The Denver Post

Biden vs. Trump: Whose flaws are more dangerous?

- By Doyle Mcmanus Los Angeles Times

In a career that spans more than half a century, President

Joe Biden has long been known all too well for mangling words, names and dates in verbal pratfalls known, perhaps gently, as gaffes.

During the 2020 presidenti­al campaign, then-president Donald Trump publicly charged that Biden, then only 77, was suffering from “dementia.” The insult didn’t stick; Biden campaigned effectivel­y enough to defeat Trump that November.

But the controvers­y over the president’s mental fitness has only intensifie­d as he has sought a second term.

Biden’s age, as the oldest man ever to serve as president, inescapabl­y weighs on voters’ minds.

Thursday’s report from special counsel Robert Hur deepened Biden’s political problem by painting a more damaging official picture of the president than had been seen before.

The report said Biden, now 81, came across as a “well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”

That may have been the nicest thing it said.

In his interviews with Hur, Biden had difficulty rememberin­g which years he had served as vice president and what year his son Beau had died, the report said. His memory of a White House debate over Afghanista­n, a subject on which he was once passionate, was hazy.

In response to one question, the president replied: “If it was 2013, when did I stop being vice president?”

Biden and his aides responded to the report with fury.

“I know what the hell I’m doing,” the president told reporters a few hours after the report’s release.

On Friday, Vice President Kamala Harris, a former prosecutor, called Hur’s decision to include the details of Biden’s memory gaps “gratuitous” and “politicall­y motivated” — a talking point other Democrats repeated throughout the day. (The special counsel is a Republican who was originally appointed by Trump.)

Aides suggested that Biden might not have been at his best when he met with Hur. They said he was focused on the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, which had occurred only a few days before the interviews.

Still, as Biden demonstrat­ed, the issue of his fitness threatens to surface every time he appears in public. On Thursday, in the news conference he called to defend his mental acuity, he misidentif­ied the president of Egypt as the president of Mexico.

The question is present on both sides of the presidenti­al campaign, since Trump, who turns 78 in June, would be the

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