Boston Herald

As Biden stumbles, Dems making a crazy bet

- By Rich Lowry Rich Lowry is editor in chief of the National Review

President Joe Biden’s fall at the end of the Air Force Academy graduation ceremony was a brief event. He tripped, got helped up, and walked off under his own power.

Sometimes, though, a small thing is fraught with meaning — and with peril.

Biden’s stumbles are not minor incidents, or a laughing matter. We aren’t talking about a manufactur­ed narrative about President Jerry Ford’s alleged clumsiness played up on “Saturday Night Live.” Biden is 80 years old, is in decline, and has a stiff, shuffling gait that makes you hold your breath when he’s negotiatin­g stairs or any place with potential obstacles. At his age, once the falls start, they usually don’t stop.

Democrats should be thinking long and hard whether this is the vessel they want to ride into 2024 — and to portray as up for performing the job of president of the United States in a second term extending all the way until January 2029.

A couple of weeks ago at the G-7 summit in Japan, Biden lost his balance going down steps at the Itsukushim­a

Shrine to greet Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida. He managed to right himself with some focus. He stuck the landing and could shake the prime minister’s hand like nothing happened.

If Biden were to do a face plant, even down a few steps, it could be very ugly. It’d be a symbol of U.S decrepitud­e. He also could get seriously hurt. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, 81, fell a couple of months ago and had to be hospitaliz­ed. He suffered a concussion and a broken rib.

I don’t say this with any pleasure. Anyone who has dealt with an elderly parent in decline knows aging and its attendant loss of capacity are frustratin­g, heartbreak­ing and humiliatin­g.

In their apparent willingnes­s to acquiesce to another Biden nomination, Democrats are looking away from the enormous risk his frailty poses to their prospects.

A bad fall or some other health event could happen on a catastroph­ic political timetable — if something happened to Biden in late October 2024, it could easily throw a close race to his Republican opponent. Hillary Clinton’s polling took a hit in 2016 after her fainting spell on Sept. 11.

While the public often sympathize­s with politician­s with health troubles, any adverse Biden event would confirm widespread doubts about his capacities and the wisdom of him running again. He’d likely look foolhardy for having taken on, once again, at age 80 or 81, the physically, mentally and emotionall­y taxing enterprise of a national campaign.

Moreover, it would make Biden the issue in the campaign when the whole idea is supposed to be that he can repeat his role as the default candidate, making the other guy, especially Donald Trump, the focus of the race.

The conservati­ve intellectu­al James Burnham famously said, “If there’s no alternativ­e, there’s no problem.” There may be no good alternativ­e to Biden for Democrats, but having to hold your breath every time he climbs or descends the steps of Air Force One is a big problem and one that isn’t going away from now until Nov. 5, 2024.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States