If Joe Biden wants to try for a residency in the White House, he’ll probably have to go through Becky McAndrews. That’s because she owns JoeBiden.com, the website he would need to launch a presidential run.
The former corporate secretary to Biden’s 2008 presidential bid would not say if she’s been contacted by Biden’s high command about 2016, but said she’s, “Just waiting, like everyone else.”
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That’s the position currently shared by many in Biden’s orbit as the vice president blows through one self-imposed deadline after another. Even for his supporters, the wait has been a bit trying. Allies want to give Biden the time he needs — and they know he chafes at the pressure on him to announce a decision soon — but they’re eager to get to work and aware that more delays only build the deficit they’ll have to overcome if he joins.
The end could be near, though.
Sources familiar with Biden’s thinking told NBC News Monday morning that a decision could come in the next 48 hours. Later, Fox News reported the same.
Rep. Brendan Boyle, a freshman congressman from Philadelphia, added to the speculation when he became a rare Democratic official to put his name behind a pronouncement about Biden’s timing. “I have a very good source close to Joe that tells me VP Biden will run for Prez,” Boyle tweeted Monday.
Meanwhile, Dr. Jill Biden, the vice president’s wife, has been making phone calls to Delaware associates, sources told NBC News.
RELATED: Sources: Joe Biden could decide on 2016 run soon
Former Biden staffers, many of whom declined to speak on the record, expressed conflicted emotions about the vice president’s waiting game. Their affection is real, and many think he would be a better candidate for the party in the general election than current front-runner Hillary Clinton. But others worry the time to jump into the race has passed and that a run against Clinton could be an unfortunate coda to a long, successful career.
“Most folks who have been in the Biden camp for many, many years have mixed emotions, knowing that the family is always first,” said McAndrews. “My line to everybody is: It makes my feet hurt just thinking about it,” she quipped, referring to the shoe-leather she burned through on the last campaign.
Mike Cuzzi, a former top Obama campaign aide in New Hampshire who now works with the Draft Biden super PAC there, said supporters realize the vice president needs time. “Are we all eager for him to make a decision and determine if he is going to throw his hat in the ring? Of course we are, but we also realize that this isn’t as decision that one takes lightly,” he said.
Reading the tea leaves on Biden’s decisions is particularly confounding, since it comes down to the vice president himself and he’s vacillated on the decision. Clinton, by contrast, always seemed determined to run again.
White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest, who has been deflecting questions on the vice president’s 2016 plans for months, deferred to a higher power during his briefing with reporters Monday. “The the laws of physics will require that this be a decision that will be announced relatively soon, since the date of these contests is coming up,” Earnest said.








