Why the Biden Campaign Can’t Ignore Concerns About His Age
Joe Biden was probably right to be angry Thursday. Special Counsel Robert Hur had found no evidence heâd committed crimes in his handling of classified documents, but, instead, made assessments in his report about the president’s age and memory that seemed gratuitous, subjective, and maybe even political in nature. âMy memory is fine,â an indignant Biden said at a press conference, expressing particular frustration with the reportâs suggestion that he did not remember when his son, Beau, had passed away.
But Hurâs characterization of Biden as a âwell-meaning, elderly man with a poor memoryâ magnified an issue that was there already: While Bidenâs lawyers said the description was ânot accurate or appropriate,â the 81-year-old presidentâs age is a matter of concern for voters, and his campaign has struggled to address it. âThe most damaging things in politics are the things that confirm peopleâs pre-existing suspicions, and those are the things that travel very fast,â David Axelrod said to the New York Times. âItâs a problem.â
It bears emphasizing that any concerns about Bidenâs age are dwarfed by the grave danger his opponent, Donald Trump, poses to democracy. It must also be said that this supposedly “diminished” Biden demonstrates a far greater cognizance and soundness of mind than Trump. But that doesn’t mean Biden’s age isn’t an issue, and one that polls suggest is on many Americans’ minds. Indeed, an NBC News survey earlier this week found more than 75 percent of votersâincluding half of Democratsâare concerned about Biden’s ability to serve. By comparison, only about 48 percent of respondents had the same concerns about Trumpâs fitness. This is, of course, absurd: Trump, at 77, is about as old as Biden, and not only prone to verbal mix-ups (confusing Nancy Pelosi and Nikki Haley, for instance), but exists in a constant state of mania.
The trouble is, thatâs how Trump has been. While he is clearly showing signs of his age, it can be difficult to distinguish signs of his decline from the lies, delusions, and stupidity that have been persistent characteristics. You canât lose what wasnât there to begin with. Biden may get held to a different standard. When he refers to Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi as the president of Mexico, as he did during his defiant presser Thursday, it gets subsumed into a narrative that his memory is failing. When Trump praises Hungarian strongman Viktor Orban as the âgreat leader of Turkey,â or apparently confuses Xi Jinping and Kim Jong Un, or seemingly mixes up Biden and Barack Obamaâwell, thatâs just Trump.
Thatâs unfair, especially since Bidenâs gaffes seem to get more attention than the command he usually shows the rest of the time. But Democrats shouldnât dismiss all this as the media falling for cynical GOP talking points: There are real public concerns about both Bidenâs age and the gerontocracy he represents, and the campaign hasnât really assuaged them. On the contrary, the Biden camp’s apparent aversion to riskâseen most recently in the decision to pass on a live interview before the Super Bowlâmay contribute to the narrative.
Will it matter in November, when voters have to weigh whatever concerns they have about Biden against Trumpâs lawlessness and authoritarian aspirations? Maybe not. The president and his party have certainly defied the doom and gloom before. But they cannot assume that the past will be prologue here. Bidenâs age may not be the biggest issue for voters in 2024, but that doesnât mean it wonât be an issueâand the stakes are too high not to find some way to confront it more directly.
Okay that’s good
Hmmm