Vice President Joe Biden met with American Jewish leaders in Florida on Thursday, acknowledging their concerns about the White House’s nuclear deal with Iran but arguing the accord is the best option for the U.S., Israel and the rest of the world.
Biden at the David Posnack Jewish Community Center in Davie, Fla. said at first he was “sort of the skeptic in the administration” about the plan but came to the realization that it was a “good deal” that “will make the U.S. and Israel safer, not weaker.”
The trip to the crucial swing state of Florida comes as the vice president mulls making a run for the Oval Office. Biden made no mention of 2016 at the event, but joked about the speculation Wednesday at Miami Dade College during a speech about education. “Look at all the press you’ve attracted,” he told students and faculty sitting in the audience. “Their interest in community college has impressed me. I hope that’s what they are going to write about.”
Related: Biden tests political waters in Florida
When Biden pushed the Iran deal on Thursday, he notably sat next to and was introduced by Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, who is still undecided about the agreement ahead of a Congressional vote on the deal in September.
Wasserman Schultz, chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, acknowledged she was still working on making her own decision about the deal.
“I am not afraid to make this decision. I am never afraid to stand alone when necessary to stand on principle,” she said, adding a decision will be made with her head along with her “Jewish heart.”
Most Republicans and a handful of Democrats are against the deal with some on the left—several of whom are Jewish, like Wasserman Schultz—still undecided. Obama secured a major victory on Wednesday, however, when Democratic Sen. Barbara Mikulski of Maryland announced her support for the deal, ensuring there are enough votes to uphold an Obama veto if Congress votes to disapprove of the agreement.








