“Why doesn’t Joe ever do television?” Jill Biden asked out loud.
The silence in the Chevy Suburban was deafening. Who’s going to tell her?
Almost a year into his third campaign for President and 72 hours until the Iowa caucus, our backs were against a wall, our opponents were driving the news with fresh sound bytes, and Joe Biden was MIA on TV.
His media absence made little sense to me. After nearly five decades of using his gift of gab to charm and disarm, why was he now on a leash and gagged in his quest for the Democratic nomination?
I agreed with Jill — her husband should be a constant presence on the cable and broadcast shows — but I bit my tongue, deferring to her chief of staff.
Finally, 10 months into the campaign, three days after Jill questioned the approach, and hours after our gut-punch showing in Iowa, the candidate was booked on a Sunday show. A few days later, he was on “The View.” It would be the turning point in our 2020 effort.
After a solid Soulcyle workout ahead of a long day of campaign stops, Jill, Anthony (her chief of staff), Jordan (her long-time personal aide), and I packed ourselves so tightly in the back of a small plane that our knees knocked against each other. We sat on the tarmac and listened to the lyrics of a song Dr. B heard in cycling class, “The Champion,” by Carrie Underwood.
“I am invincible, unbreakable
Unstoppable, unshakable
They knock me down, I get up again”
That’s the story of Joe Biden’s life — getting up again. His partner of over four decades knew what he could do, even when others internally and externally doubted him. “The Champion” instantly became the unofficial Biden Campaign tune, cranked up loud in gymnasiums across the country, even in defiance of our successive defeats in Iowa, New Hampshire, and Nevada.
Jill’s instincts from 43 years as a political spouse kicked in when it mattered most: Let Joe be Joe.
Dr. Biden isn’t a strategist or a policymaker. She is an introvert in an extrovert’s game. After three years of traveling by her side as her press secretary, spokesman, and adviser, I can fully attest to her aversion to politics. She poses in photo lines with hundreds of supporters at record speed and runs ahead of schedule (which occasionally would force the motorcade to “slow roll” to her events). Press interviews could be kept to five minutes; unlike her husband, a journalist would have the chance to ask five questions and receive five answers. She listens more than she speaks.
President Biden, like all natural politicians, enjoys schmoozing and glad-handing. While he worked the room, Dr. B. would wait for him backstage — sometimes grading papers — or depart independently. She has always wanted her husband to be who he is and not change his style, even if hers differs. She saw how he resonated with people. She just wanted to let Joe be Joe.









