Stay informed with free updates
Simply sign up to the US politics & policy myFT Digest — delivered directly to your inbox.
Democrats sought to rally around Joe Biden on Friday after they were left reeling by a special counsel’s report that depicted the US president as a “well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory”.
As the party struggled to overcome the likely blow to Biden’s political fortunes in an election year, some lawmakers tried to come to the president’s defence.
Dan Goldman, a congressman from New York, told MSNBC on Friday morning he did not have “any concerns” about Biden’s age or ability to do the job. “President Biden is incredibly experienced, knowledgeable, wise, and I don’t have concerns about his age,” Goldman said.
“Remember, the job of the president is to guide our country,” he added. “It is, you know, not to be a cheerleader for the United States. It is to govern our country.”
But other figures were more circumspect, warning of the lasting political impact of the report by Republican Robert Hur, who oversaw the investigation into the president’s handling of classified materials found at his private residences and offices.
Dan Pfeiffer, a former senior adviser to ex-President Barack Obama, wrote in a newsletter on Friday morning he feared the special counsel’s descriptions of Biden’s memory would “break through to the public at large”.
“The president must repeatedly demonstrate that Hur is wrong and that he is up to the job,” Pfieffer said. “The only way around is through, which means doing more interviews and more press conferences.”
Hur concluded this week that Biden, 81, had “wilfully retained and disclosed” sensitive documents.
While his report said Biden would not face a criminal case, it argued the president’s “memory was significantly limited” during interviews with Hur’s office in 2023, as well as with a ghostwriter working on his memoir in 2017.
The president is facing mounting concerns about his advanced age as he tries to convince voters to give him another four years in the White House.
“My memory is fine,” Biden declared at a press conference Thursday night which grew increasingly hostile as reporters shouted questions about his age and mental acuity.
The report said that, in interviews with the special counsel’s office, the president “did not remember when he was vice-president” and could not remember, “even within several years”, when his son, Beau Biden, died.
It added that, coupled with Biden’s “co-operation” with the probe, jurors in a potential trial could be easily convinced Biden “made an innocent mistake” and did not intend to break the law.
“We have also considered that, at trial, Mr Biden would likely present himself to a jury, as he did during our interview of him, as a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory,” the report said.
“It would be difficult to convince a jury that they should convict him — by then a former president well into his eighties — of a serious felony that requires a mental state of wilfulness.”
The report came after several recent gaffes by the president. Speaking last weekend at an event in Nevada, Biden confused François Mitterrand, the former president of France who died in 1996, with the current president, Emmanuel Macron.
Biden subsequently referred to the late German chancellor Helmut Kohl while recounting a story about former German chancellor Angela Merkel.
In Thursday’s press conference, Biden referred to Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi as the leader of Mexico in response to a reporter’s question about the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.
Read the full article here