A halting Joe Biden struggled on Thursday to allay concerns about his age during a fiery debate with Donald Trump, marked by personal insults.
A bombastic Trump attacked his successor, calling him a failure on the economy and the world stage.
Biden attempted to respond but delivered his points falteringly, speaking rapidly in a raspy voice, stumbling on his words, and often staring open-mouthed.
His performance, following a week of seclusion for preparation, sparked new concerns within the Democratic Party, as polls show Trump either tied or ahead for the November election.
It was the first debate ever between a sitting president and a former president, with each accusing the other of being history’s worst.
Trump and Biden, who were each the oldest president when first elected, even accused each other of being childlike as they argued over their golf swings.
Biden, 81, and Trump, 78, did not shake hands as they walked to their podiums at CNN headquarters in Atlanta. There was no live audience, and their microphones were muted when the other spoke.
Biden hit Trump with rehearsed lines, reminding millions of television viewers that Trump could be the first convicted felon in the White House.
“You have the morals of an alley cat,” Biden said.
Trump, a veteran of rallies and reality television, spoke loudly, listing numerous complaints about Biden’s record.
“I’m friends with a lot of people. They cannot believe what happened to the United States of America. We’re no longer respected,” Trump said.
Trump seized on Biden’s delivery, saying at one point, “I really don’t know what he said at the end of that sentence. I don’t think he knows what he said either.”
‘Slow start’
Stopping by a Waffle House restaurant to pick up food after the debate, Biden told reporters he had a sore throat but said, “I think we did well.”
The White House was clearly in damage-control mode.
Vice President Kamala Harris, in a live interview on CNN, said Biden’s record was “extraordinarily strong” but acknowledged concerns about his debate performance.
“Yes, there was a slow start, but it was a strong finish,” Harris said.
Kate Bedingfield, a former Biden communications director, said on CNN that “it was a really disappointing” evening for the president.
“I don’t think there is any other way to slice it,” she said.
A CNN poll found that 67 percent of debate watchers thought Trump had won.
Democrats are set to formally name Biden as their candidate in August in Chicago, with little way to change course unless the president himself withdraws.
But Julian Zelizer, a historian at Princeton University, said Biden’s supporters would be “extremely concerned.”
“Biden fueled the basic perception that has continued to overshadow him,” he said.
At a watch party in San Francisco, Hazel Reitz said she would still vote for Biden but added, “I can’t understand a word that he says. Isn’t it sad?”
Personal attacks
Neither candidate laid out new policies, with most exchanges consisting of attacks on the other’s record.
In one of the most personal moments, Biden cited accounts that Trump had described soldiers who died in the Normandy landing as “suckers” and noted his own son Beau, who served in Iraq and later died of cancer.
“My son was not a loser, was not a sucker. You’re the sucker. You’re the loser,” Biden said.
Trump denied the remarks and repeatedly accused Biden of incoherence.
On foreign policy, Trump accused Biden — who faces backlash from parts of his Democratic base over his support for Israel — of not helping Israel “finish the job” against Hamas.
“He doesn’t want to do it. He’s become like a Palestinian — but they don’t like him because he’s a very bad Palestinian, he’s a weak one,” Trump said.
Trump described Biden’s withdrawal from Afghanistan as the “most embarrassing moment in the history of our country” and said it encouraged Russia to invade Ukraine.
Biden, however, noted that he was the first recent president who has not had soldiers at risk overseas.
Trump and Biden also locked horns over abortion and immigration, key issues for their respective bases.
Biden, attacking Trump for appointing justices to the Supreme Court who ended Roe vs. Wade, said, “It’s been a terrible thing, what you’ve done.”
One candidate not on the stage was anti-establishment activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who failed to meet CNN’s threshold of reaching 15 percent in four national polls. Kennedy instead spent the 90 minutes taking questions on a live stream.
Source: AFP