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Americans apparently agree on at least one thing: age matters. A recent CBS News poll shows that large, bipartisan majorities believe there should be maximum age limits for elected officials, with nearly half of those surveyed saying the cutoff should be 70 years old. That, of course, would eliminate the two presumptive candidates in next year’s presidential election. If Donald Trump, 77, manages to reclaim the White House in 2024, he would become the oldest person to ever win a presidential election. The same goes for Joe Biden, already the nation’s oldest-serving president at age 80.
It’s not just presidential politics that’s graying. High profile health scares for Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Republican Minority Leader Mitch McConnell have brought increased attention to the fact that this U.S. Senate is the oldest in its history, with an average age of 63.4 years, and nearly a quarter of the body over age 70.
How did a country that ostensibly worships youth come to be led by one of the oldest political classes in the democratic world? And how much of a problem is it, really? Read on to explore the politics of old age from all sides, including whether voters actually punish candidates for too many candles on their birthday cakes.
Image by Image_Source_ / Getty Images
Monica Potts
FiveThirtyEightThe possibility of an octogenarian on the presidential ticket is worrying many Americans — perhaps because it’s not just the presidency that’s aging. But will voters actually start rejecting candidates because of their age?
Staff
NBC NewsNBC News interviewed dozens of voters about whether they are concerned about Biden's advanced age — and whether it's as much of an issue for Trump.
Bill Scher
Washington MonthlyRepublicans are gleeful, and Democrats are worried about Biden’s age. But such attacks on White House contenders go back to antebellum days and rarely draw blood.
Christine Ro
BBCWith the top contenders for the US presidential election in 2024 both well past the typical retirement age, debate is raging over the trade-offs of being led by older politicians
Juliana Kim
NPRTwo of the oldest members of the U.S. Senate showed the vulnerabilities that come with gerontocracy last week. But age limits can still be difficult to talk about or pass as law.
David Smith
The GuardianJoe Biden and members of Congress are increasingly long in the tooth – and more and more out of step with a much younger US public
Kim Hjelmgaard
USA TODAYOutside of the U.S., older leaders tend to be a feature of countries that are less free politically. Vladimir Putin and China's Xi are both 70, and have been in power for years.
Ben Smith
The New York TimesWhat should elderly leaders — many of America’s top politicians are over 80 — reveal about their health?
Joanne Kenen
POLITICOIs it time for a constitutional amendment to oust incapacitated lawmakers?
Susan B. Glasser
The New YorkerOn the dangerous reign of the octogenarians.
Michael Hiltzik
Los Angeles TimesWorries about the advanced age of leading politicians are as old as Methuselah. But age isn't related to whether a political leader is worthy or effective.