By JOHN FROONJIAN, Political Editor and DEREK HARPER, Statehouse Bureau 609-292-4935
DENVER - In 2005, then-Gov. Richard J. Codey and U.S. Sen. Joe Biden went to the same New Jersey political function. Biden's cufflinks impressed one of Codey's aides. "They were Senate cufflinks," Codey said. "My aide said, 'Senator, can I see those cufflinks?'"
Biden removed them and gave them to the staffer as a gift. Codey, D-Essex, the state Senate president who will resume the governor's seat this afternoon until Jon S. Corzine returns from Denver on Monday, later pulled his aide aside.
"Now he thinks I'm going to endorse him for president," Codey said.
When Biden addresses the Democratic National Convention tonight to accept the vice presidential nomination, he will be more than just another national figure to New Jersey convention delegates.
Many state officials, particularly those in the southern part of the state, have established personal relationships with him since he became a Delaware senator in 1973. They shared stories about Biden on Tuesday. Delegate Damon Tyner, of Egg Harbor Township, first met Biden in 1981, when Tyner was 11. He attended a fundraiser in Teaneck for U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg with his father, Hank Tyner, at one time an Atlantic City Councilman.
Biden spoke for more an hour. When he was done he looked directly at the young Tyner and said, "I give you a lot of credit," Tyner recounted. "You're the only one here - adults and children included - who did not fall asleep."
June Fischer, of Scotch Plains, has known Biden for decades, first encountering him in Atlantic City when Biden met the New Jersey State Committee in the mid-1970s.
In 1986, when Fischer ran a campaign against seven-term Republican U.S. Rep. Matt Rinaldo, Biden campaigned for her. She returned the favor two years later, flying to Iowa and New Hampshire in the winter during his short-lived 1988 presidential campaign,.
When she saw him Monday, Fischer said proudly, Biden gave a hug and kiss to the Democratic national committeewoman.
U.S. Rep Rob Andrews, D-1st, is one of many officials who have met Biden commuting to Washington on an Amtrak train. Biden travels to the capital every workday. Andrews said their conversations span many topics.
"(Whether) you talk about what your kids are doing or legislation you're working on, he's interested."
Andrews said Biden talks a lot about his son, Beau Biden, Delaware's Attorney General and a U.S. Army Reserve captain headed to Iraq on Oct. 3. But Andrews said they just as easily could talk about the Mets and Phillies or Russia's presence in Georgia.
Andrew's predecessor, former Gov. Jim Florio, also used to see Biden board the same commuter train in Wilmington. Florio was chairman of the House transportation committee, and an Amtrak facility was a major employer in Wilmington.
"We would talk about substantial things, often about railroads," Florio said.
But he said Biden came to southern New Jersey frequently, often to campaign for little-known candidates.
Cumberland County Democratic Chairman Lou Magazzu said he walked up and introduced himself to Biden in 1998.
"I thought it would be a two-minute hello. But he invited me to sit down and talk," Magazzu said.
As a county freeholder, Magazzu was lobbying to have Cumberland County designated a federal urban empowerment zone. But Biden gave him bad news: he was pushing for Wilmington to get the same designation.
"We were in competition with them," Magazzu said. "But he said if we prevailed, he would help us."
Cumberland did win the designation. And Magazzu said Biden has been there to help whenever funds were threatened.
As the two became friendly, Magazzu got Biden to speak at a county fundraiser several years ago. Biden flew in on a helicopter that landed at the old Kroelinger airfield in Vineland and mesmerized a room by speaking on international affairs for 45 minutes without notes.
Biden asked for Magazzu's support when he ran for president this year. Despite their friendship, Magazzu told Biden he was under pressure to support Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., with the rest of the state party. He said Biden's response was unexpectedly generous.
"He said he wouldn't ask a guy to go against his state's political structure and do something adverse to his interests," Magazzu said.
"That said a lot about the guy. He knew I had a political obligation to him, and he discharged me of it without me even asking," he said.
Corzine said he has a close relationship with Biden, who has worked on New Jersey issues such as Delaware River projects and Amtrak.
"There were three senators who came to my inauguration," Corzine said. "And Joe Biden was one of them."
He said Biden, as Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman, helped him pass the Armenian genocide recognition act he cosponsored.
Former Gov. Brendan Byrne recalled Biden giving him good news when they attended a dinner in Cumberland County when Byrne ran for governor in 1977.
The new state income tax made Byrne unpopular. But Biden told him not to worry.
Byrne said Biden had access to an internal party poll of which Byrne was unaware, and he told him he was going to win.
"He really is a great guy," Byrne said.
E-mail John Froonjian:
JFroonjian@pressofac.com
E-mail Derek Harper:
DHarper@pressofac.com