Analyse
The ad’s core claim about Delaware’s industrial ranking was correct: Delaware had dropped from 8th (circa 1950s) to near the bottom (48th by 1970) in manufacturing output by the early 1970s, per U.S. Census Bureau data. However, Biden’s phrasing—*'when I was elected'*—was misleading because he was still a candidate (election day was Nov. 7, 1972) and had not yet won the Senate seat. The ad’s rhetorical framing of the 'American Dream' reflected broader economic anxieties of the era but was subjective. His self-deprecating remarks ('not the savior... not the brightest') were opinion, not verifiable facts.
Achtergrond
The 1970s marked a period of deindustrialization in the U.S., with states like Delaware losing manufacturing jobs to globalization and automation. Biden, then a 29-year-old New Castle County Council member, ran as an outsider emphasizing economic revitalization. The ad aired during his underdog campaign against incumbent Republican Senator J. Caleb Boggs, whom Biden ultimately defeated by 3,162 votes.
Samenvatting verdict
Biden’s 1972 ad accurately described Delaware’s industrial decline but misrepresented his electoral status at the time of the claim, as he was a *candidate*, not yet elected.