Most Democrats say age is not just a
number for White House candidates: Reuters/Ipsos poll
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[May 01, 2019]
By Amanda Becker and Tim Reid
WASHINGTON/LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - As
Democrats weigh a field of 20 White House hopefuls that includes
candidates who would be the youngest or oldest president ever elected,
new Reuters/Ipsos polling shows age could be a liability at either end
of the spectrum.
More than half of all Democrats said they would be less likely to
support a candidate over 70 years old. More than a third said they would
be less likely to vote for a candidate younger than 40, according to the
April 17-22 opinion poll.
About a quarter of all Democrats said a White House candidate's age did
not matter.
U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, 77, and former Vice President Joe Biden,
76, are the oldest contenders in the vast Democratic field. So far, they
appear to be defying concerns about age as they sit together atop public
opinion polls. U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren will turn 70 in June.
Pete Buttigieg, mayor of South Bend, Indiana, and U.S. Representatives
Tulsi Gabbard and Eric Swalwell are the youngest, with all three White
House contenders under 40. U.S. Representative Seth Moulton is 40.
At a Buttigieg event in Des Moines, Iowa, Davis Chambers, 31, said his
top priority was finding a candidate who could beat Republican President
Donald Trump in the November 2020 election. Like many in his age group,
Chambers did not think youth was disqualifying but said advanced age
made a candidate less attractive.
"I worry about having somebody who is close to 80 years old in the
office," Chambers said.
Trump, who turns 73 in June, would be the oldest president ever
re-elected if he retains the White House. Former President Ronald
Reagan, who was 73 at the time of his re-election, currently holds that
title.
Former President John F. Kennedy was the youngest person elected to the
White House, beginning his term at age 43 in 1961. The U.S. Constitution
mandates presidents be at least 35.
TOO YOUNG OR TOO OLD?
The poll found many Democrats were generally wary of supporting older
candidates.
Among Democrats ages 18 to 34, 54 percent said they were somewhat or
much less likely to support a candidate over the age of 70.
Among 35-to-54-year-old Democrats, 58 percent said they were somewhat or
much less likely to support a candidate who is over the age of 70, while
59 percent of Democrats aged 55 and older said the same.
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2020 Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice
President Joe Biden talks to reporters after ordering an ice cream
cone at the Cone Shoppe during a two-day campaign kickoff in
Monticello, Iowa, U.S. April 30, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File
Photo
Despite such concerns, Biden and Sanders lead the Democratic field
for the 2020 presidential nomination in Reuters/Ipsos polling.
Thirty percent of Democrats said they would vote for Biden and 15
percent said they supported Sanders in the latest Reuters/Ipsos
national tracking poll.
Sue Carrera, 56, a childcare worker from Inglewood, California, said
she worried Biden and Sanders were too old to deal with the demands
of being president.
"I mean, they are in their 80s at the end of their first term. The
prospect of mental issues is a concern for me," Carrera said over
the weekend at a candidate forum in Las Vegas with union workers.
"I don't want (candidates) to be too inexperienced, but I don't want
them to be old because then there is a possibility they might die in
office," she added.
The poll found younger candidates may see a benefit with younger
voters but have trouble convincing some older voters that they are
ready to lead.
Among 18-to-34-year-old Democrats, 49 percent said they were
somewhat or much more likely to support a candidate under 40, while
28 percent said it did not matter. Twenty-three percent said they
were less likely.
But among Democrats who are at least 35, 44 percent said they were
less likely to support a candidate who is under 40.
Yiran Zhang, 24, a graduate student at Loyola University in Chicago,
also attended the Las Vegas forum. Reflecting the polling showing
that young adults are less likely than older Democrats to penalize a
candidate for being over 70 or under 40, she said age was
"irrelevant."
"What really matters is what you stand for, if you stand on the side
of the working class," Zhang said. "I don't care what age you are."
The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online in English throughout
the United States. It gathered responses from 4,018 adults,
including 1,449 Democrats, and had a credibility interval, a measure
of precision, of 5 percentage points.
(Reporting by Amanda Becker in Washington and Tim Reid in Las Vegas;
Additional reporting by James Oliphant in Des Moines, Iowa, and
Chris Kahn in New York; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Peter Cooney)
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