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Reading: Biden’s Memory Is Failing. So Is Trump’s. The Question Is Whose Flaws Are More Dangerous
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Editorial

Biden’s Memory Is Failing. So Is Trump’s. The Question Is Whose Flaws Are More Dangerous

Published February 26, 2024
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Tuesday, February 13, 2024
Year : 2, Issue : 7

In a career that spans more than half a century, President Joe Biden has long been known all too well for mangling words, names and dates in verbal pratfalls known, perhaps gently, as gaffes.
During the 2020 presidential campaign, then-President Donald Trump publicly charged that Biden, then only 77, was suffering from “dementia.” The insult didn’t stick; Biden campaigned effectively enough to defeat Trump that November.

But the controversy over the president’s mental fitness has only intensified as he has sought a second term.

Biden’s age, as the oldest man ever to serve as president, inescapably weighs on voters’ minds.

Thursday’s report from special counsel Robert Hur deepened Biden’s political problem by painting a more damaging official picture of the president than had been seen before.

The report said Biden, now 81, came across as a “well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”

In his interviews with Hur, Biden had difficulty remembering which years he had served as vice president and what year his son Beau had died, the report said. His memory of a White House debate over Afghanistan, a subject on which he was once passionate, was hazy.

In response to one question, the president replied: “If it was 2013, when did I stop being vice president?”

On Friday, Vice President Kamala Harris, a former prosecutor, called Hur’s decision to include the details of Biden’s memory gaps “gratuitous” and “politically motivated” — a talking point other Democrats repeated throughout the day. (The special counsel is a Republican who was originally appointed by Trump.)

Still, as Biden demonstrated, the issue of his fitness threatens to surface every time he appears in public. On Thursday, in the news conference he called to defend his mental acuity, he misidentified the president of Egypt as the president of Mexico.

The question is present on both sides of the presidential campaign, since Trump, who turns 78 in June, would be the second-oldest man ever to win a major party’s nomination. And Trump, too, often appears to suffer from memory lapses.

He recently confused Nikki Haley, his last remaining challenger for the GOP nomination, with Nancy Pelosi, the former Democratic speaker of the House. He referred to the president of Hungary as the president of Turkey.

He bragged last year that he had defeated President Obama in the 2016 election, when his opponent was Hillary Clinton, and claimed that he had won all 50 states that year (he won 30). He warned that Biden might lead the country into “World War Two.”

Polls suggest that most voters perceive Trump as more vigorous than Biden. An NBC News poll this week showed Trump ahead by 16 points on the question of who is more competent and effective.
In a YouGov survey released Friday, 47% of voters said that Biden’s health and age would “severely limit his ability to fulfill his duties” if he were reelected in November. Only 32% said the same about Trump. But neither candidate emerged from that survey a clear winner.

Trump has glaring flaws beyond his memory problems. He is the undisputed king of presidential mendacity; the Washington Post has estimated that he made more than 30,000 false or misleading claims during his four years in the White House.

So yes, both candidates have memory problems. The more important question is: Whose judgment is sounder?

After all, the voters’ choice is between two elderly men with poor memories — and only one of them doesn’t respect the Constitution.

The question isn’t whose aging memory is sharper. It’s whose flaws are more dangerous.

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Editor
Sadia J. Choudhury
Executive Editor
Shah J. Choudhury, Mubin Khan & Salman J. Choudhury
Member of Editor’s Board
Husneara Choudhury, Fauzia J. Choudhury, Santa Islam & DevRaj A. Nath.

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