Portrait of Joe Biden, 46th President of the United States
Wikipedia / Wikimedia Commons · cc-by-sa-4.0

Historical · U.S. President · 46th

Joe Biden

46th President of the United States · 2021–2025 · Democratic

Joe Biden served as 46th President of the United States (2021–2025) — one term for the Democratic. The page below collects sourced biographical facts, the consequential decisions of the presidency, and the elections that put Biden in office.

Key facts

Presidency
46th President of the United States
Born
November 20, 1942
Died
Living
Term(s) in office
2021–2025
Total terms
1
Party
Democratic
First inauguration
2021
Final term ended
2025
Dataset version
20260519

Key accomplishments

  • Served a single term (2021–2025) as Democratic president.[1]
  • Born 1942 and (as of the dataset version above) still living — life now includes the post-presidency years.[1]
  • Took the oath of office in 2021, inheriting the Article II powers of the U.S. presidency under the Constitution.[1]
  • Affiliated with the Democratic party throughout the presidency, anchoring the era's partisan alignment.[1]
  • Listed in The Candidate's historical-content spine with full structural provenance — Person JSON-LD, per-section Citation chain, and a public JSON API endpoint.[1]

Sources

  1. [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Bidenwikipedia · retrieved 2026-05-19

Notable quotes

Quotes for Joe Biden are pending operator curation. The Task 16 admin queue will surface this row for review; ingest sources for narrative-scope provenance remain attached below.

Sources

  1. [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Bidenwikipedia · retrieved 2026-05-19

Key policy positions

Curated policy positions for Joe Biden are pending operator review. The biographical narrative below carries the same provenance trail and remains the canonical surface until per-topic positions are written.

Sources

  1. [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Bidenwikipedia · retrieved 2026-05-19

Election results

2020 presidential election (term 1)

Won election[1]

CandidatePartyPopular voteElectoral vote
Joe Biden
Opponent-level tallies pending operator curation.

Significant legislation

Per-bill legislation entries for Joe Biden are pending operator curation. Era-level legislative impact appears inline in the biographical narrative below; per-bill rows will land in a follow-up sprint.

Sources

  1. [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Bidenwikipedia · retrieved 2026-05-19

Biographical narrative

1,500 words · sourced from the Wikipedia REST extract

Joe Biden — biography. Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. (born November 20, 1942) is an American retired politician who was the 46th president of the United States from 2021 to 2025. A member of the Democratic Party, he represented Delaware in the United States Senate from 1973 to 2009 and also served as the 47th vice president under President Barack Obama from 2009 to 2017. Born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, Biden graduated from the University of Delaware in 1965 and the Syracuse University College of Law in 1968. He was elected to the New Castle County Council in 1970 and the U.S. Senate in 1972. As a senator, Biden chaired the Senate Judiciary Committee and Foreign Relations Committee. He drafted and led passage of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act and the Violence Against Women Act. Biden oversaw six U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings, including contentious hearings for Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas. He opposed the Gulf War in 1991 but voted in favor of the Iraq War Resolution in 2002. Biden ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic presidential nomination in the 1988 and 2008 primaries. In 2008, Obama chose him as his running mate, and he served as a close advisor to Obama while in office. In the 2020 presidential election, Biden chose Kamala Harris as his running mate, and they defeated Republican incumbents Donald Trump and Mike Pence. As president, Biden signed the American Rescue Plan Act in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and recession. He signed bipartisan bills on infrastructure and manufacturing. Biden proposed the Build Back Better Act, part of which was incorporated into the Inflation Reduction Act passed in 2022. He appointed Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court of the United States. In his foreign policy, the U.S. reentered the Paris Agreement and enacted the New Atlantic Charter. Biden withdrew U.S. troops from Afghanistan in a chaotic exit, and the Taliban swiftly retook control. He responded to the Russian invasion of Ukraine by imposing sanctions on Russia and authorizing Ukrainian aid. In 2022, Biden supported Finland's and Sweden's bids to join NATO and formally approved their membership. During the Gaza war, he condemned the actions of Hamas, strongly supported Israel, sent humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip, and backed a temporary ceasefire proposal before his presidency ended. Concerns about Biden's age and health persisted throughout his presidency. Biden is the first president to turn 80 years old while in office. Biden initially ran for reelection in 2024, winning the Democratic primaries and becoming the party's presumptive nominee. After his performance in the first presidential debate, intensifying scrutiny from across the political spectrum about his age and health led him to withdraw his candidacy. During his time in office, Biden's administration was ranked favorably by several historians and scholars, diverging from unfavorable public assessments of his tenure. Biden entered office with majority support, but his approval ratings declined significantly during his presidency, particularly over concerns about inflation. He is the oldest living former U.S. president since the second inauguration of Donald Trump in 2025, the oldest living former U.S. vice president since the death of Dick Cheney in 2025, and the oldest person to have served as president. ### Early life Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. was born on November 20, 1942, at St. Mary's Hospital in Scranton, Pennsylvania, to Catherine Eugenia "Jean" Biden (née Finnegan) and Joseph Robinette Biden Sr. He is the oldest child in a Catholic family of predominantly Irish descent. Biden has a sister, Valerie, and two brothers, James and Francis. Joseph Sr. had been wealthy, and the family purchased a home in the affluent Long Island suburb of Garden City, New York, in 1946. After he suffered business setbacks around the time Biden was seven years old, the family lived with Jean's parents in Scranton for several years. Scranton fell into economic decline during the 1950s, and Joseph Sr. could not find steady work. Beginning in 1953, when Biden was ten, the family lived in an apartment in Claymont, Delaware, before moving to a house in nearby Mayfield, Delaware. Joseph Sr. later became a successful used-car salesman, maintaining the family in a middle-class lifestyle. At Archmere Academy in Claymont, Biden played baseball and was a standout halfback and wide receiver on the high school football team. Though a poor student, he was class president in his junior and senior years. He graduated in 1961. At the University of Delaware in Newark, Biden briefly played freshman football and received a Bachelor of Arts degree with a double major in history and political science in 1965. To overcome a childhood stutter, he memorized lines from Ralph Waldo Emerson and William Butler Yeats. ### Presidency === Inauguration === Biden was inaugurated as the 46th president of the United States on January 20, 2021. At 78, he was then the oldest person to assume the office up to that point. Biden was the second Catholic U.S. president, after John F. Kennedy, and the first president elected from the state of Delaware. He was also the first person since George H. W. Bush to have been both vice president and president, and the only president to date from the Silent Generation. Biden's inauguration was "a muted affair unlike any previous inauguration" due to COVID-19 precautions as well as massively increased security measures because of the January 6 United States Capitol attack. === First 100 days === In his first two days as president, Biden signed 17 executive orders. By his third day, orders had included rejoining the Paris Climate Agreement, ending the state of national emergency at the border with Mexico, directing the government to rejoin the World Health Organization, face mask requirements on federal property, measures to combat hunger in the United States, and revoking permits for the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline. On March 11, Biden signed into law the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, a $1.9 trillion economic stimulus and relief package that he had proposed to support the United States' recovery from the economic and health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The package included direct payments to most Americans, an extension of increased unemployment benefits, funds for vaccine distribution and school reopenings, and expansions of health insurance subsidies and the child tax credit. Biden's initial proposal included an increase of the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour, but after the Senate parliamentarian determined that including the increase in a budget reconciliation bill would violate Senate rules, Democrats removed it. Also in March, amid a rise in migrants entering the U.S. from Mexico, Biden said migrant adults were "being sent back", in reference to the continuation of the Trump administration's Title 42 policy for quick deportations. He earlier announced that his administration would not deport unaccompanied migrant children; the rise in arrivals of such children exceeded the capacity of facilities meant to shelter them, leading the Biden administration in March to direct the Federal Emergency Management Agency to help. On April 14, Biden announced that the United States would delay the withdrawal of all troops from the war in Afghanistan until September 11, signaling an end to the country's direct military involvement in Afghanistan after nearly 20 years. In February 2020, the Trump administration had made a deal with the Taliban to completely withdraw U.S. forces by May 1, 2021. Biden's decision met with a range of reactions, from support and relief to trepidation at the possible collapse of the Afghan government without American support. On April 22–23, Biden held an international climate summit at which he announced that the U.S. would cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 50%–52% by 2030 compared to 2005 levels. On April 28, the eve of his 100th day in office, Biden delivered his first address to a joint session of Congress. === Domestic policy === On June 17, Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act, which officially declared Juneteenth a federal holiday. In July 2021, amid a slowing of the COVID-19 vaccination rate in the country and the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant, Biden said that it was "gigantically important" for Americans to be vaccinated. In 2022, Biden endorsed a change to the Senate filibuster to allow for the passing of the Freedom to Vote Act and John Lewis Voting Rights Act. The rules change failed when two Democratic senators joined Senate Republicans in opposing it. In April 2022, Biden signed into law the bipartisan Postal Service Reform Act of 2022 to revamp the finances and operations of the United States Postal Service agency. Biden supported the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act aimed to address gun reform issues following the Robb Elementary School shooting in Uvalde, Texas; he signed the bill on June 25, 2022. The Honoring our PACT Act of 2022 was introduced in 2021 and signed into law by Biden on August 10, 2022. The act intended to significantly improve healthcare access and funding for veterans who were exposed to toxic substances, including burn pits, during military service. In 2022, Biden signed…

External resources

  • Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election

  • Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Biden

  • WhiteHouse.gov

    https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/presidents/joseph-r-biden-jr/

Sources & provenance

Every quantitative or attributable claim above carries a per-section [N] marker that resolves to the corresponding URL below. Each entry records the upstream provider, the canonical URL, and the timestamp at which the underlying source was retrieved by the ingest pipeline.

Joe Biden — 46th President of the United States (2021–2025) | The Candidate