bidenism you hear him say all the time. famously in that 2012 debate against paul ryan, the vice presidential debate. you don t know what malarkey means, put it right here on the bus. defined it. malarkey, insincere or foolish talk. the idea behind this eight-day, 18-county bus tour is reinforce the biden s campaign to voters here there s no candidate best positioned among democrats running to end the malarkey of the trump four years in the white house. this whole idea of this bus tour, get the former vice president off the stage, off the teleprompter and do what the campaign feeling he does best. make authentic connections with voters. yes, he will have a kickoff rally here appearing with his wife here in the next few hours. give speeches along the way, but this tour has a lot of pot luck dinners, a lot of stops for ice cream, for, yes, even in the cold, diner stops. things like that which will bring him into much smaller crowds and importantly for a caucus, the personal connections r
his kids a lot of people who were in high school with him will be there. mika, no teleprompter is part of the telling it like it is so that he ll talk off the cuff. and we ll really get a window into chris christie s bid. he ll fly to new hampshire for five days where he ll two three town halls, diner stops, house parties, luncheon endorsement events including capped off with a fourth of july celebration there with his new best friends in the granite state. his new best friends. was there ever a doubt that chris christie was going to run? it seemed like a month or two ago that he was considering not jumping in the race. what made this come about? well, there doesn t seem to be any doubt by chris christie. i think other people questioned his viability, especially with the strength of jeb bush. so much of the strength and money that s gone to jeb bush
the publisher of the yawn onleader. . i m joined by mark halperin, politico s chief courthouse correspondent mike allen. thanks again for waking up early. i have to ask y, your story on politico, you called new hampshire the land of make believe. what did you mean? it is. we ve got diner stops, the satellite trucks, all of us are here but there s not a contest. the new york times political oddsmaker says there s a 98% chance that mitt romney will be the president the nominee. and that s maybe a little low, right. 98% that he s a nominee or that he wins new hampshire. that he wins new hampshire. that he wins new hampshire. what are we doing here, mark halperin? we re doing three things, first of all we re enjoying the new england winter. it s not even cold. we don t even that have. the warm new england winter. we re seeing if romney needs to meet the expectations that are set. what we re doing here is picking someone or maybe two someones to
nominee, so writes joe mcquaid, the publisher of the yawn onleader. . i m joined by mark halperin, politico s chief courthouse correspondent mike allen. thanks again for waking up early. i have to ask you, your story on politico, you called new hampshire the land of make believe. what did you mean? it is. we ve got diner stops, the satellite trucks, all of us are here but there s not a contest. the new york times political oddsmaker says there s a 98% chance that mitt romney will be the president the nominee. and that s maybe a little low, right. 98% that he s a nominee or that he wins new hampshire. that he wins new hampshire. that he wins new hampshire. what are we doing here, mark halperin? we re doing three things, first of all we re enjoying the new england winter. it s not even cold. we don t even that have. the warm new england winter. we re seeing if romney needs to meet the expectations that are set.