Times-Call (Longmont)

The St. Louis Post-dispatch on how Haley’s ‘test’ idea is a nonstarter, but America’s aged leadership is an issue:

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How convenient that presidenti­al hopeful Nikki Haley’s proposed mental-competency test for politician­s would kick in at age 75 — just below the age of her only other announced Republican opponent, former President Donald Trump, and a few years below incumbent Democrat Joe Biden. Since the Constituti­on already specifies age criteria for federal elective office (minimum of 25 years for the House, 30 years for the Senate and 35 years for the presidency, but with no upper limit for any of them), Haley’s idea presumably couldn’t go into effect without a constituti­onal amendment.

In any case, the transparen­tly self-serving proposal by Haley, 51, reportedly has already backfired with older Republican voters, a key block in the GOP. If this is an example of her political instincts on the national stage, she shouldn’t expect to last long.

Still, Haley has raised an issue that voters in both parties may soon have to confront.

Biden, 80, is already the oldest president in U.S. history. If, as expected, he runs for reelection, he would be 86 by the end of a hypothetic­al second term. While there has been no medical prognosis indicating loss of cognitive ability, no one who watches Biden’s speeches today could honestly deny his age is already taking a toll. And Trump’s erratic behavior seems only to be getting worse with age.

There’s much to be said for the benefits of experience, but it does seem odd that the ages of so many in the nation’s political power structure are double or more the nation’s median age (38, according to the census). More than one-sixth of the U.S. Senate is 75 or older. The oldest, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-calif., 89, plans to retire in January 2025. The second-oldest, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-iowa, also 89, has filed for reelection in 2028.

As for Trump, 76, we would argue that demonstrab­le concerns about his psychologi­cal stability and temperamen­t long predate any concerns about his age — but he, too, will have crossed into his 80s by the end of the next presidenti­al term. And it’s not like those additional years are going to make him more fit for office.

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