had been killed and beau and hunt were in the hospital seriously injured. >> with both sons in the hospital, biden decides to give up his new senate seat. >> i had six or seven senior senators, including republicans, who said, "joe, come down." in retrospect, they saved my sanity. >> one of the senators said, "nelia and the boys and you worked too hard for this, you have to give it a shot." that one got him. >> biden is sworn in next to his sons' hospital beds. >> congratulations, senator. >> thank you. if in six months or so there's a conflict between my being a good father and being a good senator, we can always get another senator but they can't get another father. >> the boys kept him going and he kept going by trying to be a united states senator. >> it sounds like an urban myth,
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but i mean every single day he would take the train back to delaware so that he could read stories to his boys and tuck them in. >> the hour-and-a-half commute each way earns him the nickname amtrak joe. >> our senate hearings sometimes do not begin until 10:30 or 11:00 in the morning. we had to sort of gauge our situation on the basis of joe's train. >> biden dives into his work but says the absence of nelia and naomi was like a companion that never left his side. >> my family held me in place from going over the edge until jill lifted me up and moved me on. >> an advertisement featuring model jill jacobs catches biden's eye at the wilmington airport. >> two nights later frank and jim and my sister val were all going out together for dinner with their dates, and my brother frank said, well, i got just the girl for you to meet.
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>> biden agrees to go, and his date is the exact same girl from the photo. >> i was used to dating guys with jeans and bell bottoms and clogs. when i opened the door there he was in a dark suit and leather shoes, and i thought, "well, you know, this is only going to be one date." we went out on a date and he was really interesting. when he took me to the door to say good night, he shook my hand and i went upstairs and i called my mother and i said, "mom, i finally met a gentleman." >> the boys tell their dad, "you should marry jill." biden agrees and proposes but doesn't get the answer he wants on the first proposal. >> there were absolutely five, but the boys had lost their mother and their sister and i had to be 100% sure that it was going to last till death to us part. >> biden marries jill, who has launched a teaching career, and
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they have a daughter, ashley. as joe's political star rises in washington, he sets his sights on the top seat. coming up -- >> you were on the verge of dying, weren't you? >> yeah. fo rful claritin-d. while the leading allergy spray only relieves 6 symptoms, claritin-d relieves 8, including sinus congestion and pressure. claritin-d relieves more. into your own little world.k especially these days. (dad) i think it's here. (mom vo) especially at this age. (big sister) where are we going? (mom vo) it's a big, beautiful world out there. (little sister) woah... (big sister) wow. see that? (mom vo) sometimes you just need a little help seeing it. (vo) presenting the all-new three-row subaru ascent.
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i announce my candidacy for president of the united states of america. >> after 14 years in the senate, 44-year-old joe biden runs for president in 1987. >> senator joseph biden of delaware has raised the most money. >> a lot of things start going right for him. he's giving speeches that are getting a lot of attention. he is known as one of his party's most effective, inspiring orders. >> as biden's campaign gains momentum, a controversial judge named robert bork is nominated to the supreme court. >> robert bork is a lightning rod nomination. he has all sorts of provocative writings on american social issues and democrats react with terror. >> as chairman of the judiciary committee, biden will oversee
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the bork supreme court hearing, while continuing his run for president. amid everything biden starts to get debilitating headaches but works through the pain. >> so the headaches started. it is not like he said, i got a terrible headache. you will just notice he is popping some aspirin. >> during his campaign, biden is inspired by a speech given by british labor party leader neil kinnock and begins referencing it on the trail. >> neil kinnock was telling a personal story about the dignity of working class life, about the potential of building something better for the next generation, about the role government can play in helping families like that, and so he did start making it kind of a staple of his message on the campaign trail. >> almost every major press person in the country had heard me repeatedly attribute that quotation to kinnock. >> could be made of the time -- >> at the iowa state fair, democratic presidential
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candidates debate, biden again quotes kinnock in his closing statement. >> why is it that joe biden is the first in his family ever to go to a university? >> this time biden forgets to attribute the line to kinnock and faces accusations of plagiarism. >> senator, can you clarify any of your comments -- >> it wouldn't have been a problem if he had acknowledged the source of it. >> plagiarism charges dog biden's campaign. >> i concluded that i will stop being a candidate for president of the united states. >> things that were disqualifying back then are no longer disqualifying. >> immediately after ending his presidential campaign, biden walks down the hall and continues presiding over the bork hearing. >> ted kennedy slips him a note and says, i've been there, there's life after this. i think that resonated with biden in that moment, because kennedy had been there. >> after an historic constitutional debate led by biden, the senate rejects bork's
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nomination. as biden presses forward in the senate his severe headaches continue. >> the headaches really got bad after he withdrew from the race. >> and in february of 1988 an aneurism ruptures in joe biden's brain. biden is rushed into emergency surgery. >> you were on the verge of dying, weren't you? >> yeah. >> what did you say to your children? >> in general terms i told them how much i believed in them and what i expected of them if i died. >> i think there's a reason for what happened, and i think that getting out of the race was, quite frankly, a god send. >> it was at that point that i made my peace with the campaign falling apart. in the long-run if he wants to be president i think it will make him a better president. >> after lifesaving surgery biden returns to the senate.
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>> i mean he is a man who really has a lot of strength and fortitude. he just gets up. >> in 1990, troubled by data showing increasing crime against women, he introduces the violence against women act. >> the idea that someone could abuse a woman and not face the full penalty of the law was just an anathema to him. >> it will act as the first time the government will address domestic and sexual violence against women, but it dies in committee. >> when joe biden first introduced it, it was not a subject on the political radar. >> he reintroduces his act in 1991. again, it doesn't make it to the floor for a vote. later that year the issue of sexual harassment makes headlines when clarence thomas is nominated to the supreme court. again, biden will oversee the nomination hearing.
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>> then joe biden's judiciary committee finds out that anita hill says that clarence thomas had sexually harassed her. >> anita hill is called before the judiciary committee. >> he spoke about acts he had seen in pornographic films involving such matters as women having sex with animals and films showing group sex or rape scenes. >> it was the first time that the issue of sexual harassment was being aired like this. >> thomas told me graphically of his own sexual prowess. >> biden is still pushing to get the violence against women act passed. however, he and the all-male panel are criticized for appearing unsympathetic to hill and for not calling other women with similar allegations to testify. >> in fact, he never did ask you to have sex, correct? >> in 1991, sexual harassment was not a common term. i don't think that they understood it from the point of view of victims of sexual harassment.
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>> it just seems so incredible to me that you would not only have visited with him twice, i would think that these things, what you described, are so repugnant that you would never have talked to him again. >> nobody was covered with glory, not any of the members of the committee, republican or democrat. >> when we look back, of course we look at joe biden because he was the leader, but the responsibility has to be with the whole group. >> this is a tragedy. the people keep mentioning that. i do apologize to the women of america if they got the wrong impression about how seriously i take the issue of sexual harassment. >> clarence thomas denies all charges of sexual harassment. biden votes against confirming thomas, but the senate sends him to the supreme court. >> the hearings caused an incredible backlash. ended up calling 1992 "the year of the woman." there were female candidates who
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ran for office across the country, saying they were enraged not enough senators believed anita hill. that's where the momentum comes i think to pass the violence against women act. >> biden reintroduces the violence against women act in 1993. >> if we mean to do something about it, do something about it. >> this time it passes and is signed by president clinton. >> the one decision he made to introduce this bill and get it passed has had an incredible effect, multiplier effect across this country. >> it is the legislation he is most proud of, and it continues on to this day. i have met women who have come up to me and said, you know, my sister wouldn't be alive today if it weren't for your husband. >> instead of keeping us at arm's length, vice president biden has decided to say, "i'm going to fight for them." it is impossible to describe unless you have been a survivor. >> doing the violence against women act was the single most significant thing i have ever been part of.
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we're learning some new details about the synagogue shooting that left one person dead in california yesterday. witnesses report the shooter only fired a few shots before his ar-15 rifle jammed. the 19-year-old suspect is a college student with no criminal history. former indiana republican senator richard lugar passed away today at the age of 87. for now, back to "headliners." ♪ standing up for the values protects us better than any barrier we could build between ourselves and the rest of the world, because our values are what draws the world to our
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side. >> as a member of the senate foreign relations committee since his 30s, joe biden has been in a front row seat to u.s. foreign policy. >> he had been involved in foreign affairs of one kind or another his entire adult life, whether it was protesting the vietnam war or working on arms control or being a champion for humanitarian intervention in the balkans. >> he tries to put every policy issue through a prism of people, whether it be military policy, foreign policy or domestic policy, he tries to relate it to people. >> after decades of getting to know the world's leaders, at age 58, in 2001, biden is named chairman of the senate foreign relations committee. >> we served for 30 years together on the foreign relations committee, and joe was really endefatigable with his travels. >> he was well-known in the capitals around the world.
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he knew the prime minister, the president, whatever it might be, the foreign ministers. they were comfortable with him and they would listen to him. >> when he got to know all of these foreign leaders, he came away with a better understanding of who they were and what they had to get out of a negotiation, and you only really can get that honestly if you make friends with these people. it doesn't mean that you may not be adversaries from time to time. >> on september 10, 2001, biden gives a prophetic security warning at the national press club. >> the real threat comes to this country in the hold of a ship, the belly of a plane. >> a day later -- america is attacked. the u.s. goes to war in afghanistan the next month, and iraq two years later. initially biden argues the u.s. should avoid entering the war in iraq. >> i do not believe, and never
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have as you know, believe there's a direct correlation between the threat that comes from al qaeda and international terrorist organizations and saddam hussein. i believe that's a bunch of malarkey. >> ultimately, like most democrats, biden votes in favor of the war. he later says he regrets the vote and is a fierce critic of bush's policies in iraq. >> he had strong views of what was going on in both afghanistan and iraq, and i know that he made those views known to the president. sometime his advice was accepted and sometimes it was not accepted, but he would not hold it back because somebody might not like it. he always was trying to find the solution. >> my friend talks about letting the iraqi political -- >> the way he fights you endears him to you. you can actually oppose somebody and come out of the contest more liked. i think he's been wrong about a lot of stuff on foreign policy, but he's very passionate, and he does it in a very respectful
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way. >> as bush's second term comes to an end, biden eyes another shot at running for president. >> we thought we were the right person at the right time for the right reasons. >> i'm thinking he better run because i want to end that war in iraq. our son was in the military. i really wanted that war to be over in the worst way. >> are you running for president? >> i am running for president. >> and you're going to talk on hillary clinton, barack obama and all other comers? >> i'm going to be joe biden and i'm going to try to be the best biden i can be, if i can, i have a shot, if i can't, i lose. >> what three nations other than iraq represent to you the biggest threat to the united states? >> the biggest threat to the united states is right now north korea. iran not as big a threat but a long-term threat and, quite frankly, the tendency of putin to move in a totalitarian direction. >> every single one of those debates joe biden found himself to get in the mix in a way that showcased knowledge of foreign policy. >> biden gets only 1% of the
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iowa vote and drops out of the race. barack obama wins the nomination and asks biden to be his running mate. >> joe had zero, zero interest in running for vice president. he thought he had a stronger position to influence policy as being chair of foreign relations, and my mom said, "joe, the first african-american president whose policies and principles you have supported your entire life and you're not going to help him because you don't think you want to be vice president? really?" >> i said, how can you not do it. this is a moment in history. think of the things we will be able to accomplish. >> the next vice president of the united states of america -- >> obama presses joe biden to reconsider, and biden says, yes. as long as he could be the last guy in the room. >> joe wanted to be a full partner. the one way to be sure i'm a full partner is i'm the last person in the cabinet room or the oval office.
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>> yes, yes, i accept your nomination to run and serve with barack obama! [ cheering and applause ]. >> obama and biden win the 2008 election, and in 2009 delaware's career senator -- >> i joseph robinette biden jr. do solemnly swear -- >> -- becomes the united states of america's 47th vice president. >> that i will support and defend the constitution of the united states. >> it just felt like joy. it was all, look at the possibilities. >> looking out onto that mall and seeing thousands upon thousands of people, you just didn't want to miss a minute of it. coming up -- >> i could list several things that the vice president had done and the press never saw that.
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♪ >> come on. >> they won't let me. >> they won't let you? >> they won't let you? >> president obama and vice president biden become one of the closest political partnerships in white house history. >> i'm confident that in their conversations joe told him what he thought ought to be done, but when the president made his decision, i'm also sure that joe biden supported him to the fullest. >> they confided in each other about everything. >> i think it was a surprise to both of them actually about how much they came to actually love one another. >> they had an outlook on the world that was very much a consensus, and because they had that consensus you could then have the vice president playing a more central role. >> the first challenge of the
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obama administration is addressing what is called the greatest global financial crisis of our time. >> instantly the new obama administration is confronted with something that no president since fdr had been confronted with. the economy was melting down. >> we were losing 750,000 jobs a month, we had the banks on verge of collapse. >> biden gets involved, putting his years of experience in the senate to use. >> i have asked vice president biden to lead a tough, unprecedented oversight effort because nobody messes with joe. >> senator mcconnell gets on the senate floor and says, hey, the only person i'm going to deal with is joe biden. >> president obama had two years of senate experience, joe biden had 35. those relationships count when you're passing legislation. >> joe understood sort of what you could and couldn't do, and he was able to work with senator mcconnell in a way i don't think anybody else in the white house could have done it. as a result, we avoided a fiscal calamity.
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>> obama also leans on biden's relationships on issues such as health care and iraq. >> president obama knew that biden brought a kind of rolodex that could be drawn upon to try to help navigate iraqi politics and our relationships. >> biden helps orchestrate a handover of power to the iraqis in 2010, a move that is both celebrated and criticized. >> it is clear to me they wanted to get out and it is an example of where i think they got it wrong. you could can argue bush got it wrong, you can argue i got it wrong, but i think he and obama made a mistake. >> we're not claiming victory. what we're claiming here is that we've done the job our administration set out to do, to end the bleeding, both financially and physically, that this war has caused. >> throughout their administration, obama and biden develop a synchronized approach. >> i think it evolved quite naturally. the president tends to be reflective and he would like to
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hear from all sides. the tendency is if people know the president wants to go in one direction, everybody goes in that direction. it was helpful to have the vice president willing to say, look, this is what i think and let people debate with him. it worked. >> what the president wanted him to do was to help him get his head around a problem, what are the assumptions, what are the premises, what are the implications. biden would raise a question that nobody wanted on the table raised. >> biden becomes the highest-ranking white house official to endorse marriage equality, publicly supporting it before president obama. >> men marrying men, women marrying women and heterosexual men and women marrying one another are entitled to the same exact rights. >> they talked about it a lot. it wasn't a surprise to president obama that the vice president felt that way. the timing was a little surprising to us, but i think it just came up naturally in an interview. he was asked a direct question and he answered it.
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>> in 2012, obama and biden are re-elected to a second term. the thrill of the win is short-lived. >> right after the reelection, of course, we have the terrible tragedy of sandy hook elementary school, and president obama asked vice president biden to lead our effort to try to get the most sensible legislation through to keep guns out of the wrong hands. >> we now belong to a lousy club, a lousy, stinking club where -- where as a parent, for whatever reason you have a child predecease you. >> in the end we failed, and that was a huge disappointment for both of them, and for all of us. >> biden's personal touch endears him to colleagues. >> i remember seeing a note basically telling people that if they missed birthday parties or recitals that he would be mad,
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that he didn't want people to use their work at the white house as an excuse not to spend time with one's family because of how precious it is. >> when we were in iraq one time he found out that it was my daughter's birthday, and we were in the middle of baghdad and he ended up calling my daughter from iraq and wishing her a happy birthday. >> when my first daughter was born, you know, he taught me the irish lullaby i still sing to this day to each one of my kids, they request it, they know it word for word. >> when my father died the vice president called up and he said, "i'm going to come see you." i thought, sometime in the next few days. well, he came right up. and he grabbed me by the shoulders and he looked me in the face and he said, "it will get better." and it just meant so much to me that he would do that for me. >> i could list several things that the vice president had done with wounded warriors, with people that were sick, of
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friends that he called that were struggling, of parents that he called of children that had died, and the press never saw that. >> he's been through such tragedy in his life, and you recognize what other people are going through, whether it is illness or loss. they know that he understands their pain. >> when the biden family is shattered again on may 30, 2015 by the death of beau, who served as delaware's attorney general, the people biden has touched rally around him. >> i immediately went to vice president biden's house and stayed with him. there was a spot where he and beau would always sit and talk. and he just wanted me to walk out there with him. we probably sat there for 30 minutes, didn't say a word. you could only feel that -- the loss that he felt. >> president obama gives the eulogy at beau's funeral.
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>> what a great inheritance than to be part of a family that passes on the values of what it means to be a great parent, that passes on the values of what it means to be a true citizen. that passes on the values of what it means to give back fully and freely without expecting anything in return. that's what our country was built on. >> before he passed away, beau had asked his dad to make him a promise. >> he said, promise me, dad, promise me you'll be okay. meaning we'll all stick together. we'll all be here. >> what motivates joe is that, you know, if you want to honor beau, keep doing things that beau believes in and he believes in. just an unusual man who can keep doing this.
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>> coming up -- >> i've always, always said that joe would make a great president. and let's make it work! they're tool free and they hold strong. or change your mind damage free. like a pro. command. do. no harm. shaving has been difficult for me. i have very sensitive skin, and i get ingrowing hairs. so it's a daunting task. oh i love it. it's a great razor. it has that 'fence' in the middle. it gives a nice smooth shave. just stopping that irritation... that burn that i get is really life changing.
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if you don't love joe biden, it is time for some serious introspection. >> as president obama's second term winds down, vice president biden receives tributes from former senate colleagues that reflect his many relationships across both sides of the ail. >> we've been friends for almost 40 years, since i was the navy senate liaison and used to carry your bags on overseas trips. >> you've been a real friend, you've been a trusted partner. and it's been an honor to serve with you. >> president obama honors biden with the highest civilian award in the united states. >> i am pleased to award our nation's highest civilian honor. the presidential medal of freedom.
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>> the internet explodes with a series of memes about biden and obama's bromance. >> they're funny. and he thinks they're funny, too. he's always able to laugh at himself. i'll never forget when the onion had the super imposed biden face washing a trance am in jean shorts and he loved it. he immediately was like, yeah, you know, that's a trans a.m. i'm a corvette guy. >> before leaving office he races collin powell on cnbc's jay leno's garage. >> go ahead. go ahead. >> i would let him get out in front of me just briefly, and then i'd floor mine and beat him to the finish point. but jay leno did not show that
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last five seconds. so it looks like we're both turning and coming back and we're even. we weren't even. i was about to beat his butt. don't let him tell you anything else. >> my name is joe biden, i'll be vice president of the united states for 48 more hours. i'm here today to issue a call to action. >> after watching the 2017 handover to the trump administration, biden begins life as a private citizen. >> the election's over. donald trump is president, and i'm disappointed, to state the obvious. >> he forms a pack called american possibilities, ostensibly to support democratic candidates. >> you got to show up and vote. after 36 years in the
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senate. eight in the white house. the question remains. >> who could beat donald trump. it's joe biden. >> get up and take back the country. >> half the democrat party is running for president in 2020. the potential campaign a peers to sputter before is starts. march 2019, two women say the former vice president touched them inappropriately. >> he leans down, smells my hair. and plants this big long kiss on the top of my head. >> biden is infamously touchy feeling. this is the first time a woman said had makes me uncomfortable. >> he finds people on both sides of the aisle. >> he's one of the most decent people i met. i don't think had met to do
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anything wrong. he's the same kind, he's joe. >> just this morning former vice president biden joins the democratic ration. >> he decides to weather the accusations. and at 76 years old vows he has one campaign left in him. >> he will alter. >> he needs to apoll to sent ris in order to win. he's a centerist being pull ld to the left. by warren and sanders. he is a known quantity within the democratic party. >> the question a lot of younger progressi progressive voterers are going
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to be asking, we cannot go back to 2008 through 2017. that's done. so what else you got? >> 70 is the new 50. age is nothing but a number. having been in the second spot for eight years and having served so long in the senate he knows what it takes to be president. >> one thing i know comes to me from military background. something we say about people. when we believe they are the best of being and you can trust them. that is this is a guy we would take on a long patrol. >> he's an inspiration. that you can be for the progressive agenda. and do business with people like me. if you ask me an example of somebody that a young person would want to imlate. it's joe biden. lose your wife get up.
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lose your kid get up. people say things get over it and get up. >> joe would make a great president. and i haven't changed. > we do not back down. we do not shut up. >> she came to washington ready to fight. >> enough is enough. >> fierce and fearless. >> at best, you are incompetent. either way you should be fired. >> people ask me -- >> let me follow up. >> is elizabeth warren the person she plays on tv? the answer is yes. >> our agenda is america's agenda. >> elizabeth warren in a revealing in-depth interview. >> i learned about fighting in washington. i learned about fighting against those with power. do you know where the money went? >> she's confrontational. >> she's smarter than any wall st
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