Speaking before a crowd of roughly 200 people, Biden largely stuck to his prepared remarks but also rambled at times as he told stories about growing up with working-class people.
“In fewer than 100 days, this new administration has done so much damage and so much destruction. It’s kind of breathtaking,” Biden charged during a speech that spanned just under a half-hour. “They’ve taken a hatchet to the Social Security Administration.”
He referred to the Republican president only as “this guy”. Trump, by contrast, continues to blame Biden for many of the nation’s problems and often attacks his predecessor by name.
Conservatives immediately seized upon a Biden reference to the country’s political divisions as an attack on Trump supporters.
“We can’t go on like this as a divided nation, as divided as we are,” Biden said. “As I said, I’ve been doing this a long time. It’s never been this divided. Granted, it’s roughly 30 per cent, but it’s a 30 per cent that has no heart.”
His public remarks come as the former president grows restless in his retirement.
Many leading Democrats across the country — including some former top aides and close allies, who note they’re sad to say it — are desperate for the former president to stick to quietly being on the sidelines.
Today’s speech is an odd spot for someone who was the leader of the free world less than 100 days ago, and for those who have been trying to sort out what to say and do about a man they feel affection for but blame in part for the situation they’re in now.
Asked by CNN about hearing from the former president since January 20, one longtime supporter and donor said only this: “No. Thank God.”
While Trump is still attacking him nearly daily from the White House or Air Force One — to an extent that amazes the former president’s inner circle — Biden’s world has shrunk drastically since he left the Oval Office just three months ago.
Only a few of Biden’s most loyal aides stayed with him, mainly those who were the last fighting for him to stay in the presidential race. He’s been mostly at home in Delaware, coming back to an office in Washington about once a week, often via his beloved Amtrak.
He’ll occasionally get spotted around Wilmington, but his public appearances have been limited to a Model United Nations conference in New York, a St Patrick’s Day brunch in Delaware and accepting a lifetime achievement award from the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers at the union’s convention in Washington this month.
People close to Biden are calling this a period of “reconnecting, rebuilding and reflecting” — with his grandchildren, with old friends, with movies and books he missed, even just with a wife he now gets to see for more of the day than only dinner.
He’s been putting together thoughts for a book he’s hoping to sign a deal for soon. He’s been having intense conversations with some of the freed Israeli hostages and families of others.
Sunday afternoon, Biden called Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro to express his sympathy and support after the attack on the governor’s mansion hours after a Passover seder there. Sunday evening, Biden joined Delaware’s new governor, Matt Meyer, as a guest at a seder himself.
Meyer welcomed Biden to the group of about 50 community leaders and family members by talking “about what a friend of Delaware Joe is, and what a friend of the Jewish people Joe is”. He joked that the former president had probably spent more time in a synagogue than he has.
Though Biden didn’t lead any of the participatory service, in short remarks of his own, Meyer recalled, he talked poignantly about Passover “as a day for a hope for a brighter future”.
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Biden has yet to begin fundraising for his presidential library, to the confusion of several loyal donors who told CNN they had been expecting to hear from him. He and his aides have been sketching out a focus for his foundation in raising up and protecting his legacy, but they’re still working up a mission statement and board of directors.
Several Democratic officials who supported Biden for years told CNN they have had, at most, passing conversations with him. Others say they’ve been amazed how completely he’s disappeared.
“I haven’t heard of one person who has communicated with him,” said one Democratic member of Congress who talked with Biden regularly over the years.
But Klain also reached out several times to Biden to apologise, according to people familiar.
“Joe Biden is going to thrive in that very wise, senior statesman role of, ‘How do you help navigate?’ And I think people do want him engaged and involved,” one person close to Biden told CNN. “We’re not hearing, ‘Stay away.’ We’re hearing the opposite. But it’s not going to look like it did before — they’re not running for anything.”
Starting to speak out against Trump
Ever the institutionalist, Biden deliberately waited most of Trump’s first 100 days to speak out, before accepting the invitation to Tuesday’s meeting of the Advocates, Counselors and Representatives for the Disabled, or ACRD — a relatively new group of mostly lawyers who work with Social Security beneficiaries, co-chaired by former Republican senator Roy Blunt and former Democratic senator Debbie Stabenow.
Martin O’Malley, the Social Security Administration commissioner under Biden, who introduced him at the event, told CNN on Monday that with Biden’s long record of speaking about the dignity of work and bolstering the program, this is a fitting way for him to return to public life.
In fact, O’Malley said, he hoped that Biden would encourage more people, including the other living former presidents, to speak out against Trump’s plans.
“One of the stabilising influences in the history of our republic has been the voices of former presidents,” said O’Malley, a former Maryland governor and Baltimore mayor. “President Biden’s administration racked up a lot of important progress for the people of our country. I don’t believe that as a party we did the best job we could have in telling that story. But there’s no time like the present.”
But Biden already started sounding off earlier this month. It’s just that almost no one noticed.
In his speech to the IBEW conference on April 4, kept closed to the press amid concerns of triggering Trump’s wrath, union International President Kenneth Cooper presented Biden with a certificate naming him an honorary member and praising him for having “led with his heart and soul.”
It wasn’t all warmth and nostalgia.
Two days after Trump sent global markets careening with his “Liberation Day” tariffs and amid the reversals that followed, Biden talked to 1000 people at the Washington Hilton about his own economic record and said “that economy is being squandered — utterly, needlessly squandered.”
“You know, folks, I spent the last two years of my presidency hearing the press and the pundits talking about how I was about to send the country into a recession. Remember that? It was relentless,” Biden said, according to a person in the room. “Well, guess what? It never happened. We did not have a recession when I was president. But, do you want to know what we did have? We had the strongest economy in the world.”
In office, Biden was often frustrated he didn’t get more credit for the strength of the economy he’d overseen. Out of office, he still is.
“I’ll say it again: On the day I left office, America had the strongest economy in the world. That’s a fact. It’s not just my view. It’s the consensus view among economists and financial publications around the world,” Biden said. “And now, what’s happening?”
One IBEW member in the crowd later posted on Facebook that the former president’s speech was “very feisty.”
Feeling out a political future
Biden’s only significant political meeting of his post-presidency so far was with new Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin.
Asked what role he would like the former president to play for Democrats going forward, and how Biden could be most helpful in rebuilding the party, Martin did not answer with any specifics.
Through a spokesperson, Martin provided a statement: “No Democratic president has invested more in the party’s infrastructure than Joe Biden, and I’m deeply grateful for the president’s service not only to our nation, but his ongoing commitment to the party.”
Aides familiar with the matter, though, say a March 31 DNC fundraising email signed by Biden was one of its best-performing of the year, and also reactivated tens of thousands of donors.
“I think with every passing day, people miss him more and more. He’s for sure a net positive,” O’Malley said.
“You can agree or disagree with Joe Biden’s policies and politics, but this is a man who cares deeply for our country and has personally sacrificed so much for our country,” said Meyer. “The degree to which he’s seen as a divisive figure now, to us in Delaware, is kind of strange. He’s always been one to bring us together.”