To voters like Carol Wickey, a 78-year-old Cedar Rapids Democrat who is undecided in the race and attended a Biden event in her hometown, the candidate isn’t explaining enough.
“He needs to be prepared to answer questions about it. And I don’t think he is. I don’t think he’s come up with an answer,” she said. “Loving his kid to death and not doing anything wrong is not an answer. And I, as someone who thinks he’s a really decent human being, when I first started hearing about the Hunter connection, it bothered me. I wanted an answer because it doesn’t look good. It’s a bad perception.”
Democratic voter Ann Gibny said she didn’t like Biden’s exchange and said he should explain more about Hunter.
“He shouldn’t act like Trump. We don’t need that,” she said. “I don’t like what Trump is doing at all [concerning his unproven claims about Hunter Biden and Ukraine], but some people have real questions about this and he needs to respect that.”
In his most-extensive remarks yet with reporters about his son, Biden addressed the concerns Friday evening by pointing to an October ABC interview with his son where he expressed regret.
“Hunter Biden spoke publicly about it,” Joe Biden said. “He said that in retrospect if he had thought about what was going to happen — how it was going to be handled by Giuliani and company — he wouldn’t have done it. Nothing he did [was] wrong. The appearance looked bad. And he acknowledged it. And that’s it. That’s all I’m going to talk about.”
Asked if he shared his son’s view about how “the appearance looked bad,” Biden wouldn’t say.
“I’m not going to comment on anything other than that my son speaks for himself. He’s a 47-year-old man,” Biden said. “He didn’t do a single thing that was illegal or wrong. He didn’t like the way it appeared.”
Until now, the campaign and candidate have met questions about Hunter’s lucrative business arrangements with flat-out denials — sometimes to questions that are accurate — or efforts to shut down questions about it.
But the limits of that approach became clear in a Wednesday interview with Telemundo host and reporter José Díaz-Balart during a discussion about Ukraine.
“Your son did make a lot of money there,” Díaz-Balart said.
“No,” Biden cut him off, as Díaz-Balart pointed out that Hunter Biden earned between $50,000 and $80,000 a month at one point.
“No,” Biden said again.
Díaz-Balart then asked if the arrangement was “wrong.”
“No,” Biden said. “There is nothing to [the allegation] that he did anything that was illegal. Nothing.”
Díaz-Balart then noted that he wasn’t talking about legality but propriety.
“Here's what I'm not gonna do,” Biden said. “I'm not gonna — and I know you're not intending to do this — play the game to take the eye off the culprit.”
Biden’s campaign likewise has steadfastly refused to discuss the issue in depth publicly. Privately, some have expressed frustration with the fact that Hunter Biden put his father in this situation with his role at the Ukrainian gas company Burisma, which Joe Biden maintains he had nothing to do with.
“One of his sons died. This is his boy. It’s very personal to him and he’s just not going to throw his kid under the bus,” an adviser to Biden said.
Most voters at Biden’s events who spoke to reporters about Hunter Biden said they were voting for the former vice president and they liked the raw way he handled the attack about his son.
Sharon Hannen, a 74-year-old Cedar Rapids Democrat, said Biden showed he’s “not taking crap.”
But Hannen thinks Biden needs to say more because his son’s job in the eastern European country represented “poor political judgment. He should say ‘we made a mistake’ .... I think in a political family, it’s a collaboration. Now, there have been bad political brothers or brothers-in-law, but I think he should say ‘as a family, we made a mistake and in retrospect, we shouldn’t have done that’ and move on.”
Her sister, Caroline Roseberry, thought that was unfair to expect that from Biden.
“His son is a grown man. You can’t control your kids,” she said, a common refrain from voters like Ronald Daly, who mused with a friend that the retired farmer who attacked Biden was a “Republican plant.” (The man said he was a Democrat.)
“Biden was great. The voter was an asshole,” Daly, 74, said. “People like the fight. They want someone to take it to Trump.”
Though Trump has tried to draw a link between Biden’s activities in Ukraine and his son’s business deals there, none has been found. Trump administration witnesses in his impeachment inquiry testified that Biden did nothing wrong in Ukraine, although some said his son’s business deal raised the appearance of a possible conflict of interest.
One sign of the ongoing awkwardness surrounding the issue surfaced in the aftermath of Biden’s Thursday confrontation. His emotional response, captured on video, made the nightly network news, cable news broadcasts and dominated social media. On political Twitter, where Biden normally has scant support, the former vice president basked in the praise of liberals who saw a glimpse of a candidate they could envision taking the fight to Trump on stage at a debate.
But despite the outpouring of support, Biden’s campaign didn’t fundraise off the encounter — a departure from practice in a primary where every candidate has sought to monetize anything approaching a viral moment. Nor did it attempt to market Biden’s memorable retort to the voter — “get your words straight, Jack!” — on T-shirts or coffee mugs, a common tactic of Trump and Elizabeth Warren’s campaigns.
Asked why his campaign didn’t do the same thing, Biden said “because I don’t want that.”
Political pros were scratching their heads at the missed opportunity.
“Voters are desperate for honest, authentic candidates and Biden had a highly visible honest, authentic moment,” said Eric Wilson, a Republican digital strategist, who was surprised the campaign didn’t do more.
“Not talking about the moment doesn’t magically make it go away,” Wilson said. “When the campaign gives you lemons, you have to make lemonade.”
Joe Trippi, a veteran Democratic consultant, said Biden is still in a good spot, saying his show of strength “came at just the right time” because primary voters are starting to tune in more as Biden appears to gain momentum.
“Joe Biden has this feisty moment, and maybe it’s over the top, but people are saying, ‘Yeah. He’s got some fight in him.’ The naysayers can say what they want but it’s going to be helpful because it hit at the right moment,” Trippi said.
“But this is not going to go away and Biden’s campaign probably understands that,” he said. “The general election may be a better time to take this on, but it’s going to have to be done. It’s not going away.”
Biden has acknowledged as much but indicated that Trump, who’s not viewed as honest and trustworthy by a majority of Americans, will ultimately have trouble facing him because he’s more trusted.
“People think that I’m authentic, that I say what I think,” Biden, citing “the internals of all these polls,” said. “They think I’m honest. They think I’m straightforward. And they think I try to do what I say. That may get interpreted by some Democrats that I’m not a fighter because I’m not going to give him a nickname. There’s 30 nicknames you could give this guy.”