From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject Biden Anxiety
Date May 14, 2023 12:05 AM
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[ Though the public thinks he’s too old to serve a second term,
Joe Biden keeps getting older. What should the Democrats do?]
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BIDEN ANXIETY  
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Harold Meyerson
May 9, 2023
American Prospect
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_ Though the public thinks he’s too old to serve a second term, Joe
Biden keeps getting older. What should the Democrats do? _

President Joe Biden arrives to deliver his State of the Union address
to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol, February 7, 2023, in
Washington., Carolyn Kaster/AP Photo

 

There’s a very real prospect that Americans will go to the polls in
2024 opposing the Republicans’ and supporting the Democrats’
positions—on abortion, increased domestic investment, fairer taxes,
a modernized infrastructure, the climate crisis, public health, and a
host of other issues—and nonetheless put a Republican (most likely,
Donald Trump) in the White House.

If that happens, I suspect the reason will come down to Joe Biden’s
age.

The _Washington Post_/ABC poll released over the weekend was something
of an outlier in showing Biden trailing both Trump and Ron DeSantis by
levels outside the margin of error. (The same poll showed that 66
percent of Americans opposed banning the abortion drug mifepristone,
which should only intensify fears that the situation described in the
preceding paragraph could come to pass.) Even if the poll’s sampling
tilted a tad toward Republican voters, its findings on Biden’s
weaknesses have to be taken seriously. Foremost among those is the
fact that Biden would start his second term at age 82 and finish it at
age 86, and the fact that he’s already showing his age—in no small
part by not showing up very often. His is not a presidency of press
conferences or speeches from the Oval Office, and if this cossetting
spares him some gaffes by keeping him out of the public eye, it also,
well, keeps him out of the public eye. Only 32 percent of poll
respondents said Biden has “the mental sharpness it takes to serve
effectively as president” and only 33 percent said he’s “in good
enough physical health to serve effectively as president.” (I
suspect these Biden doubters include those who may think he’s OK now
but won’t be by 2028.) The 32 percent who say Joe’s OK doubtless
overlap the 32 percent who said they would “definitely vote for
Biden” when he was pitted against either Trump or DeSantis.

Biden, then, must enter the campaign with two objectives: The first,
made clear by his frequent use of the word “freedom” in his
announcement of candidacy, is to contrast the country over which he
hopes to preside with the country where Republicans are busy stripping
basic rights from women and will do more such stripping (of the right
to vote, among other things) under Republican rule. The second is to
make his case for freedom so forcefully that he dispels some of the
doubts raised by his age—which he can only do by subjecting himself
to the media and the public more than he has, and hopes that that
works.

It may not. His responses to criticisms that he’s too old have
sometimes sounded so querulous that they only confirm his critics’
apprehensions. Asked on MSNBC last Friday why, despite his age, he was
the right person for the job of president, Biden answered, “Because
I have acquired a hell of a lot of wisdom and know more than the vast
majority of people.”

I doubt that’s what his inner circle suggested he say, but if they
did, he needs a different inner circle.

Right now, the Democrats are drifting uneasily toward a waterfall and
hoping Biden can somehow navigate the looming turbulence. By autumn,
if he hasn’t had some measurable success in playing the freedom
card, and in so doing allaying much of the public’s fears of a
president drifting into senescence, then some prominent Democrat (a
category that doesn’t include Robert Kennedy Jr. or Marianne
Williamson) had damn well better enter the race.

* Joe Biden
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* 2024 Elections
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* President Biden; 2024 Election; Biden vs Trump;
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