"How are you?" a reporter asked Joe Biden on
Thursday night. "I'm well," the president replied, in a touching
moment in a horrendous week.
But after Biden's hour-long news conference, it was
hard to fully concur with his assessment of his own health.
The
solo encounter with the press didn’t end his reelection campaign on Thursday
night. But it showed why it will be so hard for him to save it.
Biden
endured his latest agonizing, public test of cognition as he faces a growing
torrent of calls from Democrats, worried that he’s destined to lose to former
President Donald Trump, to step aside.
The
president’s deepening reality is that every halting step he takes to tackle his
biggest liability — his age and diminished condition — the more he highlights
it. And his defiance suggests, he may be one of the last people to realize it.
“I
believe I’m the best qualified to govern. And I think I’m the best qualified to
win,” Biden told reporters at the NATO summit. But as soon as he finished
speaking, he suffered yet another Democratic defection — from senior House
Democrat Jim Himes — that showed that much of his divided, anxious party
doesn’t believe him. Other lawmakers followed before the night was over.
Biden’s
performance wasn’t as disastrous as at the presidential debate exactly two weeks
earlier. In less fraught circumstances, it might have attracted little comment.
But it poignantly revealed Biden for who he now is — an 81-year-old robbed of
his quintessential bombast and the twinkle in an Irish eye.
The
president’s warning that he stood as a bulwark against threats to democracy was
especially apt against a statesman’s backdrop of the NATO summit. Biden has led
the West more effectively than any president since George H.W. Bush.
But
Biden's every public appearance is now a walk along a cognitive high wire. Each
sentence could send him crashing to the ground. And it’s all refracted through
the prism of a debate with Trump that sent his campaign into a nose-dive.
Even
before Thursday’s high-stakes news conference, Biden’s evening got off to a bad
start when he mixed up the names of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and
his nemesis, Russian President Vladimir Putin. He quickly corrected a verbal
slip that anyone could make. (Trump, for example, has mixed up Pelosi and
former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.) But it keeps happening to the
president. And shortly afterwards, when a reporter asked Biden to weigh in on
the qualities of his vice president, he referred to “Vice President Trump”
instead of Kamala Harris.
Such
slips don’t alone disqualify him from the presidency But, large majorities of
voters have been telling pollsters for months that they fear Biden is too old.
The debate debacle had the classic political impact of confirming a negative
impression that voters have already formed. And every subsequent
struggle hardens it.
It’s becoming more difficult for
Democrats to tell voters to ignore the evidence of their own eyes and to argue
that Biden is capable of being president until January 2029.
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