Donald Trump has long attacked Joe Biden, his likely opponent at the polls next year, as âSleepy Joeâ, portraying the 80-year-old president as too old and too mentally fogged to occupy the Oval Office. As recently as Friday, the former president attacked his successor for being unfit to deal with Russia and the threat of nuclear war.
But Trumpâs tactics rebounded when he said Biden threatened to lead the US into âworld war twoâ â and suggested that he, Trump, thought he had beaten Barack Obama for the presidency back in 2016.
There have been two world wars. The first ended in 1918, the second in 1945. The cold war, the nuclear stand-off between the US and the Soviet Union that often threatened a third world war, ended with the fall of the communist regime in Moscow in 1991.
Obama was president, and Biden vice-president, from 2009 to 2017. In the 2016 election, Trump beat Hillary Clinton.
Mockery of Trumpâs stumbles was immediate and sustained. But it also pointed to an increasingly stark issue on both sides of the aisle: the advanced age of many American leaders, and polling that shows most voters want generational change.
At 80, Biden is the oldest president ever. Should he win re-election and serve a full term, he will be 86 on leaving office. Polling has shown more than 75% of Americans think he is too old for a second term.
Trump is 77 but polls show significantly fewer voters think he is too old to return to power. Whether gaffes like those he made in Washington move the needle remains, of course, to be seen.
Addressing the Pray, Vote, Stand summit, a rightwing event, Trump said Biden was âcognitively impaired, in no condition to lead and ⌠now in charge of dealing with Russia and possible nuclear warâ.
Under Biden, he added: âWe would be in world war two.â
On Monday, the MSNBC host Joe Scarborough, a former Republican congressman, laughed as he said: âItâs almost like itâs the summer of 1939 all over again. You know, [Trumpâs] fatherâs going to a Nazi rally or something, or a Klan rally. I donât know which rally he did or didnât go to.â
Trumpâs father, Fred Trump, was arrested after a Klan riot in Queens, New York, in 1927. Donald Trump has reportedly expressed sympathy for Nazism and Adolf Hitler.
âBut yeah,â Scarborough said. âYou think they may want to take out the âcognitively impairedâ part of his speeches from now on.â
Jonathan Lemire, his fellow host, said: âThatâs an attack line the Republicans and Trump love to use [against Biden] but, man, that does seem like he was looking in the mirror just there.
âI mean ⌠we see these polls that suggest that voters are more concerned about President Bidenâs age than Donald Trumpâs age. Trump is only three years younger and anyone watching Trump day in, day out says heâs changed too.â
Biden says he is fit to serve. So does Trump, telling NBC in an interview broadcast on Sunday âthere should be a competencyâ test for presidents, of the sort he âacedâ while in the White House. That prompted memories of previous national mirth, when in summer 2020 Trump, then 74, bragged about successfully recognising âperson, woman, man, camera, TVâ in a cognitive exam.
But, again, the issue remains a serious one.
Democrats protest that disproportionate attention is paid to Bidenâs age than that of Trump. Last week, Chuck Rocha, a Democratic strategist, told CBS News: âJoe Biden is getting older, we all know that. But the other guy heâs probably going to be running against is getting older, too. And in the focus groups that Iâm doing, old and steady still beats old and crazy.â
Nonetheless, on Sunday, a new poll from CBS and YouGov said only 34% of voters thought Biden would complete a second term if elected. Asked the same question about Trump, 55% said they thought he would complete a full four years.
Asked if the two men had the necessary mental and cognitive health to be president, 26% said only Biden did, 44% said only Trump did and 23% said neither did.
Ninety-one criminal charges and assorted civil lawsuits notwithstanding, Trump leads Republican polling by wide margins. His challengers have made age and cognitive ability an issue but such is Trumpâs dominance, they have mostly directed their fire at Biden.
Ron DeSantis, the hard-right Florida governor who is a distant second to Trump, said last week age was âabsolutely a legitimate concernâ when electing a president.
âThe presidencyâs not a job for someone thatâs 80 years old,â DeSantis told CBS.
He did not say if he thought the same about someone who was 77, and who the former Republican party chair Michael Steele called a âdumbassâ, over his Washington remarks.
But DeSantis added: âObviously, Iâm the governor of Florida, I know a lot of people who are elderly, theyâre great people, but youâre talking about a job where you need to give it 100%, we need an energetic president.â
Concern about the age of many US party leaders has spread beyond the presidency, particularly given public health scares suffered by Mitch McConnell, the 81-year-old Republican leader in the Senate, and Dianne Feinstein, the 90-year-old Democratic senator from California.
DeSantis said: âI think that if the founders could kind of look at this again, I do think they probably wouldâve put an age limit on some of these offices.â
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As long as thereâs a conga line, Iâm in.