Hartford Courant

No time like the present, senator

- Gail Collins Collins is a columnist for The New York Times.

Dianne Feinstein is giving old age a bad name.

Of course, it’s painful to see Feinstein, who’s served in the Senate for more than 30 years, suffering from what commentato­rs delicately call diminished mental capacity. She’s 89, in poor health and having trouble getting to work even when she’s really needed.

Feinstein has already announced she won’t run for reelection next year, but it’s time for her to set a good example and retire immediatel­y. The country shouldn’t discrimina­te against older workers, and older workers shouldn’t insist on staying in jobs they can no longer really carry out.

“I haven’t been gone. I’ve been here,” she crankily and inaccurate­ly told a reporter who tried to question her when she returned to the Capitol in a wheelchair.

The Judiciary Committee is at the core of this drama. The Democrats have a majority of exactly one. If Feinstein isn’t there, the Biden administra­tion can’t get many judicial nomination­s through.

Which is delighting the Republican­s, who are making no effort whatsoever to find a middle ground — like letting Feinstein take a leave from the committee with a temporary replacemen­t. And Feinstein will not quit. So everything important involves trying to drag her in.

“She can vote, and she seems to understand what the votes are,” a Democratic senator told me defensivel­y.

Not the way to end a career! Remember how Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s glorious reputation was clouded by her refusal to retire when she was dogged by a history of multiple cancers and Barack Obama could have appointed a replacemen­t? When Donald Trump was in office, she vowed at 85 to be around “at least five more years,” but obviously that didn’t work out.

It’s hard for younger people to comprehend the difficulty of the decision Feinstein is faced with, partly because they prefer not to imagine themselves in that situation. “When I’m 89 years old, I’ll be long dead. Trust me,” said Sen. Jon Tester of Montana.

Tester is 66. Let’s see how he feels when he’s, say, 78. And meanwhile, thank him for a reminder that while he represents a state with 1.1 million people and Feinstein represents a state with 39 million, they have exactly the same Senate voting power.

The Feinstein saga is promoting a growing ageism in some political quarters. Nikki Haley, a former governor of South Carolina and current presidenti­al contender, has proposed a mental competency test for all candidates older than 75. We are sure this has nothing to do with the fact that Haley, 51, is competing against Trump, 76, for the Republican nomination.

Hardly need to mention that President Joe Biden is 80. Now that 44-year-old Ron Desantis is in the running, you can bet you’ll be hearing a lot from Desantis supporters about age, even though their guy sometimes seems unable to get his youthful brain to remember a stump speech.

Feinstein’s friends occasional­ly suggest calls for her resignatio­n are simply sex discrimina­tion. “I’ve never seen them go after a man who was sick in the Senate in that way,” said Nancy Pelosi.

But some of those old guys did give us excellent examples of sticking around too long. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina was still a senator at 100. In his later years he had trouble hearing, and — let’s talk about people being unwilling to admit their age — he refused to use a hearing aid. After debates, his aides would just tell him how to vote.

“He neither smoked nor drank, did more pushups and situps than many men decades younger and fathered children into his mid-70s,” said The New York Times in Thurmond’s 2003 obituary. “He was also known for fondling women in Senate elevators, including a woman who turned out to be a fellow senator, much to his surprise.”

Would you want to end your story like that, people? Under a headline announcing “Foe of Integratio­n Dies at 100”?

OK, nobody wants to live to be Strom Thurmond. But one of the messages of his career was that the absolute must-do demands on a senator are pretty low. Your staff will take care of constituen­ts, and while there are always plenty of important policy projects underway, the only really crucial part of the job is showing up to vote.

Feinstein’s friends are hoping she can at least make that happen. But the uncertaint­y is sort of scary, giving the Republican­s hope they can keep stalling Biden judicial nomination­s until after the next election.

Of course, since we’re talking about the current state of Washington politics, there are always other chances of creative roadblocks. People like Hillary Rodham Clinton are arguing that if Feinstein leaves Judiciary, the Republican­s will just find a way to avoid replacing her at all.

There’s also the question of what Gov. Gavin Newsom would do about naming a short-term replacemen­t. He’s already said it would be a Black woman, and there’s much talk about Oprah Winfrey, who’d certainly be more capable than a lot of folks already in the job. To be decided. First, start planning a proper goodbye for Sen. Feinstein, celebratin­g her many achievemen­ts on issues ranging from CIA brutality to gun safety to the environmen­t. And if it happens now, we’ll also remember that she showed us how it’s possible, at 89, to have a vision for the future that doesn’t involve just hanging on to the past.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY ?? Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-calif., departs a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 11 in Washington.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-calif., departs a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 11 in Washington.
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