Focus on Biden health underscores future Trump attacks

Conservative media’s focus on Joe Biden’s health this week underscores how attacks on the former vice president’s age are likely to be a big part of the race if he’s the Democratic nominee. 

Biden will turn 77 this fall, and the issue of his age has repeatedly resurfaced since he entered the presidential race. 

President Trump, who is just four years younger than Biden, already has made a number of allusions to Biden’s age, accusing the former vice president just last month of “not playing with a full deck.”

{mosads}Democrats and Republicans alike say they expect Trump to continue to play the age card, particularly whenever Biden makes a gaffe. 

“They’re going to make it all about him not being physically fit for the job,” said Shermichael Singleton, a Republican strategist who briefly worked for the Trump administration. “Republicans will use it to point out that he’s not ready for the job on day one.” 

The Drudge Report this week made a banner headline out of a story from the conservative Washington Examiner about a broken blood vessel in Biden’s left eye. 

Mainstream media outlets barely mentioned the incident, and the blood in Biden’s eye was hardly noticeable for many people watching the climate summit hosted live by CNN. 

But right-wing outlets played Biden’s eye as a major piece of news, foreshadowing attacks likely to come next summer and fall if Biden, the Democratic front-runner, wins his party’s nomination. 

The effort would be familiar to anyone who remembered attacks on Hillary Clinton’s age and physical stamina in 2016. 

Singleton predicted that Republicans will use “the same tactics” they used against Clinton in 2016 after she had pneumonia and nearly fainted at a Sept. 11 event that year.  

Democrats — particularly those who worked for Clinton — agree with that sentiment. 

Zac Petkanas, a Democratic strategist who worked on Clinton’s 2016 campaign, said it’s part of a larger narrative driven by conservatives. 

“All candidates should be on the lookout,” Petkanas said, adding that it “certainly did have an impact” on Clinton’s campaign and could also dent candidates such as Biden. 

He also suggested the argument could also be used against any Democrat who could be classified as a senior citizen. The two Democrats chasing Biden in polls are Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who is 70, and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who is 77. 

“Anybody over 60 would be susceptible,” Petkanas said. 

Adam Parkhomenko, who also worked on Clinton’s 2016 campaign, added that it’s “part of a limited line of attacks” that Republicans have “always used and are clearly planning to use this time.” 

Other Democrats haven’t made an issue of Biden’s age, though some strategists say it will be fair game this fall as the race gets hotter — particularly if Biden makes more verbal flubs.

Implicit, age-based attacks already are appearing. 

Tech businessman Andrew Yang, for example, said this week that electing Biden would take the country back in time — a nod to the attack by some Democrats that Biden is not from the generation that should lead the party in the future. 

It wasn’t an attack on Biden’s health or even a direct attack on his age, but it skirted close to the issue. 

Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio), one of the lower-tier Democratic challengers, also said he didn’t think Biden had what it takes to defeat Trump.

“I just think Biden is declining. I don’t think he has the energy,” Ryan said, according to Bloomberg News. “You see it almost daily. And I love the guy.”

Ryan later added he did not know he was speaking to a reporter and that he was trying to raise money for his campaign, Bloomberg reported. 

“The Democratic presidential campaign is as much a generational battle as it is an ideological contest,” said Democratic strategist Brad Bannon, adding that the Democratic victories in 2018 of young progressive candidates such as Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) against older Democrats “were manifestations of generational conflict.” 

Biden’s campaign declined to comment for this story. 

Sanders and Warren may not want to make age an issue, but former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas) and South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg may try “to capitalize,” Bannon said. 

“So any physical problem like Biden’s eye that raises questions about a 70-something candidate’s health will be an ongoing storyline for the media and a problem for his campaign,” he added. 

Biden allies say they expect Trump to continue to come after the candidate as the primary plays out and the former vice president looks to retain his front-runner status. 

“Trump and Republicans feel threatened by the guy who is going to beat him,” one ally said. 

And some Democrats say Trump, who has battled with his weight and faced questions about his own health and mental acumen, should be ready for counterattacks.

“If they want to talk about health problems, we’re happy to have that conversation,” Parkhomenko said.

Tags Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Andrew Yang Ayanna Pressley Bernie Sanders Donald Trump Elizabeth Warren Hillary Clinton Joe Biden Pete Buttigieg Tim Ryan

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