As rumors fly, Joe Biden hits the road

WASHINGTON – Vice President Joe Biden on Wednesday embarks on a series of public and private stops from the Southeast to the Rust Belt that may provide him key feedback on how much appetite exists in the Democratic Party for him to challenge Hillary Clinton for the nomination.

In his first political road trips since speculation heated up that he will run for president, Biden will be promoting President Barack Obama’s policies and raising money for other Democrats. People familiar with his schedule said he isn’t setting up separate donor meetings related to his own possible run. Still, the vice president’s itinerary will connect him with hundreds, perhaps even thousands, of players whose reactions to him may shape whether he decides to get into the race. In coming days, Biden will be in front of Jewish activists, Florida donors, young voters and organized labor – all key Democratic constituencies.

“There are a lot of people who want to hear what the vice president says,” said Andrew Weinstein, a Jewish community leader and major Democratic fundraiser from South Florida who plans to attend a Thursday gathering at a Jewish community center in Davie, where Biden will discuss the Iran nuclear deal. “Certainly there’s national interest in the fact the vice president is traveling to arguably the most significant swing state in the country during the period where he’s deciding what he wants to do but I think that’s primarily coincidence and not by design.”

In his highest-profile public appearances since he stepped up behind-the-scenes outreach last month to potential backers of a presidential campaign, Biden will travel Wednesday and Thursday in South Florida, where he will champion the merits of community college job training partnerships with U.S. employers; raise money for Democratic candidates running for U.S. Senate; and promote a multi-nation Iran nuclear deal negotiated by the administration ahead of Congress’ votes in mid-September.

On Thursday evening, Biden will travel to Atlanta to speak and take questions at Ahavath Achim Synagogue on the topic of “Challenges Facing the U.S. and the World in the 21st Century.” Next Monday, Biden is scheduled to travel to Pittsburgh to participate in one of the nation’s largest Labor Day gatherings, which AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka also is to attend.

Later next week, Biden will host an event in Washington to celebrate Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. He’ll help inaugurate the CBS’ “Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” with an appearance on Sept. 10 during the show’s first week.

Biden, 72, has run twice before for president, and now must decide whether he and his family are emotionally prepared for a presidential campaign after his son Beau’s death from brain cancer in May, and whether the financial and organizational backing at this late stage exists for a challenge to Clinton. A Bloomberg Politics/Des Moines Register Iowa Poll released Saturday found that without being a declared candidate Biden is the first choice for president among 14 percent of likely Democratic caucus-goers in Iowa, up from 8 percent in May, while Clinton has slipped to 37 percent, and Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont has climbed to 30 percent. Biden also had the highest favorable ratings of the three, at 79 percent.

Stuart Eizenstat, the State Department’s special adviser on holocaust issues and a former U.S. ambassador to the European Union, founded the annual lecture series that Biden will deliver at the synagogue on Thursday. Hillary Clinton delivered the same lecture a decade ago. He said in a telephone interview that he had extended the invitation for Biden to speak last December at a White House Hannukah event and that it was not connected to Biden’s possible run. Eizenstat, who backed Clinton’s presidential bid in 2008, also co-sponsored a fundraising event for her earlier this year before the speculation about a Biden run heated up. He has advised her campaign team on Mideast, Iran and trade policy.

At the same time, Eizenstat said he has been friends with Biden since they met in 1976, that he joined his 1988 campaign, and that “he’s the most genuine politician I’ve ever met. I think he’s a great man. He was a great senator. He’s been a great vice president.

“He’s a beloved figure in the Jewish community, as is Hillary,” Eizenstat said. “I don’t know what Joe’s decision will be. We’ll just have to see.”

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