Presidential candidate Joe Biden says Irish roots are key to his success

Democratic 2020 candidate Biden, who currently stands eight points ahead of Donald Trump in the polls, speaks about how important his Irish heritage is to him.

IrishCentral Staff @IrishCentral Apr 25, 2019

Democratic 2020 candidate Biden, who currently stands eight points ahead of Donald Trump in the polls, speaks about how important his Irish heritage is to him and how he carries it with him always

Joe Biden has officially announced that he will seek the presidency in the 2020 US elections.

This is the former vice president's third time to run for the office, having failed to earn the Democratic nomination in 1998 and 2008. Biden joined the already crowded field of the so far 20 Democratic candidates – including John Delaney, Beto O’Rourke, and Tim Ryan.

Biden announced his candidacy in a video posted to Twitter. He declared “We are in the battle for the soul of this nation. If we give Donald Trump eight years in the White House, he will forever and fundamentally alter the character of this nation. And I cannot stand by and watch that happen.”

He continued “The core values of this nation, our standing in the world, our very democracy – everything that has made America America – is at stake. That’s why today I’m announcing my candidacy for president of the United States.”

Currently Biden leaders President Donald Trump by eight points in a new poll published on Wednesday (Apr 24). The Morning Consult/Politico poll shows Biden leading Trump 42 percent to 34 percent.

Biden who is proud of his strong Irish roots visited Ireland, in 2016, during his tenure as vice president.

Ancestry documented the former vice president and proud Irish American’s emotional visit to his ancestral home. During his stay, he praised the true Irish welcome he had received and reflected on the lessons his Irish roots had afforded him.

Biden’s great-grandfather, James Finnegan, emigrated from County Louth as a child, in 1850. All eight of his great-great-grandparents on his mother’s side was born in Ireland during, the first half of the 19th century. On his father’s side, two great-grandparents were also born in Ireland. Essentially that makes him five-eighths Irish.

What’s clear is that his visit to Ireland, his ancestral home clearly touched the former vice president of the United States.

Joe Biden speaking to the public during his 2016 visit to Ireland.

In the letter below the former vice president wrote in advance of his visit explaining why coming back to Ireland was so personally meaningful:

I’m leaving for a very special trip tomorrow.

I’m going back to Ireland – the country from which my ancestors hailed, and a country whose independence the Easter Rising set in motion, 100 years ago this year. It is my first dedicated trip to this nation as Vice President – during which I’ll meet with the country’s leaders, discuss issues of trade, economic recovery, migration and refugee policy, and other national security challenges, and celebrate our shared heritage. Our shared values of tolerance. Diversity. Inclusiveness.

And it’s a trip I’m so deeply grateful to be taking alongside my children and grandchildren…

…Over the course of my life, I’ve been a lot of places. I’ve traveled all around the world – more than a million miles on Air Force Two alone. I’ve been honored to have held a lot of titles. But I have always been and will always be the son of Kitty Finnegan. The grandson of Geraldine Finnegan from St. Paul’s Parish in Scranton; a proud descendant of the Finnegans of Ireland’s County Louth. The great-grandson of a man named Edward Francis Blewitt, whose roots stem from Ballina, a small town in Ireland’s County Mayo – sister city to my hometown in Scranton, Pennsylvania. An engineer with a poet’s heart. Months after my mother passed away, I found an old box of his poems in my attic.

In his poetry, my great-grandfather spoke of both continents, and how his heart and his soul drew from the old and the new. And most of all, he was proud. He was proud of his ancestors. He was proud of his blood. He was proud of his city. He was proud of his state, his country. But most of all – he was proud of his family.

And that is America: This notion that home is where your character is etched. As Americans, we all hail from many homes. Somewhere along the line, someone in our lineage arrived on our shores, filled with hope. We are blessed to experience that simultaneous pride in where we’ve found ourselves, while never forgetting our roots.

James Joyce wrote, “When I die, Dublin will be written on my heart.”

Well, Northeast Pennsylvania will be written on my heart. But Ireland will be written on my soul. And as we join the world in celebrating everything that Ireland has become, and indeed everything that she has always been, I could not be more honored to be returning.

You can see what I see right here and across social media.

I’m looking forward to sharing it with you.

-Joe

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