Joe Biden update: No 'private meetings,' just meetings closed to the press
Possibly a very important policy change quietly emerged in the daily
schedule of Vice President Joe Biden today.
Loyal Ticket readers know that, as a patriotic duty, we monitor the longtime
senator's schedule with a close eye for detail because, after all, this man
is only a heartbeat away from having to give a toast at a G-8 summit. We've
especially noted Biden's innumerable "private meetings" that are closed to
the press because, well, they're private.
And we've wondered aloud how this Democratic VP's private meetings with
unnamed people on unnamed subjects differs from the private meetings with
unnamed people that his evil predecessor had that got so many Democratic
senators and representatives worried about nefarious secrets.
On one recent long weekend, the man who became a Delaware senator when his
future boss, Barack Obama, was an inexperienced fundraiser of only 11,
devoted an entire Monday to "private meetings" that are closed press in his
Delaware home.
If that isn't dedication for the $208,000 salary.
Well, today's schedule, unlike many at the end of Biden's work weeks,
contains no "private meetings." Not one.
Having spent Thursday traveling and successfully selling the nation on the
so far hard-to-detect effects of the $787-billion Obama administration
economic stimulus spending plan that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi gave them,
Biden will show up for work around 11 today.
He'll join Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius in a
roundtable to discuss only the rising costs of healthcare for people who own
or work for small businesses. One suspects the absent president's ambitious
plan to spend billions more to impose his healthcare reforms might also be
mentioned.
OK, so figure an hour for the roundtable, maybe 75 minutes max. You can only
talk about that stuff so long before requiring healthcare yourself. Fifteen
minutes for handshaking, cellphone photos and congratulations on the
excellent roundtable. The VP should be outta there by 12:30.
That leaves -- what? -- five, maybe six hours to make it a seven-hour
workday.
According to the White House schedule, Biden will not spend the remainder of
the workday in private meetings that are closed press.
Instead: "The Vice President will spend the remainder of the day in meetings
that are closed press."
You get the difference, right?
-- Andrew Malcolm
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/washington/2009/07/joe-biden-update-1.html