Joe Biden has finally emerged from his basement — and Democrats are relieved.
After months of near-seclusion at his home in Delaware, the Democratic nominee has given two well-crafted speeches in two weeks: an eloquent and hopeful acceptance speech at his party's convention and a forceful attack Monday on President Donald Trump over the boiling issue of urban violence.
So far, so good — but two speeches do not a winning campaign make. Biden needs to do much more in the two months before Election Day, pandemic or not.
Aides handle the 77-year-old candidate as if he were as fragile as a Faberge egg. He still holds most meetings remotely. A recent conversation with his running mate, U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris of California, occurred across a socially distanced expanse of conference room.
His speech Monday in Pittsburgh was in a cavernous former steel mill, with only television crews and reporters present. But he later donned a mask and stopped by a union local to hand out pizza to firefighters — proving that it's sometimes worth bending the rules for a good visual.
The most important element of the Pittsburgh speech, a rebuttal of Trump's overheated charge that Biden is a puppet of "anarchists," was the controlled anger of his tone.
"You know me," he told voters. "Do I look to you like a radical socialist?
"Rioting is not protesting. Looting is not protesting," he added. "Those who do it should be prosecuted."