Daily Press

Age matters. Biden’s age is his superpower

- By Bill McKibben Bill McKibben is Schumann Distinguis­hed Scholar in Environmen­tal Policy at Middlebury College in Middlebury, Vermont, and founder of Third Act. He wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.

President Joe Biden is old. Like each of us, he comes from a particular place in history, in his case the LBJ years. And that’s one big reason why his first term has been so full of accomplish­ment: His age, often cited as the greatest obstacle to his reelection, is actually his superpower.

There was never much question that Third Act, the progressiv­e organizing group for people over 60 that I helped found, would end up endorsing Biden for reelection. We campaign to protect our climate and our democracy, and so the chances we would back Donald Trump — who pulled us out of the Paris climate accords and helped mount the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on — were nil. (Nikki Haley, another no-go, strenuousl­y backed Trump’s Paris pullout.)

Biden, on the other hand, is a scrupulous small-d democrat. His record on climate isn’t perfect, but he has helped jump-start renewable energy developmen­t, and just last month he showed real bravery in standing up to Big Oil and pausing new permits for LNG — liquid natural gas — export.

Still, individual policy decisions don’t explain why my organizati­on’s members are drawn to Biden. It’s not that we reflexivel­y like older politician­s; we take seriously the need to pass the torch to a new generation. But we also don’t unthinking­ly dismiss anyone just because they can collect Social Security. Obviously you lose a step physically as you age, but the presidency doesn’t require carrying sofas up the White House stairs. And science increasing­ly finds that aging brains make more connection­s, perhaps because they have more history to work with.

It’s the specifics of that history that really draw us in.

The first presidenti­al election in which Biden was eligible to vote featured Lyndon Johnson beating Barry Goldwater. History remembers LBJ’s presidency as chaotic because of his tragic adventurin­g in Vietnam, but in other respects it was remarkable. His Great Society echoed Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal (FDR was Biden’s childhood president). Under Johnson, the federal government took ambitious steps to advance civil rights, to rein in poverty, attack disease, beautify human landscapes and conserve wild ones, and to further science — these were the Apollo space program years. Not every project worked, but lots have lasted: Medicare, Medicaid and food stamps, for instance.

So Biden was socialized in an era when government took on big causes, and you can see it reflected in his firstterm commitment to rebuilding infrastruc­ture on a grand scale, boosting a new sustainabl­e energy economy with billions of dollars for solar panels and battery factories, dramatical­ly increasing the number of people with health care, and standing up for gun control, voting rights and reproducti­ve rights.

What are Trump’s political influences? What presidency might be his model? He first got to vote in 1968’s tilt between Hubert Humphrey and Richard Nixon. He didn’t inherit any of Nixon’s few good qualities (Nixon founded the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, for instance). Trump mainly seems to have adopted Nixon’s endless sense of victimizat­ion, not to mention his willingnes­s to break the law on his own behalf.

The commitment to the principles of the New Deal and the Great Society — to the idea of America as a group project, not a series of isolated and individual efforts at personal advancemen­t — are what we desperatel­y need. Turning over all important decisions to “the market” has left us on a planet with melting poles and cartoonish levels of inequality.

Johnson, of course, wasn’t reelected; with the war in Vietnam raging, he didn’t even run. Biden appears to have remembered that too, with his forthright decision to finally get us out of Afghanista­n. Now Gaza may be the kind of inhuman quagmire that could still bring him down.

That would be a shame, because given another four years Biden might well be able to restore confidence in an America that has so destructiv­ely turned on itself.

Age matters. My cohort agrees. Why did Biden believe he could do what he did in his first term? Because he’d seen it done. Let’s hope the politician­s of the future are watching his successes closely.

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