President Trump frequently refers to his Democratic challenger as “Sleepy Joe” Biden, suggesting the former vice president is lethargic and confused. Informally, the Trump campaign claims the 77-year-old Biden is outright senile.
Biden’s verbal gaffes help feed this narrative, but Trump’s attacks on Biden’s age could backfire. Trump, 74 himself, has looked frail at times, such as when he struggled to lift a water glass to his mouth while giving the commencement address at West Point on June 13, and when he inched down a ramp after the speech. Trump recently belittled a 75-year-old protester in Buffalo who was injured by riot police, falsely claiming he was a violent anarchist, when in reality he’s a long-time peace activist. Slandering the elderly isn’t normally a shrewd vote-getting move.
Trump is also earning poor marks for his handling of the coronavirus crisis, which may concern seniors more than any age group because they’re most vulnerable to the Covid-19 virus. Since mid-March, Trump’s net approval on his handling of the coronavirus has fallen by 29 percentage points among those 65 and over, according to Morning Consult. Trump now refers to remaining coronavirus cases as “embers,” as if the fire itself is stamped out. But infections and hospitalizations are still rising in several states—including retirement havens such as Florida and Arizona. Seniors could conclude Trump is still failing to take an urgent health risk seriously.
Trump won voters 65 and over by 9 percentage points in 2016, according to Pew Research. That was his best showing among any age group. But Trump is losing his grip on seniors in 2020. A Quinnipiac poll from May found Biden leading Trump by 10 points among voters 65 and older. A Fox News poll that breaks out age ranges differently found Biden ahead by 3 points among voters 45 and up. “Older voters are moving to Biden,” Beacon Research wrote in a recent analysis of the 2020 race. “Covid-19 certainly may not be helping Trump's cause with older voters, but seniors were a core group of Biden's constituency during the Democratic primary.”
Young voters still don’t decide elections
Younger voters may be disappointed in a presidential campaign with two candidates born in the 1940s, but young voters still don’t decide elections. Older voters do. In the Democratic primaries, Bernie Sanders’ call for revolution gave him a strong lead in polls among young Americans. But they didn’t show up to vote. Older voters turned off by Sanders’ extreme positions did show up, and they favored Biden over all the others, allowing him to surge ahead in the primaries and essentially clinch the nomination fairly early on.