Just after the conclusion of this week's NATO summit in Washington, President Biden held a rare solo press conference. The questions were not just about foreign policy. You earlier explained confidence in your vice president. Yes. If your team came back and showed you data that she would fare better against former President Donald Trump, would you reconsider your decision to stay in the race? No, unless they came back and said, there's no way you can win. Me. Me.
No one's saying that. No poll says that. In the weeks since Biden's disastrous performance in the presidential debate, a steady drip of high profile supporters, everyone from members of Congress to big donors like George Clooney, has urged him to step aside. They're worried he's too old for a second term, too vulnerable to losing to Trump.
But the polls haven't really shifted all that much, and Biden is digging in. I'm in this to complete the job I started. I did this painful thing tonight because for me, the answer to that is I just don't see that trajectory. I don't see the numbers. Shortly after that press conference, Connecticut Representative Jim Himes added his name to the list of Democrats who have publicly called for Biden to end his presidential campaign, as he explained to CNN.
In the over two weeks since that presidential debate, I've thought a lot about a reporting trip that I made last fall to western Pennsylvania. We gathered a group of voters all around the same age as Biden and Trump to talk about how they viewed age in the race. We danced. This is a little call-out dance that Stella's going to call it out. Okay. Here we go. And we talked about Biden's age, about Trump's time in the White House. This week, we talk some more.
Consider this. President Biden believes he can withstand a bruising campaign, win reelection, and lead the country for four more years. So how have recent events changed how a group of key voters in a key swing state are thinking about the president? From NPR, I'm Scott Detrow.
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It's Consider This from NPR. Over the past few weeks, amid all the intense scrutiny on President Biden and his ability to stay in the race and defeat former President Trump, I've thought a lot about those older voters in western Pennsylvania we met with last fall.
How they viewed the debate, what they thought about Biden's future, how much, if at all, their opinions on the campaign had changed. There were three people I really wanted to hear from. First, John Fuller, who was deeply frustrated at his choices and wasn't quite sure who he'd vote for. Advice to both.
Don't run. Fuller punctuated the end of our voter roundtable with that memorable line. And when I called him up this week to catch up, he told me his view hasn't changed. Well, let me just start with this. If the election were right now, do you know which way you would go? It's very difficult. It's six in one hand and a half dozen in the other. My perspective is both have some common challenges, one being age. And President Biden...
Certainly from his last performance in the debate, he had some cognitive and physical issues. On the other hand, former President Donald Trump had some legal issues in the court still remaining, as well as some character issues.
And neither of these put me in a mind to vote for either of them. But if I had to choose, I would go with President Biden. Fuller, who turned 82 in May, said he watched the debate the other week and he was discouraged, as he put it. What surprised me most was the difference between the performance of President Biden for the State of the Union address and
Fuller says he has good days and bad, and that maybe mentally he could see himself in a tough job like Biden running the country. But
But physically, he thinks at this age, it's just too difficult. Another thing I wanted to ask you is that when you've seen President Biden push back against this calls for him to step aside, he has said,
that this is coming from pundits, this is coming from people in D.C. and the coasts. And he says that when you look at it, voters in swing states don't want me to step aside. Black voters in particular don't want me to step aside. You're a black man in a swing state. So I wanted to ask you what you thought about that argument from the president. I think at this point in time, President Biden should take a hard look and consider what's best for
from the United States and not just what's best for him. Put the pride aside, he's had a productive political career. I think it's time for him to take an exit from the political stage. Take his bow. We appreciate what he's done, the progress that has been made.
But for me, it's time for him to step aside. Is his age at this point the most important issue to you? What is the most important topic that you're going to think about this election through? Physical performance. Physical and cognitive performance. The second person I wanted to talk to, Kathy Huber, one of the people I met at the line dancing class at a Pittsburgh senior center.
She was energetic that day about Joe Biden, but also about the dancing and the other activities she does to keep busy. I would put it this way. You've seen the ad where the gal says, my age is just a number. Yeah. And that's the way I feel about it. I feel at 80, I'm just as sharp as I ever was. In fact, it was hard to schedule a phone call between all of Huber's classes. By the way, she's 81 now.
When we finally connected, Huber said that the debate was unfortunate, as she put it, but she's still backing Biden and she still thinks he could do the job. I'm just a couple of months younger than Biden. I still have all my marbles. I might be able to speak a little more forcefully than he does, but I think he's got the experience, the background and the expertise to go on for a second term. Do you think he can win the election?
I'm hoping so. I speak to many, many people about this, and they kind of feel that I do, that Trump's biggest drawback is the fact that he is such a damn liar. He's also a convicted felon. Huber would still back the Democrats if, as many people have theorized, Vice President Kamala Harris ended up topping the ticket. But it's clear she'd be less enthusiastic.
I would hope that if he stood aside for her, I would hope that she would have a very, very strong running mate like Newsom, like Shapiro, like Buttigieg, somebody who is very much in the public eye and is obviously a very intelligent, informed person. And that leaves Len Zappler, the person I was most interested in hearing from.
When we talked in the fall, he was the voter who best exemplified the path that Biden's campaign sees to his reelection. A voter who does see real flaws in Biden. My chief worry is I'm losing it. And he's on the verge of losing it, I think. So I wouldn't want this guy out there running the
the show. But Zappler is also a lifelong Republican who, the time we first talked, thought Trump was too untenable and planned to vote for Biden. I hope he has a very stalwart and capable vice president. That's what I would pray for. Ten months later, Len Zappler is now 86. And if the election were today and it's Trump and Biden, who do you think you'd vote for?
I'd have to go with Trump. I mean, I'm not happy about Trump. He's sort of a jerk. That's not presidential. But he gets stuff done, you know, and at least we know that his mental acuity is there. Zappler says as the election has gone on, his top concern has been Biden's ability to do the job. The fact that he is losing it.
That's, you know, that's the way the world works. You're born, you grow up, you flourish, and then you begin to wither, and then you're gone. And I think he's on the withering end right now, a lot more than Trump. Zappler says swapping Biden for Harris would not bring him back into the fold.
But what I asked about the initial reason he couldn't vote for Trump, the attempt to overturn the 2020 election, the violence of January 6th. Nobody should be messing with our Constitution. And that is bothersome. You're right.
And thanks for reminding me. This is a problem that I have with Trump. I don't think that he's going to get away with being a tyrant. You know, we still have our availability of dealing with somebody like that. And it's not going to happen. I think he'd be okay for four years. And who knows? I hope I'm right.
Len Zapler, Kathy Huber, and John Fuller, all around President Biden's age and all residents of the key swing state of Pennsylvania. This episode was produced by Mark Rivers and Kai McNamee. It was edited by Courtney Dorning and Patrick Jaron Watanon. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
Thanks to our Consider This Plus listeners who support the work of NPR journalists and help keep public radio strong. Supporters also hear every episode without messages from sponsors. Learn more at plus.npr.org. It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Scott Detrow.
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