Former Vice President Joe Biden is currently out of public office for the first time since 1972, but he’s keeping awfully busy for a guy in retirement. Biden frequently makes public appearances; he’s increasingly involved with ongoing elections; he’s making stops in early primary states; and as the New York Times reported yesterday, the Delaware Democrat is now forming a new political action committee.
Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. is planning to create a political action committee, the most concrete sign yet that he intends to remain active in the Democratic Party and is considering a presidential bid in 2020.
The PAC, which Mr. Biden intends to unveil on Thursday, will offer the former vice president a platform he can use to nurture relationships with donors, travel on behalf of the party and contribute to candidates in the two governor’s races in November and in next year’s midterm elections.
He has tapped a former aide in his vice-presidential office and a veteran of President Barack Obama’s White House campaigns, Greg Schultz, to help lead it.
The name of the PAC will be “American Possibilities.”
For the record, I’m skeptical that Biden, who’s already run two unsuccessful presidential campaigns, will throw his hat in the 2020 ring. He is, after all, 74, which means by the next Inauguration Day, Biden will be 78 — which means he’d be nearly a decade older than the oldest American president ever elected (who happens to be Donald Trump). There’s also the fact that the former VP told reporters, just last month, “Guys, I’m not running.”
So why form a PAC? Perhaps for the most traditional of reasons: because he has a donor base and wants to help elect like-minded candidates.
What strikes me as every bit as interesting, if not more so, is what Biden’s successor is up to.









