As Biden turns 80, Americans ask 'What's too old?'
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[November 12, 2022]
By Steve Holland and Jason Lange
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The 2024 race for
the White House could be uncharted territory in the United States, which
celebrates youth, but where millions of Americans - including presidents
- now keep working well beyond the traditional retirement age of 65.
Ronald Reagan was 77 when he left the White House, but President Joe
Biden, who turns 80 on Nov. 20, would be 86 by the time a second
four-year term ends, should he win it. His leading potential Republican
opponent, Donald Trump, would be 82 when he left office if he won in
2024.
As a society, the United States is aging, and working until later in
life. The 65-and-older population is projected to nearly double from 52
million in 2018 to 95 million by 2060. By 2026, more than one in four
men over 65 will still be working, the nonprofit Population Reference
Bureau projects.
Still, some Americans have concerns about the advanced age of the two
most likely 2024 candidates.
While 71% of Democrats think Biden is "mentally sharp and able to deal
with challenges," 46% say he may not be up to the challenge of running
in 2024, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll taken Wednesday and Thursday.
About a quarter of Republicans, 26%, think Trump may not be up for 2024
because of his age.
Political affiliation aside, 68% of people surveyed think Biden may not
be up for the challenge two years from now, and 49% say the same about
Trump. Some 86% of Americans said they believe the cutoff for serving as
president should be age 75 or younger, the poll found.
Biden's occasional verbal stumbles and tendency to meander off script
during live appearances have been seized on by his Republican critics as
proof he's too old for the job. His supporters say the president, who
overcame a childhood stutter, has been ad-libbing in public speeches for
decades.
Biden's prospects for a second term got a boost this week when the
Democrats did better than expected in midterm congressional and
gubernatorial elections.
Asked about concerns about Biden's age ahead of his 80th birthday, the
White House said his recent record speaks for itself.
"As then-candidate Biden said in 2019, ‘watch him,'" responded
spokesperson Andrew Bates.
"Since then, he won the most votes of anyone in American history,
achieved unprecedented job creation, made big corporations pay their
fair share in taxes, empowered Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices,
and signed the most significant gun reform in 30 years and the biggest
infrastructure investment since the 1950s," Bates said, calling it "the
most successful legislative record of any president since Lyndon
Johnson."
"Keep watching,” he added.
Some Biden supporters said they admired Democrats' success under Biden,
but were still uncertain about a possible next term.
"I think he's done a great job in the time that he has had," said
Illinois resident Paul Klenck. "I am concerned that someone well into
their mid-80s would serve as president. I can't think of a more
demanding job than that."
Others said criticism of Biden's age was discriminatory.
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers
remarks about student debt relief at Delaware State University in
Dover, Delaware, U.S., October 21, 2022. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File
Photo
"Some people at 60 should go nowhere near political power," New York
City resident Catharine Stimpson, 86, said in an interview. "I think
the satire about him and the sneering at him is ageism. So let us
look at the individual."
Asked about his birthday in a recent MSNBC interview, Biden had a
reaction that may be familiar to anyone over 50: disbelief. "I can’t
even say the age I am going to be. I can’t even get it out of my
mouth,” he said.
Biden said questions about his age were "totally legitimate" but
that it was his intention to seek another term.
AGING AMERICA, AGING LEADERS
The outgoing Congress is one of the oldest in U.S. history, with
more than half of the House of Representatives and two-thirds of the
Senate part of the "Baby Boomer" generation born between 1946 and
1964, Pew Research shows.
Some members have years on Biden and Trump. House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi is 82. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is 80.
Republican Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa, 89, won another six-year
term on Tuesday.
Americans are not necessarily comfortable with that situation.
Two-thirds of people surveyed support the idea of having an upper
age limit for federal officeholders, including the president,
members of Congress and Supreme Court justices, the Reuters poll
shows.
However, Biden does not even register in the top 10 on the list of
the world's oldest current serving leaders, which is led by the
89-year-old president of Cameroon, Paul Biya, and includes
82-year-old Queen Margrethe of Denmark.
"There's a reason why other societies look to their elders for
wisdom and guidance. It's because they have that experience, which
should not be discounted," said Deborah Kado, co-director of the
longevity center at Stanford University.
Kado and other experts on aging said they saw no signs Biden is
unable to fulfill his duties.
Stuart Jay Olshansky, an expert on aging at the University of
Illinois at Chicago, said Biden may be a member of a subset of older
Americans who are "super-agers," with the mental faculties of people
decades younger.
"Age has been weaponized and people from the other party, whatever
party you're dealing with, will always try to say that there’s
something wrong with this individual," he said. "Those of us who
study age as a profession say: 'Stop using age as a weapon.'"
The Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted online in English throughout the
United States, gathered responses from 1,003 adults, including 468
Democrats and 342 Republicans. It has a credibility interval - a
measure of precision - of 4 percentage points either way.
(Reporting by Steve Holland and Jason Lange; Editing by Heather
Timmons and Jonathan Oatis)
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