Presumptive
Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama introduced Sen. Joe
Biden to the nation as his running mate Saturday, telling
supporters that he is "a leader who is
ready to step in and be president."
"For months, I've searched for a leader to finish this journey
alongside me and join me in making Washington work for the American
people. I searched for a leader who understood the rising costs
confronting working people and will always put their dreams first,"
Obama said.
"Today, I've come back to Springfield to tell you I've found that
leader," he said.
The rally is the pair's first joint appearance since Obama announced
that Biden, the senior U.S. senator from Delaware, would be his
running mate on his Web site and in a text message to supporters
early Saturday morning. Watch Obama introduce his running mate »
Democrats hope that Biden's working-class roots and foreign policy
experience will help Obama, who informed Biden of his decision
Thursday.
Thousands of cheering supporters gathered Saturday for the rally in
Springfield, Illinois, where Obama announced his candidacy last
year. It will be their only public appearance together before next
week's Democratic convention in Denver. Watch what Biden would bring
to an Obama presidency »
As he took to the podium at Saturday's rally, Biden invoked the 16th
U.S. president, Abraham Lincoln, who was from Illinois.
"President Lincoln once instructed us to be sure to put your feet in
the right place and then stand firm," said Biden, a native of
Scranton, Pennsylvania.
"Today in Springfield, I know my feet are in the right place, and
I'm proud to stand firm with the next president of the United States
of America, Barack Obama."
Obama stressed those roots, introducing 65-year-old Biden as "still
that scrappy kid from Scranton who beat the odds."
He noted hardships in Biden's life, including the deaths of Biden's
first wife and infant daughter in a 1972 car wreck and his struggle
to overcome a brain aneurysm in 1988. iReport.com: iReporters ask if
Biden was really the best choice
"That's the kind of fighter I want by my side in the months and
years to come," Obama said.
Known for his plain-spoken approach and penchant for speaking from
the cuff, Biden wasted little time taking to the traditional vice
presidential candidate's role of political attack dog.
"John McCain ... served our country with extreme courage, and I know
he wants to do right by America," he said of his Senate colleague
and the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. "But the harsh
truth is loud and clear: You can't change America when you supported
George Bush's policies 95 percent of the time."
He also seized on a McCain comment from this week when he could not
remember how many houses he owns and said McCain was out of touch
with the "kitchen-table" issues that working families face.
"It's a pretty hard experience. He'll have to figure out which of
the seven kitchen tables to sit at," Biden said.
It's a pretty hard experience. He'll have to figure out which of the
seven kitchen tables to sit at," Biden said.
The McCain campaign quickly pounced Obama for introducing Biden as
"the next president of the United States" before quickly correcting
himself to say "vice president."
"Barack Obama sounded as though he turned over the top spot on the
ticket today to his new mentor, when he introduced Joe Biden as the
next president," McCain spokesman Ben Porritt said. "The reality is
that nothing has changed since Joe Biden first made his assessment
that Barack Obama is not ready to lead. He wasn't ready then and he
isn't ready now."
Biden, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, brings
decades of experience that could help counter GOP attacks on Obama's
lack of experience in foreign policy.
Biden abandoned his own White House run after a poor showing in
Iowa's first-in-the-nation caucuses. He also ran for the 1988
Democratic presidential nomination but dropped out after charges of
plagiarism in a stump speech. Learn more about Biden
Biden is serving out his sixth term, making him Delaware's
longest-serving senator.
He is married and has three children. He received his undergraduate
degree from the University of Delaware and got a law degree from
Syracuse.
One of Biden's grandfathers was a Pennsylvania state senator,
according to the Almanac of American Politics.
Biden will make his first big speech as the vice presidential
candidate Wednesday, the third night of the Democratic convention
Source:CNN
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