December 13, 2017

Biden, Meghan McCain get emotional talking about her father's cancer diagnosis

WATCH: Biden comforts emotional Meghan McCain about her father's cancer diagnosis

Former Vice President Joe Biden shared an emotional moment with co-host Meghan McCain on "The View" this morning as they discussed her father's brain cancer diagnosis.

"We're like two brothers who were somehow raised by different fathers or something," Biden said of Sen. John McCain, who was diagnosed with the same kind of brain cancer that killed Biden's son, Beau.

Biden moved to sit next to Meghan McCain, saying that her father is seeing one of the doctors his son consulted after being diagnosed with glioblastoma.

Meghan McCain and Biden held hands and both started tearing up when the former vice president talked about the hope that his son kept alive even after getting "this devastating diagnosis, like your dad."

Former Vice President Joe Biden speaks to Meghan McCain on "The View," Dec. 13, 2017.

Biden added that Beau, who died in 2015, said "we're not going to talk about percentages" after receiving the diagnosis.

"Beau is missing but we've all decided to not talk about the loss as much as the inspiration he was to all of us," Biden said.

Trump attacks Gillibrand after call for his resignation, suggests she'd 'do anything' for campaign contributions Doug Jones wins Alabama Senate race in seismic Democratic victory; defiant Roy Moore does not concede Former Vice President Joe Biden 'not closing the door' on 2020 presidential run

Speaking about the continued speculation about his own future, Biden didn't give a concrete answer about whether or not he will run for president again in 2020, saying that time will tell.

"If I were offered the nomination by the Lord Almighty today, I would say no because we're not ready, the family's not ready," Biden said, but added that if he were asked next year, "I may very well do it."

Former Vice President Joe Biden speaks to Meghan McCain on "The View," Dec. 13, 2017.

Earlier in the interview, Biden also shared his excitement about his former colleague Doug Jones' special election win in Alabama this morning.

"This is not just about rejecting Trump -- which was real -- but it's about Doug Jones," Biden said.

Biden, who campaigned on behalf of Jones, said Jones' victory was not only "a repudiation of President Trump's tactics," adding that some people in Alabama might be "a little ashamed" of those tactics.

Biden said that he believes "it wasn't just his opponent's record" that drew people to the polls to vote for Jones on Tuesday night. He was referencing Jones' opponent, Republican Roy Moore, who had come under fire in recent weeks for alleged sexual misconduct, as well as comments he had made about slavery. Biden praised Jones' character.

"This guy is a very serious guy," Biden said of Jones. "He is real. His dad was a steelworker. He understands how to talk to the middle class."

"I just think I'd rather focus on the positive side of Doug Jones than the ugly side of that side," Biden said.

Former Vice President Joe Biden appears on "The View," Dec. 13, 2017.

Speaking about what he saw as some of the ugliness of politics, Biden called Trump's tweet about Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand Tuesday "disgusting."

Trump had tweeted that Gillibrand, D-N.Y., who has called for his resignation, "would do anything" for campaign contributions. Gillibrand called the president's remarks "a sexist smear." During the signing of the National Defense Authorization Act Tuesday, Trump ignored a reporter’s question about what he meant by the tweet.

Biden said that even if Trump's claim that he speaks about men the same way he speaks about women is true, Biden balked at "the idea that the president is so tone deaf" as to apply that language to a female politician.

"When our leaders use the kinds of language that is so often used today ... we allow the seamier side in society to act as if it has a legitimate place," Biden said.