Santa Fe New Mexican

Why age is bigger problem for Biden than for Trump

Poll says 70% of voters in six battlegrou­nd states say president too old to serve as commander in chief

- By Rebecca Davis O’Brien

Former President Donald Trump has praised Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orban, for his leadership of Turkey, and confused Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi. President Joe Biden has named dead former European leaders when describing his contempora­ry peers and referred to Egypt as Mexico.

The episodes might have raised parallel concerns about age and mental acuity. Instead, while Biden, 81, has been increasing­ly dogged by doubts and concerns about his advancing years from voters, Trump, 77, has not felt the same political blowback.

The response suggests profound difference­s not only between the two men, but in how they are perceived by the American public and in what their supporters expect of them — a divide that could play a major role in the coming presidenti­al election.

Ina New York Times/Siena College poll of six battlegrou­nd states, an overwhelmi­ng majority of voters said they had serious concerns about Biden’s age, with 70% saying he is too old to be president. Fewer than half of voters have expressed similar misgivings about Trump.

“Even though we know both candidates are 3½ years apart, one side seems to have it sticking a little more, and that’s going to be a concern,” said Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Wis.

Some of it comes down to basic physical difference­s.

Biden’s voice has grown softer and raspier, his hair thinner and whiter. He

is tall and trim but moves more tentativel­y than he did as a candidate in 2019 and 2020, often holding his upper body stiff, adding to an impression of frailty. And he has had spills in the public eye: falling off a bicycle, tripping over a sandbag.

Trump, by contrast, does not appear to be suffering the effects of time in such visible ways. Trump often dyes his hair and appears unnaturall­y tan. He is heavyset and tall, and he uses his physicalit­y to project strength in front of crowds. When he takes the stage at rallies, he basks in adulation for several minutes, dancing to an opening song, and then holds forth in speeches — replete with macho rhetoric and bombast — that typically last well over an hour, a display of stamina.

“It is the perception of how you communicat­e,”

said Carol Kinsey Goman, a speaker and coach on leadership presence. “When Trump makes those kinds of faux pas, he just brushes it off, and people don’t say, ‘Oh, he’s aging.’ He makes at least as many mistakes as Joe Biden, but because he does it with this bravado, it doesn’t seem like senility. It seems like passion.”

With Biden, Goman said, “it looks like weakness.”

It is difficult to go beyond public perception to compare the physical health of the two men. Democrats and some Republican­s have said Biden remains sharp in private conversati­ons. Biden and Trump have each released limited medical informatio­n. Nearly a year ago, the White House released a letter from Biden’s longtime doctor describing him as a “healthy, vigorous 80-year-old male” after a physical examinatio­n. The White House has not made his doctors available to reporters. In November, Trump released a vague health report describing his condition as “excellent.”

Democrats and Biden’s supporters say the two men are held to different standards.

Last week, Biden was forced to defend his mental acuity publicly after a special counsel’s report said there was evidence that he may have willfully retained classified documents. The office would not recommend charges, the report said, in part because Biden would most likely appear to a jury “as a sympatheti­c, well-meaning elderly man with a poor memory.” It said he had difficulty rememberin­g the date that his son Beau died.

When Biden gathered reporters to dispute aspects of the report and angrily denounce its assertions about his memory and mental state as out of bounds, he also took questions about the Middle East — and mixed up Egypt and Mexico.

Trump has also faced questions about his health and fitness for office. He is prone to long, incoherent remarks and slip-ups. He has suggested that he defeated Barack Obama, not Hillary Clinton, in the 2016 presidenti­al election, and has warned that the country is on the verge of World War II. In office, he was seen walking haltingly down a ramp and struggling to hold a water glass.

Although Biden has acknowledg­ed that voters’ concerns about his age are reasonable, Trump has responded to these episodes with typical hyperbole. In 2015, he released a hastily written doctor’s note declaring that if elected, he would be “the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency.” In office, amid news reports of his erratic behavior, Trump asserted that he was actually a “very stable genius.”

Today, he regularly mocks Biden for his age, while boasting about acing a test that detects cognitive decline.

Trump’s responses point to a basic asymmetry of expectatio­ns that appears to be working in his favor: His impulsiven­ess and willingnes­s to go off-script in ways that can be messy only adds to his image as an unrehearse­d, unvarnishe­d chaos agent, a key source of his popularity with Republican­s.

(When Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Trump’s defeated rival for the Republican nomination, tried to convince voters that Trump had “lost the zip on his fastball,” it didn’t stick.)

Verbal flubs by Biden, by contrast, undermine the image of experience, competence and profession­alism that got him elected and that even his supporters quietly fear may be slipping away.

“Donald Trump is more of an entertaine­r than a politician in many ways,” Pocan said. “And I think there’s just a different set of expectatio­ns, and that’s why he gets away with it.”

Goman, who said she supports Biden, also suggested that Trump’s experience as a reality-TV star might have influenced how he performs and is perceived in public.

“Trump is big,” Goman said. “He simply takes over. He has that kind of full-charge-ahead persona that does correlate with being younger, healthier, more active. Biden doesn’t. He is a different kind of person. And, unfortunat­ely, in this situation, it doesn’t work out well.”

Biden has spent his life in government, but he was never a gifted public speaker. He had a significan­t stutter during his childhood. And he has always been vulnerable to verbal slips and malapropis­ms. His unscripted moments have long made his backers nervous, even before age came into the picture.

 ?? KENT NISHIMURA/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? President Joe Biden boards Air Force One for a trip to New York earlier this month at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland. Last week, Biden was forced to defend his mental acuity publicly after a special counsel’s report said there was evidence that he may have willfully retained classified documents.
KENT NISHIMURA/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO President Joe Biden boards Air Force One for a trip to New York earlier this month at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland. Last week, Biden was forced to defend his mental acuity publicly after a special counsel’s report said there was evidence that he may have willfully retained classified documents.

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