At 81, Patrick Leahy Announced He’s Retiring — That’s When Biden Wants To Run for Reelection

Elections
Senator Patrick Leahy (D., Vt.) speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., January 22, 2020. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)

Senator Patrick Leahy, at 81, announced on Monday he won’t stand for reelection, because he wants to “pass the torch” to somebody younger. But this is the same age at which President Biden wants to run for a second term as president.

Leahy, having been elected in the 1974 post-Watergate Democratic wave, is the longest-serving Senator. However, Biden was actually elected to the U.S. Senate two years earlier, in 1972.

Had Leahy decided to run for reelection, he would have been 82 at the start of his second term. Were Biden to run in 2024, as aides indicate he intends to, that would put him at 82 by the time he’s sworn into a second term, and 86 by the time he leaves office.

As things stand, Biden’s plunging approval ratings and incompetent management have already lead a majority of Americans to question his mental acuity. It’s staggering to think that Democrats might be trapped into running an even older Biden in 2024, given that Vice President Kamala Harris is performing even more poorly in polls.

Articles You May Like

Iranian Arrested in UK for Calling Hamas ‘Terrorist’ Praises Israel, Jews
Blinded bishop defiantly picks up where he left off — at altar where Islamic terrorist tried to butcher him
MRC’s Bozell Joins FBN’s Varney in Slamming Media’s Campus Protest and Trump Coverage
Watch: Bill Maher’s awkward exchange with Don Lemon prompts Caitlyn Jenner to blast ex-CNN anchor as privileged, wealthy, entitled
Doocy, Wegmann, Gutierrez Grill Inept KJP Over Biden’s Inaction on Pro-Hamas Students

Leave a Comment - No Links Allowed:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *