After more than 40 years pursuing a singular dream in Washington, Joe Biden finally, reluctantly, let his last and best chance at the highest office in the land slip away Wednesday, removing a major obstacle for Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton.
Flanked by his wife and the young president who shared the ticket with the elder statesman, Vice President Biden announced Wednesday from the Rose Garden of the White House that he will not run for president in 2016.
“I believe we’re out of time. The time necessary to mount a winning campaign for the nomination,” Biden declared in a hastily arranged statement. “While I will not be a candidate, I will not be silent. I intend to speak out clearly and forcefully to influence as much as I can where we stand as a party and where we need to go as a nation.”
Despite taking shots at Clinton in recent days, Biden acknowledged — without saying her name — that it would likely be impossible for him to beat her in the Democratic primary. Clinton has more than $33 million in the bank, a staff of hundreds and the support of most Democrats. Biden has none of that.
When Biden took the job of vice president, after a disappointing 2008 presidential bid, he made it clear he had no intention of running again when Obama’s term was up. That paved the way for the former secretary of state to coalesce support from Democratic Party leaders and lay the groundwork to succeed the president who beat both her and Biden in the last Democratic primary.
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But the untimely death this summer of Biden’s cherished eldest son, Beau, and his dying wish that his father give the presidency one last go, changed everything. Advisers began taking clear steps to prepare for a run, interviewing potential staffers, exploring contracts with vendors and researching filing deadlines and other procedures in key states.
A draft committee, founded by a low-level former Obama volunteer, suddenly attracted well known Obama operatives and a close aide to Beau Biden. The vice president himself met with labor leaders and donors, senators and activists, and talked openly about his preparations for a run.
As recently as Tuesday, top Democratic and labor officials were convinced Biden would throw his hat in the ring, even as many analysts pointed out that the vice president had waited too long.
On Wednesday, after so much hype and speculation, Biden acknowledged that the “window” for a run had “closed.”
In recent days, Biden closed his drawn-out deliberation process by taking some thinly veiled jabs clearly aimed at Clinton. In public appearances in the past three days, Biden repeatedly said the vice president is more important than the secretary of state; he took issue Clinton’s characterization of Republicans as a proud “enemy” she had made; and he contradicted her and others’ recollection of how the administration decided to after Osama Bin Laden.








