The Columbus Dispatch

Biden, Sanders have waited too long to be president

- Richard Cohen Richard Cohen writes a weekly political column for The Washington Post. Email him at cohenr@washpost. com.

Charles de Gaulle said old age is a shipwreck, so the question for America is whether it should consider the age of likely presidenti­al candidates who, statistics and experience tell us, stand a pretty good chance of foundering on the rocks of old age. I’m talking Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders.

Sanders and Biden are about the same age. Sanders is 77 and Biden 76, and since the next president will be inaugurate­d in 2021, I can say without fear of persnicket­y fact-checkers that both men will be almost two years older by then. It is not unlikely, therefore, that the next president of the United States will be well into his 80s before his first term is up. That’s a shocking figure.

Both men are now at about the age when the indomitabl­e Winston Churchill started to hit the wall.

Government statistics tell us that a man Biden’s age will live an average of 11 more years. These, though, are statistica­l averages and neither Sanders nor Biden is anything of the sort. They are both white, middle class by birth, not likely to overdose on drugs, drive drunk or get into a bar fight with someone wearing a MAGA hat, the dunce cap of our times. I am not sure if Sanders works out, but Biden sure does. I have been to the gym with him.

But while looking good may be the best revenge, it isn’t the whole story. The brain ages. It slows down. It forgets. I know men in their 90s — Henry Kissinger comes to mind — who seem as sharp as they’ve ever been, but they are not the rule. It is not necessary to have great mental energy to get elected — Donald Trump is an intellectu­al sloth — but it helps. Old age can turn the delight in doing certain tasks into a plodding burden.

The old seek their own comfort zones. I wouldn’t be surprised if Biden thinks Snapchat is a breakfast cereal. I wouldn’t be surprised if Sanders thinks Drake is the English pirate who defeated the Spanish Armada. (How’s that for being an influencer?) It’s fine not to know these things, but it suggests an unfamiliar­ity with a world that is everchangi­ng. The zeitgeist is forever on the move. When you’re over 70, it may well have passed you by.

Of course, a president need not be intimately familiar with youth culture. But he ought to feel at home in the world and feel that the culture is his, that he need not have to pause to translate a thought into politicall­y acceptable language. I don’t know if either Biden or Sanders feels that way, but if they don’t occasional­ly hanker for a Beatles’ tune, they already lack all memory.

Most presidents were in their 50s when elected — mere youths, by today’s standards. Most lived many years after leaving office. (Jimmy Carter, at 94, has been out of office for almost 39 years, a record.) John F. Kennedy was the youngest ever elected at 43, and Trump the oldest to be elected to a first term at 70. The rule here is that there is no rule.

Still, “September Song” has to precede “Hail to the Chief.” It is the lament of an old man for a young woman. It is about the passage of time, about how “the days dwindle down to a precious few.” It is about lost opportunit­ies, about summer turning to autumn and “one hasn’t got time for the waiting game.”

Biden and Sanders have waited too long. A pledge to serve only a single term will not reverse the clock. It will only hobble the president, making him a lame duck before his time. Of course, the ultimate decision is their own, but they have to know they will probably decline. If they don’t think so, they have gotten old without getting wise.

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