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For Biden in 2024, is age really just a number?

WASHINGTON, United States — Joe Biden has joked about it, ignored it and suggested it makes him wise. A year out from the US presidential election, the issue of his age just won’t go away.

The 80-year-old Democrat is already the oldest president in American history, and if he wins a second term next year he will be 86 when he leaves the White House.

A series of trips -- most famously stumbling on the steps of Air Force One -- and verbal slips have gone viral on social media and given Republicans fodder for attacks. 

Polls show that it's a major worry for US voters concerned about what would happen if their commander-in-chief became incapacitated, and that it is distracting from his efforts to sell his policies.

Worse still for Biden, voters don't seem to have the same concerns about Donald Trump, despite the fact the former president and Biden's likely Republican rival is aged 77.

Seventy-four percent of people said Biden would be too old to serve a second term, compared to 50 percent for Trump, a recent ABC/Washington post poll showed.

But age in general has been unfairly "weaponized" in US politics, says S. Jay Olshansky, a longevity researcher at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

"Ageing is not what it used to be," Olshansky told AFP.

"There are very large segments of the population that survive to their eighth decade perfectly capable of being president or doing whatever they like," added Olshansky.

"To the contrary, accompanying chronological age is wisdom, knowledge, and experience."

Nevertheless, Biden's age will come under even deeper scrutiny during a grueling election campaign.

Biden must convince people he is fit by hitting the campaign trail "at least five days each week" next year, the Brookings Institute said in a commentary.

Biden's last medical in February described him as "vigorous" but his gait has become more shuffling and his voice often descends into a whisper.

Accidents such as tumbling off his bike have been broadcast worldwide, and he now uses the shorter stairs of the presidential plane to avoid further falls.

His propensity for gaffes -- from rambling answers about John Wayne films to saying he wanted to go to bed during a press

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