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“If I were just 80 years old, if I was 15 years younger, I don’t believe I could undertake the duties I experienced when I was President,” Carter said.
Should old age matter in a president? After all, there is reason to be skeptical of the critics, especially if we think that 80 is the new 60. We have had presidents who were considered old at the time but nonetheless found success in the job. Ronald Reagan, who was 69 when he took office, was in his seventies when he negotiated a historic agreement with the Soviet Union and a series of bipartisan agreements, including on immigration and tax reform.
Despite concerns at the time about his memory, Reagan, who would later be diagnosed with Alzheimers, ended his second term with strong approval ratings. Dwight Eisenhower, 62 when he was inaugurated, kept the nation out of nuclear war and departed as one of the most successful figures to hold the position, even mounting an ambitious campaign, though unsuccessful, to cut domestic and military spending. George H.W. Bush, who was 64 when he took office, helped oversee a peaceful end of the Cold War while pushing a historic deficit-reduction package through Congress.
But these instances of older Presidents doing their job (mainly) well don’t outweigh legitimate concerns over potential cognitive decline. The challenges that confront some senior citizens are familiar to most Americans, and a failing memory, in particular, could become a real impediment to presidential decision-making, especially in times of crisis. Youth does not ensure success in these struggles — but it’s fair to consider whether an older candidate’s mental acuity will be in top form. If not, it can result in poor decisions, or the delegation of decision-making to cabinet officials.
Of course, being old can bring many benefits: older people have more experience, they have seen more of the political world and they can often — though not always — make decisions that are based on well-informed, long-term perspectives rather than on the visceral emotions of the short term.
Older politicians have deep relationships and are embedded in powerful political networks that give them an enormous advantage over younger politicians when they’re trying to push through legislation. Nor does old age mean someone can’t be incredibly strong. Most observers, left and right, have not really questioned the mental stamina of Sanders (78) or Elizabeth Warren (70), even if they disagree with their policies.
Old age shouldn’t be taboo to discuss, but politicians and commentators should be careful to talk about age as a factor in the race without veering into bias against older candidates — and without being blind to the disadvantages younger candidates can face.
Still, in a moment when many Americans see that politics has moved in a dangerous direction because the office of the presidency is held by someone so clearly unfit to serve, it will be impossible for voters to ignore these kinds of concerns, about Biden and others.
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