Vice President Joe Biden
WASHINGTON (AP) — It's more than a month before Donald Trump even enters the White House, but Joe Biden says he's running for president in 2020.
Maybe.
"I'm going to run in 2020. For president. So, uh, what the hell, man," the departing vice president told reporters Monday with only a slight smile on his face. Given a chance to walk it back, he did — but only a bit.
Asked if he was joking, he said: "I'm not committing not to run. I'm not committing to anything. I learned a long time ago, fate has a strange way of intervening."
Biden, who turned 74 last month, will turn 78 shortly after the 2020 election. Ronald Reagan was just a few days short of turning 78 when he left office in January 1989, making him the oldest person to serve as president.
The vice president decided to not seek the White House in 2015 and instead backed this year's eventual Democratic presidential nominee, Hillary Clinton. He ran unsuccessfully for his party's nomination in 2008, when now-President Barack Obama selected him as his running mate, and in 1988.
Biden was asked about his plans while chatting with reporters after presiding over Senate debate on a biomedical research bill he's supporting.
A senator for 36 years before becoming vice president, Biden was emotional after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., a friend, got the Senate to name a portion of the measure after Biden's son, Beau, who died of cancer last year.
Shortly after Biden was first elected to the Senate in 1972, his first wife and year-old daughter died in a car crash.