How the ravages of age are ravaging the Democratic Party



Now is the time for the Democratic Party to get serious about its oldsters problem.

The furor over former President Joe Biden’s cognitive issues is not going away any time soon. On Tuesday, it bubbled up in the California governor’s race, when one candidate, Antonio Villaraigosa, a former mayor of Los Angeles, accused two other Democrats eyeing the governor’s mansion — former Vice President Kamala Harris and former Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra — of participating in a “cover-up” of Biden’s fading fitness in office.

“Voters deserve to know the truth. What did Kamala Harris and Xavier Becerra know, when did they know it, and most importantly, why didn’t either of them speak out?” Villaraigosa fumed in a statement, spurred by tidbits from the new book “Original Sin,” which chronicles the efforts of Biden’s inner circle to conceal his mental and physical decline. Villaraigosa called on Harris and Becerra to “apologize to the American people.”

Is Villaraigosa, who is 72, exploiting the orgy of Biden recriminations for political ends?

Probably.

Does he have a point?

Absolutely.

Team Biden deserves much abuse for its sins. That said, last week also reminded us that the Democrats’ flirtation with gerontocracy is not confined to a single office or branch of government when, on Wednesday, the House was shaken by the death of Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va.

Connolly, a 75-year-old lawmaker from Northern Virginia, had been in poor health. On Nov. 7 last year, two days after his reelection to a ninth term, he announced he had been diagnosed with esophageal cancer and would undergo treatments.

Seniority keeps winning

Even so, in December he won a high-profile contest against Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., to be the top Democrat on the Oversight Committee. The race was seen as a struggle over the future of the seniority system that has long shaped how Democrats pick committee leaders.

Despite concerns about his health, seniority carried the day.

On April 28, he announced that his cancer had returned and that he would not seek reelection next year. Less than a month later, he was gone.

Washington being Washington, his death was greeted with sadness but also with chatter about the political repercussions in the narrowly divided House. It was not lost on Beltway pundits that if Democrats had had one more “no” vote in their deliberations over President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill,” Republicans would have had to sway another of their holdouts to ram it through the House last week.

Connolly was the third House Democrat to die in recent months, after the deaths in March of Reps. RaĂșl Grijalva, D-Ariz., and Sylvester Turner, D-Texas, both septuagenarians.

All three seats are vacant for now.

Axios pointed out that eight members of Congress have died in office since November 2022. All were Democrats, with an average age of 75.

Cold political musings about the failing health or cognitive troubles of elected officials can feel heartless, if not aggressively ageist. And there is a difference, of course, between lawmakers who succumb to deadly illnesses and those who think they can simply defy the ravages of age.

But time takes its toll on everyone, and even among Washington’s hard-charging, well-maintained masters of the universe, precious few weather it as well as Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., or Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.

Neither major party is immune to the practical challenges of aging leaders. (For Republican drama, see last year’s long, mysterious absence of the now-retired Rep. Kay Granger, R-Texas.)

But the problem has been extra-sticky for Democrats for years, in part because Pelosi and her equally senior lieutenants, Reps. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., now 85, and Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., now 84, sat atop the caucus for so long that younger members started leaving in frustration — or plotted to oust them. It took a coup threat or two to get Pelosi et al. to relinquish their grip, and tensions between younger members and the old guard remain.

Experience vs. energy

The Ocasio-Cortez and Connolly struggle was just one of the generational matches to kick off this Congress, and the party has yet to find a good way to balance experience with energy.

Among other challenges, Democrats do not put term limits on committee leaders, unlike Republicans, and plum assignments are doled out based heavily on length of service.



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