I
recall the hard time that the American media gave to Dan Quayle for misspelling
“potato.” (Actually, it was spelled “potatoe” on the
card he was given by a teacher.) A friend used to have to meet with Joe Biden
on committees – he has a pet phrase for him: “The Dumbest Guy in the Room.”
Indeed. So why has the media (other than Fox) not given Biden the same
attention and criticism they gave to Quayle? Easy – Biden’s a liberal Democrat,
just as they are. - Wes
List of Biden's Political Blunders
FOXNews.com
The following is a list of Vice
President Biden's notable gaffes and moments of candor.
-- On May 6, 2010, Vice
President Biden said in an address to the European Parliament in Belgium that
Brussels could be the "capital of the free world."
The comment came at the top of a
speech used to discuss the threats of nuclear proliferation, climate change and
international terrorism.
"As you probably know, some
American politicians and American journalists refer to Washington, D.C. as the
'capital of the free world,'" Biden said. "But it seems to me that in
this great city, which boasts 1,000 years of history and which serves as the
capital of Belgium, the home of the European Union, and the headquarters for
NATO, this city has its own legitimate claim to that title."
-- On March 23, 2010, Biden stated the
obvious when he told President Obama, "This is a big f---ing deal," during the bill-signing ceremony for the
health insurance overhaul. Biden apparently thought the exchange was private,
but the television microphones picked it up. The president must have realized
what happened -- Biden later said in an interview that Obama was "laughing
like the devil" after the event.
-- On March 17, 2010, Biden used a St.
Patrick's Day celebration at the White House to honor the memory of the Irish
prime minister's mother -- though she was alive.
"God rest her soul," Biden said as he introduced Brian Cowen and
Obama. Biden quickly corrected his mistake, noting that Cowen's father, not
mother, was dead.
"Wait ... your mom's still, your
mom is still alive. It was your dad (who) passed. God bless her soul. I gotta get this straight," Biden said.
-- On July 16, 2009, Biden gave a
blunt summation of the administration's approach to stimulus spending.
"People, when I say that, look at
me and say, 'What are you talking about, Joe? You're telling me we have to go
spend money to keep from going bankrupt?" he said at a stop in Virginia.
"The answer is yes."
-- On July 5, 2009, in an interview
with ABC's "This Week," Biden conceded that the White House team
"misread how bad the economy was." His confession came as
unemployment hit 9.5 percent, despite the administration's insistence that it
would hold to 8 percent with the stimulus plan.
-- On April 30, 2009, Biden gave
advice on dealing with swine flu that seemed to contradict President Obama's
warning not to panic. Speaking on NBC's "Today," Biden, a longtime
Amtrak rider who has commuted for decades daily from Delaware to Washington,
D.C., said he wouldn't advise family necessarily against going to Mexico, the
source of the H1N1 outbreak, but he wouldn't tell them to get into any small
area like a subway car, automobile, classroom or airplane.
"I would tell members of my
family, and I have, I wouldn't go anywhere in confined places right now,"
Biden said. "It's not that its going to Mexico,
it's that you are in a confined aircraft when one person sneezes, it goes
everywhere through the aircraft. That's me."
-- On March 13, 2009, Biden addressed
a former Senate colleague by saying, "An hour late, oh give me a f----ing break," after he
arrived on Amtrak at Union Station in Washington, D.C. The vice president's
expletive was caught on a live microphone.
-- During a Feb. 25, 2009, interview
on CBS' "Early Show," Biden encouraged viewers to visit a
government-run Web site that tracks stimulus spending. When asked for the
site's web address, Biden could not remember the site's "number."
"You know, I'm embarrassed. Do
you know the Web site number?" he asked an aide standing out of view.
"I should have it in front of me and I don't. I'm actually
embarrassed."
-- At a Jan. 30, 2009, swearing-in
ceremony of senior White House staff, Biden mocked Chief Justice John Roberts
for his presidential oath blunder on Inauguration Day.
"Am I doing this again?"
Biden said, after Obama asked him to administer the oath. When Biden was told
the swearing-in was for senior staff -- and not cabinet members -- the vice
president quipped, "My memory is not as good as Justice Roberts,"
prompting a stern nudge from Obama.
-- On Inauguration Day, Jan. 20 2009,
Biden misspoke when he told a cheering crowd of supporters, "Jill and I
had the great honor of standing on that stage, looking across at one of the
great justices, Justice Stewart." Justice John Paul Stevens -- not Stewart
-- swore Biden in as vice president.
-- When criticizing former GOP nominee
John McCain in Athens, Ohio, on Oct. 15, 2008, Biden said, "Look, John's
last-minute economic plan does nothing to tackle the number-one job facing the
middle class, and it happens to be, as Barack says, a three-letter word: jobs.
J-O-B-S, jobs."
-- In a Sept. 22, 2008, CBS interview,
Biden misspoke when he said Franklin D. Roosevelt was president when the stock
market crashed in 1929.
"When the stock market crashed,
Franklin D. Roosevelt got on the television and didn't just talk about the, you
know, the princes of greed. He said, 'Look, here's what happened," he
said.
Herbert Hoover -- not Roosevelt -- was
president in 1929, and television had not yet been invented in 1929.
-- During a Sept. 12, 2008, speech in
Columbia, Mo., Biden called for Missouri State Sen. Chuck Graham, who is
wheelchair-bound, to "stand up."
"Oh, God love ya,"
Biden said, after realizing his mistake. "What am I talking
about?"
-- At a Sept. 10, 2008, town hall
meeting in Nashua, N.H., Biden said, "Hillary Clinton is as qualified or
more qualified than I am to be vice president of the United States of America.
Quite frankly, it might have been a better pick than me."
-- Biden mistakenly referred to Alaska
governor Sarah Palin as the "lieutenant
governor" of her state during a town hall meeting on Sept. 4, 2008 at
George Mason University in Manassas, Va.
"I heard a very, by the way I
mean this sincerely, a very strong and a very good political speech from a
lieutenant governor of Alaska who I think is going to be very formidable, very
formidable not only in the campaign but in the debate," Biden said.
-- Biden said he was running for
president -- not vice president -- during a Sept. 1, 2008, roundtable
discussion in Scranton, Pa.
"Today is the moment for me as a
United States senator running for president to put aside the national politics
and focus on what's happening down there," Biden said.
-- Biden referred to John McCain as
"George" during his vice presidential acceptance speech on Aug. 27,
2008, at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Co. "Freudian slip,
folks, Freudian slip," he explained.
-- Biden confused army brigades with
battalions when speaking about Obama's plan for sending troops to
Afghanistan.
"Or should we trust Barack Obama,
who more than a year ago called for sending two additional combat brigades to
Afghanistan?"
-- During his first campaign rally
with Obama as his vice presidential running mate on Aug. 23, 2008, Biden
introduced Obama by saying, "A man I'm proud to call my friend. A man who will be the next President of the United States -- Barack
America!"
-- On Jan. 31, 2007 -- the day Biden
announced his presidential bid -- the Delaware Senator was roundly criticized
for calling Obama "the first mainstream African-American who is articulate
and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy. I mean, that's a storybook, man."