Chapter 1
The Making of a Neoliberal
There are some things worth losing over. Donât be involved with this for the politics of it. Be involved only if you believe in something.
âJoe Biden to Delaware Democrats, March 19961
It is no small irony that Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. was born in the cradle of the New Deal order he would later help dismantle. Neither Biden nor the United States is unique in this respect. Look at just about any developed countryâs generous postwar welfare state, and among its rich and powerful foes, youâll find many who benefited most from its generosity, only to turn against the system that created them, convinced they had done it all on their own.
The Irish heritage Biden would stress throughout his public life was only part of his family history. His parents met in high school: Joe Sr. was born to the daughter of a French family with roots in colonial times and a Baltimorian who may or may not have hailed from England; his mother, Jean, to the Scranton son of Irish immigrants and the daughter of a Pennsylvania state senator. âYour fatherâs not a bad man,â Biden later recalled his Irish aunt telling him. âHeâs just English.â Though recounted in jest, Bidenâs later approach to various foreign conflicts would suggest he had in fact internalized something from this family lore about the immutability of ancient sectarian grudges.2
The hyper-focus on the middle class that would define Bidenâs politics may well have been shaped by his own fatherâs struggles. Joe Sr. had started out with meteoric success, brought into a burgeoning business by his wealthy uncle who held the patent for a sealant for coffins. Once the Second World War took off, so did the business, which by that point had moved beyond sealant to supplying armor plate, mostly for merchant marine vessels making the dangerous journey across the Atlantic. When Congress passed a law mandating their armor on every US ship trading in the North Atlantic, the business boomed, with Joe Sr., his uncle, and his cousin running the operation across three different locations: Boston, New York, and Norfolk, Virginia, respectively.3
But once the war was over, so was the government largesse, and as Joe Sr. searched for his next venture, he suffered a string of bad luck. Planning to buy a building in downtown Boston and turn it into a furniture store, his business partner absconded with their money. Purchasing an airport and a couple of planes for a crop-dusting business, Joe Sr. struggled to secure contracts, while his cousin, his partner in the venture, squandered what was left of his wartime fortune. His uncle (and financier) pulled his capital. After years of expensive and generous living as a federal defense contractorâhunting pheasant on the weekend and buying dazzling toys for his infant sonâJoe Sr. and the family, now mired in debt, moved in with Jeanâs parents in Scranton only three years after the end of the war.4
Though the young Biden and his three siblings spent their earliest years in that crowded but loving house in Scranton, their fatherâs employment prospects would force the family to relocate several times. They first moved when Biden was ten to the outskirts of Wilmington, where Joe Sr. had been commuting every dayâa nearly three-hundred-mile round trip. In 1955, they moved to Mayfield, a suburb of Wilmington populated by employees of DuPont, the family and company that had shaped and controlled Delawareâs politics and economy for more than a century.5
âAmerica seemed to be remaking itself for our postwar generation,â Biden later recalled. âThere were new houses, new schools, new car models, new gadgets, new televisions, and new television shows with people who looked just like us.â6
The Bidens benefited from this beyond just their fatherâs wartime business success. The suburban dream they were entering was the direct outcome of the postwar New Deal order, as the federal government subsidized a construction boom concentrated in the suburbs. And just as the US military would in essence become the largest government jobs program in the decades ahead, indirectly subsidizing the conservative activists in places like Orange County who leveraged this comfort to get the government off their backs, the governmentâs fingerprints were wiped just clean enough from all this to convince postwar suburban America it had been a happy accident.7
But that dream was not all hunky-dory. Although Delaware, a former slave state that waited until 1901 to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment, had a long history of racism, Biden would later explain that he âhad just assumed everyone treated everyone fairlyâ until he worked as a lifeguard on the predominantly black east side of town during his first year of college. While no doubt an exaggerationâhe also later told a biographer that he was âalways the kid in high school to get into arguments about civil rightsââBidenâs naĂŻvetĂŠ was entirely plausible given that the government-subsidized postwar housing boom in Delaware and elsewhere was explicitly geared toward ensuring racial segregation, sending affluent whites scurrying for suburban communities that African Americans were excluded from. By 1977, Wilmingtonâs public schools were 85 percent black, while suburban schools were around 90 percent white.8
The young Biden probably wasnât aware of just how deep this went. He wouldnât have known that Delawareâs public schools were explicitly and legally created to be segregated and unequally funded, or that the University of Delaware had only admitted its first black student around the time his family moved to the state. He may well have been oblivious to the way that the state, particularly Wilmington, promoted suburban, mostly middle-class white interests at the expense of inner-city, mostly poorer black ones; that the cityâs public housing authority engaged in âurban renewalâ and federally subsidized slum clearance that tore down black neighborhoods without replacing them, displacing countless families of color; or how the fiercely contested construction of the I-95 highway through the city in the 1960s did likewise, so that car-owning suburbanites could leapfrog a desolate downtown.9
Biden may not have consciously internalized all this. But the cityâs tendency to prioritize predominantly suburban, middle-class interests at the expense of its minority populations would come to embody Bidenâs political approach.
From the Middle
Very few politicians come within a heartbeat of the US presidency without a lifetime of plotting out their rise, and Joe Biden was no different. After overcoming a debilitating stutter in childhoodâthe first in a lifetime of personal setbacks Biden would struggle to overcomeâhe set his sights on politics, startling those around him with his presidential ambitions.
âIt was soon after we met him, before they were even married, before he even got into politics,ââ his first father-in-law, Robert Hunter, later recalled. âBy God, he came up one day and said he was going to be governor first, and then president of the United States.â When his future mother-in-law asked the college junior the same question, the response was identical: âPresident.â10
Biden would deny this again and again over the years, always insisting that he started out with no grand ambitions, that he was simply taking things as they came. During one speech in Wilmington, he repeated this claim only for a nun in the audience to produce a sixth-grade essay heâd written about wanting to grow up to be president. And he wasnât the only one who believed the White House was his destiny. âFrom the first day I went to work for him, people said [to Biden], âYouâre going to be president,ââ his longtime aide Ted Kaufman later recalled.11
By his own admission, Biden had entered law school because it was the best route to a political career. After graduating, he put politics aside for a while, teaching in the Delaware public school system, serving as an assistant public defender, and working for several Wilmington firms, including his own: Walsh, Monzack and Owens. The âOwensâ was John T. Owens, a college classmate who had earlier been deputy attorney general of Pennsylvania and would soon marry Bidenâs sister. But the political world was never far away: several of the lawyers Biden was associated with at this time, including Owens, were also prominent local Democrats.12
As a public defender, Biden represented clients in various states of desperation seeing firsthand the frayed line between underclass and criminal. He pled with a judge to go easy on one defendant, a down-on-his-luck fisherman with four kids who had stolen and sold a cow.13 Another, he explained, had been âcrazy drunkâ and already brain damaged when he killed his roommate.14 The Washington Post would claim in 1975 that Biden had âa largely black, even black-militant clienteleâ as a lawyer, though itâs unclear how accurate this was, given Bidenâs habit of embellishing his civil rights activism and the fact that the article came out at a time when he was especially eager to play up his relationship with the local black community.
A registered independent since the age of 21, Biden was first courted by local Republicans to make a run for office before officially becoming a Democrat in 1969. At only 27, the party tapped him to run for the New Castle County Council the following year, a campaign for which he kept his party affiliation out of promotional material. The district where he was running was overwhelmingly Republican, and the county as a whole was shaped by the politics of suburban white flight: while its population increased fourfold between 1940 and 1980, Wilmington, the county seat, saw its numbers drop by 38 percent. Biden was perhaps the perfect fit. As a former state Democratic Party chairman who observed Bidenâs career from the start later recalled, âHe had lots of energy and idealism and was always assertive. But to my knowledge, he had no substantive ideology.â15
Biden would later claim that civil rights and Vietnam had prompted his political career. In 1973, however, he told a local paper that a citizensâ campaign against highways had drawn him into politics. He won the council seat partly by railing against unchecked growth and industrial development swallowing up the countyâs green spaces and partly by tapping into themes that would prove electorally fruitful in subsequent decades; he complained about the ârapidly deteriorating crime situation in the countyâ and the spread of drugs. Most crucially, he had been backed up by what one paper termed his âChildrenâs Crusadeâ: an adoring volunteer army of more than one hundred high school kids, college students, and young professionals âone squeak above the equal of a Beatle maniac.â Biden later admitted that as early as this county council campaign, he had his eyes on the presidency.16
Although later described as a public housing advocate during this time, his was a less-than-full-throated advocacy. âEverybodyâs opposed to public housingâno one wants it in their backyard, but damnit, if you have a moral obligation, provide it,â he told the press, while cautioning that he was ânot a Crusader Rabbit championing the rights of the people.â The stance nevertheless earned him some enmity during the campaign, including the label of ânigger lover.â17
Biden became the only county council Democrat elected from a suburban district. Despite winning by the slimmest margin of all the council members, his 2,000-vote victory in November 1970 made Biden the golden boy of Delaware politicsâmaybe even the state Democratic Partyâs great hope for 1972, as a newspaper profile of the councilman-elect offered. Young, handsome, and charming, with a beautiful wife and young family, the Kennedy comparisons came thick and fast (he could be âDelawareâs JFK,â noted the profile).18
Biden stressed that integrity was his most important quality. âThe one thing I want to be known for in politics, in my law practice, in my personal relationships is that I am totally honestâa man of my word,â he said. The profile also gave a glimpse of what would arguably loom far larger in Bidenâs political identity: the socially conservative streak he would wear as a badge of honor for much of his political career. âSamuel Clemens said âall generalizations are untrue, including this oneâ and keeping that in mind, I am a liberal Democrat,â he joked.19
A teetotaler in his personal lifeâBiden once even threatened to end a date if the girl didnât throw away her cigaretteâhe rubbished the idea of legalizing marijuana. Acknowledging his wife was the brains of the operation, he nonetheless opted for her to stay home and âmold my children.â âIâm not a âkeep âem barefoot and pregnantâ man,â he said. âBut I am all for keeping them pregnant until I have a little girl.â20
Bidenâs short time in the New Castle County Council revealed a sharp, ambitious liberal politician genuinely concerned about poverty and environmental degradation and willing to stand up to corporate interests. He fought to block construction of oil refineries and protect vital wetlands,21 called for a halt to the dredging of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal,22 denounced the destruction of tidal marshes, and tried to âde-escalateâ the construction of a controversial superhighway that he called a â10-lane monstrosity.â23
Biden also criticized a report on public housing for not paying enough attention to the very poor and spoke out against the bulldozing of the dilapidated homes of the countyâs poor black residents. Seeing a balance between the countyâs growth and the preservation of its natural resources, he worked to restrict development, or at least slow it. He called for more funding for mass transit and denounced the âsenseless highwaysâ being built in its place.24
A county council seat was always going to be too small a pond for someone who had been eyeing the presidency since he was barely out of his teens, and Biden soon locked eyes on higher office. His hand was forced to an extent, with county Republicans scheming to redistrict him out of his seat. Consequently, it took less than a year after his victory for Biden to start mulling a run for the US Senate, a course heâd evidently decided on by the one-year anniversary, when he accidentally called himself a candidate in a speech. Bidenâs ambition for higher office soon took priority above the issues that had supposedly animated his career in the first place. When the New Castle County Housing Authority made plans to buy an apartment complex in Bidenâs district and convert it into public housing for the ânonelderly,â it did so with no involvement from the councilman himself, who was too busy campaigning to discuss the plan.25
The daunting task of unseating Republican J. Caleb âCaleâ Boggs fell to Biden thanks to a combination of reluctance and ambition. A string of more experienced Democrats passed on almost certainly losing to the 63-year-old Boggs, who since 1946 had served as Delawareâs sole representative in the US House, governor, and now senator. When the opportunity to run consequently fell into Bidenâs lap, ...