He was the privileged son of a longtime U.S. senator and two-term vice president, yet Joseph R. "Beau" Biden III was no stranger to personal adversity.
When
he was only 3, just weeks after his father, Joe Biden, had been elected
to the Senate, the younger Biden was seriously injured in a 1972 car
crash that killed his mother and infant sister. His father was sworn
into office at his hospital bedside.
As
a young college student, not long after his father's 1987 presidential
campaign imploded among allegations of plagiarism, he was back in the
hospital, holding vigil with other family members as Joe Biden underwent
surgery for a life-threatening aneurysm.
And
after launching his own successful political career, Beau Biden was
dogged by health problems. In 2010, he suffered a mild stroke at the age
of 41.
On Saturday, Beau Biden died of brain cancer, less than two years after he was diagnosed. He was 46.
Although
twice elected attorney general, the younger Biden never realized the
dream of many Delaware political observers that he would follow in his
father's footsteps as a U.S. senator, and perhaps even become governor.
Biden
did, in fact, plan to run for governor in 2016. He made the
announcement in an April 2014 email to supporters in which he also noted
he would not seek re-election as Delaware attorney general.
The
announcement caught Delaware's political establishment off guard, and
also renewed questions about Biden's health. In the ensuing months, he
kept a low public profile and declined news media requests for
interviews.
"I
think he would have run. I think he would have won," said Delaware Gov.
Jack Markell, a fellow Democrat. Markell said he last spoke to Biden in
February, when he invited him to a meeting of Democratic governors in
Washington, D.C.
"He
was serious" about running for governor, added New Castle County
Executive Tom Gordon, a longtime friend and political ally of Joe Biden
who described Beau Biden as the most popular politician in Delaware. "He
thought he was going to win this battle."
Gordon said he last spoke to Beau several weeks ago, when Biden participated in a conference call on crime issues in Wilmington.
"He was a rock star," Gordon said. "He had a great image, great character."
President Barack Obama said he and his wife, Michelle, were grieving alongside the Biden family.
"Michelle
and I humbly pray for the good Lord to watch over Beau Biden, and to
protect and comfort his family here on Earth," Obama said in a separate
statement. The Obamas visited the vice president and his family at their
official residence, the Naval Observatory, on Sunday afternoon.
After
leaving office earlier this year, Biden joined a Delaware law firm run
by Stuart Grant, a prominent Democratic campaign donor and plaintiffs
lawyer specializing in corporate litigation. The law firm announced late
last month that Biden was expanding his work on behalf of whistleblower
clients, but Biden was not available for comment.
Biden,
a University of Pennsylvania graduate, earned a law degree from
Syracuse University in 1994. He served as a law clerk for a federal
judge in New Hampshire before working for the U.S. Department of Justice
from 1995 until 2002, including five years as a federal prosecutor in
Philadelphia. In 2001, he volunteered for an interim assignment helping
to train judges and prosecutors in postwar Kosovo.
With
his father, then Delaware's senior U.S. senator, at his side in 2006,
Biden launched his campaign for attorney general. He promised to
reorganize the state Department of Justice to better combat identity
theft, Internet stalking by pedophiles, street crime and abuse of the
elderly.
Politically astute, photogenic and backed by his father's political machine, Biden won with 52.6 percent of the vote.
"He's
supped at this table since he's been 3 years old," a beaming Joe Biden
said after the victory. Beau Biden was a toddler when his father was
first elected to the Senate.
"I'm just proud of him," the elder Biden added. "I think he will make the state proud."
During the campaign, however, the younger Biden sidestepped questions about his ultimate political ambitions.
"Sometimes,
it's not good to look too far down the road," said Biden, who remained
similarly cautious about discussing his long-range plans in an interview
with The Associated Press after suffering the stroke in 2010.
"Having
long-term dreams is a good thing ... but having a plan has never worked
for me, because life always intervenes," Biden told the AP at the time.
For Biden, his initial health scare was also a reminder to balance his
job with family time — advice he encouraged others to follow.
"It's kind of reinforced how I've operated my life," he said.
As
attorney general, Biden established a child predator unit, joined other
attorneys general in taking on mortgage lenders over foreclosure
abuses, proposed tougher bail restrictions for criminal defendants, and
defended the death penalty, putting him at odds with some fellow
Democrats.
But
a spate of shootings in Biden's hometown of Wilmington went largely
unabated during his tenure, and his office stumbled in some high-profile
murder prosecutions, including two cases in which murder charges were
dropped. Biden also faced scrutiny over how his office handled the case
of Earl Bradley, a pediatrician who sexually assaulted scores of young
patients over more than a decade before being arrested in December 2009.
Biden
cited his focus on the Bradley case in announcing in January 2010 that
he would not run for the Senate seat that his father vacated in 2008
when he was elected vice president.
The
younger Biden's decision stunned political observers, including many
fellow Democrats who thought Joe Biden's former chief of staff, Ted
Kaufman, had been appointed to the Senate on an interim basis to keep
the seat warm for the son. A fellow Democrat, New Castle County
Executive Chris Coons, won the seat after Castle, who had been
considered the odds-on favorite, was upset by tea party-backed Christine
O'Donnell in the GOP primary.
"I
have no regrets," Biden said after O'Donnell's stunning primary victory
scrambled the political calculus surrounding the Senate seat.
Biden coasted to re-election as attorney general in 2010 after Republicans declined to field a candidate against him.
In
addition to his work as a lawyer and attorney general, Biden was a
major in an Army National Guard unit that deployed to Iraq in 2008.
Beau
Biden is survived by his wife, Hallie, and children Natalie, 11, and
Hunter, 9, along with his father and stepmother, a brother and sister, a
sister-in-law and brother-in-law, and three nieces.
Funeral
arrangements were not announced. Beau Biden is entitled to military
funeral honors, said Lt. Col. Len Gratteri, a spokesman for the Delaware
National Guard.
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