The combined age of America’s two presidential candidates is 159. That is a lot of years. To show how many years that is, 159 years ago, America’s Civil War ended, and Abraham Lincoln was assassinated.
While the grim choice between two elderly candidates in the US presidential race is certainly noteworthy, the absence of younger choices is not something unique to America. True, recent elections in France and Britain have featured relatively young candidates by comparison. Britain’s recently deposed Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is 44. The French far-right leader Jordan Bardella is 29, while the French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal is 35.
It remains the case, however, that political leaders tend to be older. Russia’s Vladimir Putin, China’s Xi Jinping, and India’s Narendra Modi are all in their 70s, while Brazil’s President Lula, 78, has just been elected.
Age limits
Recently, much discussion has centred on 81-year-old US President Joe Biden’s age, gaffes, slips, and apparently declining cognitive abilities. But there is no guarantee that his Republican challenger, Donald Trump, 78, will not face similar age-related issues in office if he is re-elected in November. He would be pushing 83 by the end of any second term.
And illnesses accompanying old age are different for everyone. How someone's body and mind ages can be arbitrary and unpredictable. In short, there is no way of knowing how age will affect someone physically and/or mentally.