America Thinks Joe Biden Is Too Old To Be President

“Americans actually agree on something in this time of raw discord,” the AP reported back last summer. “Joe Biden is too old to be an effective president in a second term.”
Joe Biden and the Age Question: You might remember a bumper sticker that made the rounds during the 2016 election. It read “Giant Meteor 2016” in reference to Americans’ widely held dissatisfaction with the available candidates.
I saw a t-shirt back in 2023that reminded me of the meteor bumper sticker. But the 2024 critique was much more specific. It said: “Anyone Under 80.”
Americans Believe Joe Biden Is Too Old
“Americans actually agree on something in this time of raw discord,” the AP reported back last summer. “Joe Biden is too old to be an effective president in a second term.”
Well, I should hope so. Biden is over 80 years old.
And more important, Biden looks and sounds his age. A summer 2023 poll shows that most Americans have noticed their commander in chief’s frailty.
In the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll, “77% said Biden is too old to be effective for four more years.”
And here’s the most significant finding: “Not only do 89% of Republicans say that, so do 69% of Democrats. That view is held across age groups, not just by young people.”
Independent voters, whose support is so highly coveted in today’s partisan climate, also believe Biden is too old. Seventy-four percent of independents are skeptical that Biden has another four years in him.
And to be frank, that polling has not changed months later.
It’s Not Just About Joe Biden
Americans are becoming increasingly frustrated with how old their public servants are — not just the president, but members of Congress and justices of the Supreme Court.
It’s about Senator Mitch McConnell, up at the podium, seeming to forget all semblance of time and space. It was about Dianne Feinstein, not knowing who she was. Or Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, stubbornly clinging to her seat even as her health deteriorated.
“Democrats, Republicans and independents want to sweep a broad broom through the halls of power, imposing age limits on the presidency, Congress and the Supreme Court. In all, about two-thirds of U.S. adults back an age ceiling on candidates for president and Congress and a mandatory retirement age for justices,” the AP reported.
“Specifically, 67% favor requiring Supreme Court justices to retire by a certain age, 68% support age ceilings for candidates for House and Senate, and 66% support age ceilings for candidates for president.”
The support for age caps should increase if Biden is elected to a second term. Biden is already the oldest president ever. If he were re-elected, a second term would take him through his 86th birthday. But the life expectancy of a U.S. male is only 76 years.
So, Joe Biden would need to exceed his life expectancy by a full decade just to make it through a second term. It’s statistically unlikely, meaning American voters are likely being presented with a false option for their Democratic nominee.
“Just watching and listening to Biden, it’s pretty self-evident he is not what he was,” said Greg Pack, a registered nurse. Agreed. Now, imagine what Biden will look and sound like in another three or four years. Probably not someone who should be running the country.
Oh, and for what it’s worth: Donald Trump is just a few years behind Biden; a second term would bring Trump past his 80th birthday, too.
Barack Obama: The Man Who Created Donald Trump?
Let’s consider the question that is asked of all presidential administrations. What were the biggest mistakes of the Barack Obama presidency? For one, his rise may lead to the rise of Donald Trump.
Let’s consider the question that is asked of all presidential administrations. What were the biggest mistakes of the Barack Obama presidency?
Barack Obama has been out of office for the better part of a decade. Enough time has passed that we, the pundits and observers, can take a look at Obama’s administration, with the benefit of posterity, and make something of a reasonable assessment.
Let’s consider the question that is asked of all presidential administrations. What were the biggest mistakes of the Barack Obama presidency?
Afghanistan. Obama failed to end the war in Afghanistan. Now, to be fair, Obama inherited the nation-building exercise in South Asia from his predecessor, George W. Bush. And to be fair, Bush’s initial invasion of Afghanistan, to oust Al Qaeda in the wake of 9/11, was rational. But the resultant occupation and nation-building were misguided, expensive, and doomed.
Obama should have prioritized withdrawing U.S. forces when he had the chance, rather than sustaining what he would help become the longest war in U.S. history.
Judiciary. To my own point about the benefits of posterity in assessing presidential performance: Obama and the judiciary. Contemporaneously, Obama’s failure to push Merrick Garland through the nomination process, or Obama’s failure to pressure Ruth Bader Ginsburg to retire, seemed like small potatoes.
Everyone in the Obama administration operated under the assumption that Hillary Clinton was going to win the 2016 election, so no one acted with any urgency to get Garland on the bench, or to get Ginsburg off the bench. Then, of course, Trump won the election and got Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and ACB onto the bench.
So with a few years of hindsight, we are beginning to appreciate how detrimental Obama’s tenure was with respect to the liberal judicial agenda – Obama helped facilitate a 6-3 conservative majority.
Sidenote: Obama also took a relatively lax approach to federal judiciary appointments, whereas Trump and Senator McConnell, understanding the judiciary’s power, zealously appointed conservative judges to Article III positions around the country.
Incrementalism. Barack Obama was elected on a promise of hope and change. Obama was billed as a transformational figure, like the second coming of Franklin Delano Roosevelt or something. He certainly acted the part, with soaring (albeit vague) rhetoric about yes we can and the like.
But once Obama slid into the Oval Office he started to talk about how government was like an ocean liner that you could only turn a few degrees at a time, and although the turn felt insignificant in real-time, over many miles the fractional turn would become significant. It was a disappointing reveal for the people who had elected Obama to enact a progressive agenda. Really, Obama’s incrementalism equates to inactivity; Obama’s Aaron Sorkin-style pursuit of a “Grand Bargain,” manifested in an uninspiring and underachieving administration.
Banking. Through Frank-Dodd, Barack Obama squandered an opportunity to enact reform in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Instead, Obama upheld the status quo. Under the Obama administration, the “too big to fail” banks were given a guarantee against bankruptcy, without having to offer any concessions, or having to submit to any reforms; the banks weren’t required to quit the risky behaviors that had caused the economy to collapse in the first place. People were upset.
Obama Created Donald Trump?
The Obama administration’s response helped ignite the Occupy Wall Street movement, and more consequentially, helped sow the seeds of resentment and disgust toward the status quo that would bloom into the MAGA worldview.
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