The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fight to not stutter might be reason for some Biden gaffes

- Clarence Page He writes for the Chicago Tribune.

Joe Biden and I share a problem that’s not always easy to talk about. In fact, that’s the problem. We stutter. That makes a lot of things hard to talk about.

Now that the 77-yearold former vice president is running for president, many people are asking whether his notorious gaffes, bloopers and stumbles are related to his age.

For example, Google up “Biden forgets Obama’s name” and you will be linked to video and commentary about Biden briefly blocking on the former president’s name before quickly substituti­ng “my boss.”

Yes, there have been a number of occasions in which Biden in his haste rattled off a real blooper, like referring to the “G-8” when he meant G-7.

But his “my boss” moment was different. It sounded to me like a familiar stutterer’s dodge: When you bump up against a word that’s not going to let you proceed without a struggle, you just switch to another word.

Another one of the nation’s 3 million stutterers, according to the Stuttering Foundation’s estimate, who agrees with that view of Biden’s supposed gaffe is

John Hendrickso­n, a senior editor at The Atlantic. As the presidenti­al race has tightened, raising questions about frontrunne­r Biden’s debate performanc­e, the Atlantic has posted an insightful profile of him and his stuttering challenges.

Maybe the voters who worry about his mental fitness would be more understand­ing, Hendrickso­n writes, if they knew he’s still fighting a stutter.

I learned about Biden’s verbal struggles when he spoke at the 2016 gala of the American Institute for Stuttering in New York, where I, as a board member, was master of ceremonies.

“Your stutter does not define who you are,” he said to stutterers in his speech, which is posted on YouTube. “Secondly when you commit yourself to a goal, when you persevere in the face of struggle, you discover strengths you never thought you had and that I guarantee you’re going to need someday.”

Indeed, like many of the rest of us, he suffered through humiliatio­ns, nasty nicknames and even fistfights as a kid. He recalls how his mother scolded one teacher, a Catholic nun, for mocking his stutter in class. Thanks, Mom.

But I also rooted him on as he recalled memorizing Emerson and Yeats so he could recite them in front a mirror to train himself to speak without contorting his facial features. He also volunteere­d for speech and debate opportunit­ies, as I did, which prepared him for politics — and me for television news-panel shows.

“Out of everything terrible, Joey,” he quoted his mom as saying, “something good will happen if you only look hard enough for it.”

Should more voters know about Biden’s stuttering challenges? He certainly shouldn’t try to run away from it, says stutterer, Michael Sheehan, a Washington-based communicat­ions coach who has been helping Biden prepare for debates. Passing along campaign advice from MSNBC host Chris Matthews, who was sharing a quote favored by Robert F. Kennedy, Sheehan told me, “Always hang a lantern on a problem.”

I agree. I’m sure many readers reacted to the Atlantic revelation­s as Ramesh Ponnuru, senior editor at the conservati­ve National Review, did on his magazine’s website: “I had no idea, but it helps explain some of his verbal tics.”

Indeed it does. But, politics aside, what should really matter to voters isn’t Biden’s speech problems but how well he rises above them.

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