Joe Biden shrugs off age chatter, pledges medical disclosures after 3rd Democratic debate

ByBill Barrow AP logo
Saturday, September 14, 2019
Biden shrugs off age chatter, pledges medical disclosures
Joe Biden says he'll prove his fitness through the campaign process. He pledged to release his medical records "when I get my next physical" before the Iowa caucuses begin the voting process in February.

HOUSTON -- Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden is shrugging off thinly veiled criticism from younger rivals that he is too old for the Oval Office.

The 76-year-old former vice president told reporters Friday that he'll prove his fitness through the campaign, even asking one questioner jokingly: "You wanna wrestle?" And he pledged to release his medical records "when I get my next physical" before the Iowa caucuses begin the voting process in February.

"There's no reason for me not to release my medical records," Biden said.

Age has been an undercurrent of the Democratic primary for months, with Biden, 78-year-old Bernie Sanders and 70-year-old Elizabeth Warren leading the crowded field vying to take on President Donald Trump, who is 73.

The issue spilled into the open Thursday, when 44-year-old Julián Castro used the third Democratic primary debate to suggest during a health care discussion that Biden was confused about his own proposals.

Former Vice President Joe Biden dismissed questions about the Obama administration's record of deportations by touting the former Democratic president's effort to open doors to immigrants.

"Are you forgetting what you said two minutes ago?" Castro asked, wrongly accusing Biden of misstating how people would secure health insurance coverage under his proposal for a Medicare-like "public option" plan to compete alongside private insurance.

Cory Booker, who is 50, added after the debate in a CNN interview that there are "a lot of people who are concerned about Joe Biden's ability to carry the ball all the way across the end line without fumbling."

Both Castro and Booker are lagging far behind the top tier and looking for ways to gain a toehold in a campaign dominated by septuagenarians.

Biden said Friday, as he has before, that his age is a legitimate issue for his opponents to use and voters to consider. But the Thursday debate marked a new turn with Booker and Castro directly raising the issue.

If Biden is elected, he would be 78 on Inauguration Day, older on his first day as president than Ronald Reagan was when he left office in January 1989. Bernie Sanders, who would be 79, also would be the oldest president in U.S. history. And Warren, who would be 71, would be the oldest newly inaugurated first-term president, eclipsing Trump, who was 70 when he took office.

But Biden has faced the most persistent whispers about his age, particularly when he misspeaks when campaigning - a circumstance his aides note has been a well-known part of his decadeslong political career. Near the conclusion of Thursday's debate, Biden offered a stem-winding answer to a question about structural racism, at one point saying parents could help teach their children language skills by using a "record player."

Said Booker: "I don't remember the last time I saw a record player. ... But there are definitely moments where you listen to Joe Biden and you just wonder."

Former Vice President Joe Biden was asked about his biggest professional setback during the Democratic debate on Sept. 12.

Booker told CNN that he wasn't saying Biden is too old to be president, just that he wants a nominee who can excite the full spectrum of Democratic voters.

Castro insisted after the debate that he wasn't alluding to Biden's age at all when he asked Biden multiple times whether he was forgetting the details of his own health care proposal. The audience at Texas Southern University seemed to reach a different conclusion, reacting with gasps, groans and jeers at Castro's questioning.

Biden's aides on Friday called it a "low blow."

The candidate himself avoided that characterization and didn't mention Castro or Booker by name.

"We actually had an open debate on health care, and I felt very good about the debate on health care," he said. "What I saw last night is fewer and fewer personal attacks. ... So I'm getting more and more comfortable with the way the debates are moving."

At an earlier fundraiser Friday, Biden seemed to take a slightly more aggressive posture, subtly noting his continued place atop a dwindling field. "I know I get criticized," he told several dozen donors, before adding with a grin, "although fewer and fewer are criticizing me."

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