Dayton Daily News

Trump needs to take care when mocking Biden lapses

- Marc A. Thiessen Marc A. Thiessen writes for the Washington Post.

During his interview last weekend with Fox News’ Chris Wallace, President Trump repeatedly questioned former vice president Joe Biden’s mental fitness for office. “Biden can’t put two sentences together,” Trump said. “They wheel him out . ... He reads a teleprompt­er and then he goes back into his basement.”

Asked whether he thought Biden was senile, Trump replied “I don’t want to say that” but then challenged Biden to take a senility test. “Let him take the same test that I took,” he said. “I’ll guarantee you that Joe Biden could not answer those questions.” Trump added that Biden could not endure the grilling Wallace was giving him: “Let Biden sit through an interview like this, he’ll be on the ground crying for mommy. He’ll say mommy, mommy, please take me home. … He can’t do an interview. He’s incompeten­t.”

FROM THE RIGHT

Ross Douthat Star Parker

Jonah Goldberg Walter E. Williams Pat Buchanan Marc A. Thiessen George Will

Trump may be right that the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee is “not competent to be president” — but it is politicall­y unwise to mock him for it.

First, Trump is lowering the bar for Biden in the debates. That is the opposite of what successful candidates do. Trump should be raising the bar for Biden, talking about what an experience­d debater Biden is, having participat­ed in so many debates during his more than four decades as a politician in Washington. If Trump continues to dismiss him as incompeten­t, all Biden will have to do to win is string together a few coherent sentences.

Second, mocking

Biden’s decline is offensive to seniors. In 2016, Trump won seniors by nine points, but today, Trump is losing among seniors by six points in key battlegrou­nd states. His push to reopen the economy has many older Americans spooked, because they are most vulnerable to the novel coronaviru­s and least concerned about bringing back jobs quickly since most are retired. Instead of helping win these voters back, making fun of Biden’s mental functions further alienates them. Many struggle with memory problems themselves. And while they may not want someone who can’t remember his potential running mates’ names as commander in chief, they also don’t want a president who makes fun of someone’s cognitive struggles.

This is not to suggest that Biden’s mind is off-limits. Quite the opposite, it may prove to be decisive this November. Biden would be the oldest president in American history — older on the day he takes office than Ronald Reagan was on the day he left office. And Biden’s string of mental errors during the 2020 campaign is troubling. He has forgotten the office he is running for, the state he is in, the names of world leaders and the words to the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. There have been multiple instances in which he has failed to make an intelligib­le point, leaving viewers with little more than an incomprehe­nsible word salad. Some of his media supporters even have urged Biden to put conditions on the debates — which they would not be doing if they thought he was capable of going toe to toe with Trump.

So, what should Trump do? Instead of telling people Biden is not competent, let Biden continue to show it. The former vice president will misspeak a lot in the coming weeks and months.

Indeed, Trump will need to prepare carefully for how to handle it if Biden stumbles during the debates. If Trump mocks him face to face, it could backfire and create sympathy for Biden.

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