Advertisement

Opinion | US has age limits for top military posts. Why not for elected officials?

  • Biden’s withdrawal from the presidential race highlights the lack of formal and informal mechanisms to push out a sitting leader showing clear signs of ageing

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
4
US President Joe Biden walks to the White House on July 7. Photo: AFP/Getty Images/TNS
Joe Biden’s withdrawal from the 2024 US presidential race remains one of the biggest stories of the year. Criticised for his June debate performance and showing clear signs of ageing, the 81-year-old president finally acknowledged what the polls were showing and handed the reins to his vice-president, Kamala Harris, who is 59. Suddenly, the 78-year-old Republican nominee, Donald Trump, has gone from being the slightly younger candidate to the much older one.
Advertisement

While the United States does not have age limits for elected politicians, perhaps it should. The US Foreign Service requires its officers to retire by the age of 65, and the US military imposes retirement on flag officers at 64, though higher-ranked generals can have their retirement deferred until 68 by the president.

These age limits guarantee that those who command America’s soldiers and weapons are also in full command of their faculties. Trusted to make sharp, clear-headed decisions in the face of physically and mentally demanding situations, they cannot falter like Biden did on the debate stage.

Surely these standards should be even higher for the men and women with the most power. Yet neither the president nor any of the officials who would step into that role – the vice-president, speaker of the House of Representatives, the president pro tempore of the Senate and so forth – face any such requirements. The same goes for the US Supreme Court, where three of the nine justices – the ultimate arbiters of US law – are 70 or older. By contrast, only 28 Fortune 500 CEOs are 70 or older.

The usual argument for allowing aged statesmen and stateswomen to lead is that they have the most experience. But even if one views this as an asset, its value must be weighed against all the risks that come with age – from physical ailments such as strokes and fractures to cognitive decline. Older minds may be better at putting together disparate pieces of information and interpreting the “big picture”, but it is unclear whether this capacity endures well into one’s 70s and 80s.

Advertisement