We’ve all been witness to “Sleepy Joe’s” nodding off in slumber during the summit convention, his constant verbal speech blunders (“Hey man…you know…the thing…it’s doing it…”), and his obvious cognitive decline.
So the question remains, “Is Joe Biden stable enough to be our President?”
It’s the age old question that has been floating around since Biden took to office, serving as our President.
A recent poll has showed that it’s almost an equal divide amongst the American people.
Polls show that 46% of voters are still rather confident in Biden and what he can offer as a president. However, 48% are saying no way and that Biden is mentally unstable to continue serving.
Why are so many concerned when it comes to Biden?
Most people claim it has to do with Biden’s age. With him turning 79 and being the oldest to occupy the president’s seat, it’s a huge red flag and concern.
His verbal mistakes and refusal to take questions from the press, show his cognitive decline. According to many critics that have come forward since Biden became president, he is rapidly declining when it comes to good health.
Even with so many concerns relating Biden, he still claims he has every plan to run for reelection in three years. This has proven to weigh heavily on the Democrats and whether it will hinder their party substantially when reelections take place.
However, Democrats still largely have confidence in Biden’s mental abilities, a large segment of independents, by a 23 point point margin, have lost that confidence. The dissatisfaction among independents has translated to other polling metrics, including Biden’s general job performance rating, which dipped to a new low of 38 percent in October.
Personally, I don’t foresee him being able to run for reelection. Not only does his health and behavioral mishaps effect my opinion, but also the fact that he has fallen back on so many promises that he initially made.
With inflation prices soaring, constant border problems with immigration, and his asinine way of handling the Covid-19 pandemic; I have a hard time getting behind such a person.
There are way more qualified candidates that could push our economy into a better future.