The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

I’m 79, so I know Biden can still be effective

Gaffes haven’t kept him from building a solid list of accomplish­ments.

- By John C. Thomas

As a 79-year-old recent retiree, I bridle at the increasing­ly common view that 81-year-old President Joe Biden’s age should disqualify him from a second term. I’ll explain why — if my advanced years do not cause me to falter along the way. President Biden’s age clearly has not kept him from accomplish­ing a great deal in first term. In the legislativ­e realm alone, Biden can take principal credit for passage of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, which included COVID-19 financial relief; the Inflation Reduction Act, with its historic investment­s in clean energy and health care; and the Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act, which brought extensive funding to improve the nation’s aging roads and bridges. The Atlantic magazine described the legislativ­e successes of Biden’s first two years (before Republican­s achieved a majority in the House of Representa­tives) as “among the most productive of any president in the past half century.”

Even those who might question the wisdom of this legislatio­n cannot dispute their magnitude. Moreover, this legislatio­n came despite Biden having only narrow majorities in both houses of Congress. Far from being easy packages to enact, they required consummate negotiatin­g skills, and President Biden led the negotiatio­ns.

Considerin­g those accomplish­ments — relevant to the issue of age, Biden’s recent accomplish­ments — why assume he could not continue to be effective? For one thing, some warn, he might die in office. While that’s possible, actuarial tables show a life expectancy of 7¼ additional years for an 81-year-old male, as well as less than a 10% chance of him dying in any given year up to age 85. Biden’s apparent excellent health might mean even an even longer life expectancy.

Nor does octogenari­an status imply an inability to be effective. To the contrary, many in their 80s remain very productive. My dissertati­on adviser of a half-century ago, who just turned 88, told me recently that he is about to begin — yes, begin — revisions for the 16th edition of his college textbook. As he noted, “Keeping busy is important when you are even older than President Biden.” Being seven years younger, Biden could be capable of building on his accomplish­ments

in a second term.

Another concern points to Biden’s frequent gaffes, as when he recently appeared to confuse the late French President Francois Mitterrand with current French President Emmanuel Macron. Perhaps they should be disqualify­ing.

Biden has a long history of gaffes, making it difficult to blame his age for a pattern exhibited when he was 25 or 50 years younger. Moreover, the gaffes have not prevented him from building a substantia­l record of accomplish­ments both in Congress and the White House.

There is also little evidence of the gaffes having negative effects (except on public perception­s). There are no reports, for example, of Biden addressing Macron as Mitterrand

in person. With all the hand-wringing about Biden’s age, we can be confident that, had he made that mistake, we would have heard — and heard and heard yet again.

Finally, there is the issue of Biden’s supposedly fading memory, catalyzed by special counsel Robert Hur’s recent descriptio­n of Biden as a “well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”

That argument is flawed by Hur, perhaps due to the impetuousn­ess of youth (he’s only 51), going beyond both his charge — to investigat­e mishandlin­g of presidenti­al documents — and his qualificat­ions — he’s a lawyer, not a geriatric specialist — in his assessment. Hur, in short, was neither asked nor qualified to judge President Biden’s age or memory.

Often ignored in concerns about Biden’s age is the importance of the people around him, the other members of his administra­tion who also deserve credit for his administra­tion’s accomplish­ments. Contrary to some perception­s, an effective president does not function as a lone Superman whose powers enable him (or her) to accomplish great things. The job is too big, the issues too many, for a president to shoulder the entire job alone. (This reality seems lost on many of the 40-, 50-, and 60-something Biden “age skeptics.” Perhaps they’ll learn once they mature.)

These many expert staffers serve as insurance should a president falter, as by forgetting the name of an important leader (Macron, perhaps) or having a flawed understand­ing of a particular issue. They provide substantia­l protection against presidenti­al fallibilit­y, whatever a president’s age.

So I suggest vote for or against President Biden based on an assessment of his policies and performanc­e, not because he has exceeded an arbitrary age threshold. Many of us in or on the cusp of our 80s still have much to contribute.

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE/TNS ?? Often ignored in concerns about President Joe Biden’s age is the importance of other members of his staff and Cabinet who also deserve credit for his administra­tion’s accomplish­ments.
WIN MCNAMEE/TNS Often ignored in concerns about President Joe Biden’s age is the importance of other members of his staff and Cabinet who also deserve credit for his administra­tion’s accomplish­ments.
 ?? ?? John C. Thomas
John C. Thomas

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