Daily Southtown

Debate will test Trump’s claims about Biden’s mental state

- By Nicholas Goldberg Tribune Content Agency Nicholas Goldberg is an associate editor and op-ed columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

President Donald Trump’s attacks on Joe Biden’s mental state are cruel, unsubstant­iated and detestable.

But they’re also effective. With the president pounding the dementia message into voters’ heads steadily for months, it’s no surprise that many Democrats and independen­ts are now secretly worried about what will happen when the two presidenti­al candidates finally meet in person at Tuesday’s debate in Cleveland.

Perhaps the former vice president really has been in a decline! Maybe he has been hiding in his basement!

“Sleepy Joe doesn’t know where he is or what he’s doing,” Trump has said repeatedly. The Democratic nominee “doesn’t know he’s alive.” He’s weak, he’s tired and if hewins in November, Trump says, “they’re going to put him into a home and other people are going to be running the country.”

Trump’s attack dogs have amplified the message. Sean Hannity says Biden’s “in a rapid state of decline.” Tucker Carlson says he has “clearly lost it.”

A conservati­ve columnist in Boston called him “a few fries short of a Happy Meal.”

These are not empty taunts or throwaway insults— they’re part of a concerted campaign strategy to frighten voters about Biden’s mental health.

The result? According to a Rasmussen Reports poll from the end of June— the latest I’ve seen on the subject— 38% of all voters and 20% of

Democrats believe Biden has dementia.

But now, it’s time for the real test. At Tuesday’s debate, Biden’s cognitive condition will be on public display for all to see. He will not be scripted or protected by handlers, as hewas during the convention. Trump will undoubtedl­y be on the attack, unburdened by either civility or honesty.

So let the show begin.

Now I don’t want to be naive. Biden,

77, would be the oldest president ever inaugurate­d, and he has no doubt slowed downin recent years, whatever that means.

He still stumbles overwords (which defenders often attribute to the remnants of a childhood stutter) and sometimes gets numbers wrong. We’ve all seen the word flubs— like the time he called himself an “O’ Biden-Bama Democrat” instead of an “Obama-Biden Democrat.”

On the other hand, he’s acquitted himself well in the race so far. His performanc­e at the Democratic convention was strong and effective, though most of thatwas following a script. He performed well in his one-on-one debate with Bernie Sanders in March; thatwas heartening.

“I can hardly wait to compare my cognitive capability to the cognitive capability of theman I’m running against,” Biden said earlier this year.

I’m looking forward to it too. For one thing, Iwant to reassure myself. But I frankly find it hard to imagine that the Biden I’ve been watching will crumble under Trump’s jabs, no matter how far belowthe belt he hits.

Three additional points:

First, as a matter of pure political strategy, Trump may have set the bar too low. If voters expect a candidate who doesn’t know where he is and belongs in a “home,” all Biden will have to do is walk unassisted onto the stage wearing his underwear beneath rather than over his pants— and he will have passed the test set for him.

I’m not saying that’s what we want in a candidate. Just that the bar is low.

Second, let’s remember this isn’t a referendum on Biden but a comparativ­e race. Plenty of voters would vastly prefer an aging and even declining Biden to Trump operating at 100%. Biden has empathy, four decades of political experience, smart people around him— and Trump, even at his intellectu­al zenith, would have been an abysmal president.

Third, Trump is the last person who should be calling anyone old or inarticula­te or “out of it.” Only 3½ years younger than Biden, he holds the record for oldest president ever inaugurate­d. Recently, he confused “herd mentality” with “herd immunity.” In speaking, he is digressive, babbling, imprecise, solipsisti­c.

Consider this remarkable answer to a softball from Hannity about his top priorities for a second term:

“Well, one of the things that will be really great, you know, the word experience is still good. I always say talent is more important than experience. I’ve always said that. But the word experience is a very important word. It’s a very important meaning. I never did this before— I never slept over in Washington. Iwas in Washington I think 17 times, all of the sudden, I’m president of the United States. You knowthe story. I’m riding down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue with our first lady and I say, ‘This is great.’ But I didn’t know very many people in Washington, it wasn’t my thing. Iwas from Manhattan.”

Joel Benenson, former chief pollster for Obama and Hillary Clinton (and a former colleague of mine in both newspapers and politics), says Biden doesn’t need to be on the defensive at the debate.

“Biden’s job is to drive the message that is the foundation of his campaign,” Benenson says. “In 2016, Trump was the anti-establishm­ent candidate. Now he’s the owner of a pandemic that’s killed more than 200,000 Americans. Biden’s got to hold him accountabl­e— as uncaring, lacking in empathy and compassion, and unable to unite the country at a time when people are hungry for that.”

God, would I love to see that. I believe it matters a great deal to voters to see Biden take on this president clearly, cogently and forcefully on the great moral, political and economic challenges that face our country. If he can do that, Donald Trump will be defeated.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Joe Biden, the Democratic presidenti­al nominee, stops to chat with two boys while campaignin­g in Duluth, Minnesota.
ERIN SCHAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES Joe Biden, the Democratic presidenti­al nominee, stops to chat with two boys while campaignin­g in Duluth, Minnesota.

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