Current:Home > MyToo old to work? Some Americans on the job late in life bristle at calls for Biden to step aside -Apex Capital Strategies
Too old to work? Some Americans on the job late in life bristle at calls for Biden to step aside
View
Date:2025-04-17 11:39:12
NEW YORK (AP) — A swath of Americans watching President Joe Biden is seeing something beyond debate-stage stumbles and prime-time miscues: Themselves.
Debate about the 81-year-old Democrat’s fitness for another term is especially resonating with other older Americans who, like him, want to stay on the job.
“People were telling me I should retire too,” says 89-year-old D’yon Forest, a New York comedian. “But you’ve got to keep working, no matter what.”
Forest has stumbled on an occasional joke and finds it more difficult to memorize her lines. But she’s busier than ever, drawing audiences and getting big laughs with bawdy jokes and ukulele-strummed songs. She dismisses Biden’s debate performance as a “blip” and grows angry that a single night would cause people to look past all the benefits age brings.
People 75 and older are the fastest-growing age group in the U.S. workforce. All told, about one in five Americans aged 65 and older are employed, according to the Census Bureau.
Many older adults are wary of seeing a peer shoved aside because of his age and, like Forest, insist it should be up to each individual when they decide to exit the workplace.
“He has the experience,” she says. “He has judgment. He’s seen it all.”
Even among that growing population of older workers, though, some want Biden to give up.
“Forget it! The party’s over!” says Betty Ann Talomie, an 81-year-old from Seneca Falls, New York, who was born just a few weeks after the president. “Some people can’t face that it’s time.”
Talomie worked her last shift as a waitress in January. She still treasured regular customers, loved her co-workers and relished having something to occupy boring winter days. But she started feeling more tired at the end of her shift and knew the time had come.
“It’s like anything at this age: It’s twice as hard to do anything,” says Talomie.
She plans to vote for Donald Trump, as she did in 2020, but says he’s ready for retirement too.
“I think they should both sit in lounge chairs,” she says.
Biden insists he’s not stepping aside. Trump, 78, has escaped similar questioning about his age. If he is elected and serves a full term, he would eventually supplant Biden as the oldest president in U.S. history.
Eli Trujillo, an 87-year-old barber in Cheyenne, Wyoming, sees age taking its toll on Biden, but he knows he doesn’t cut hair as fast as he used to or log as many hours either.
Who is he to judge when it comes to the president’s decision?
“If he feels he could still do it,” Trujillo says, “I don’t hold it against him.”
Older employees see rampant age discrimination in their workplaces, and for those who remain on the job, being asked about retirement plans is a constant aggravation.
“They look at me and say, ’Why don’t you retire? You can take it easy,” says Paul Durietz, a 76-year-old teacher in Gurnee, Illinois. “I just like teaching,” he tells them.
Durietz, who teaches seventh-grade social studies, may come home a little more tired than he used to, but he says working into later life is no longer a big deal.
Polls have shown older Americans are more likely than younger people to have a favorable view of Biden and are less likely to say he should withdraw to allow another candidate. But even among older people, Biden faces steep skepticism.
Six in 10 people over 70 favored Biden’s withdrawal from the race in a survey released Wednesday by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
Harriet Newman Cohen is one of them. Though she will vote for Biden if he remains, she finds his appearances painful to watch and fears he has lost all sense of self awareness.
“What’s happening now,” the 91-year-old attorney says, “is giving older age such a bad rap.”
Cohen says she hasn’t slowed at all and finds old age has brought her “more acuity, more keenness, more energy.” Even as she bristles at the idea of anyone suggesting she retire from the work she loves, she believes the time has come for Biden to step aside.
“I’ve just been so lucky,” Cohen says. “But the president has not been so lucky.”
Though many younger people can’t imagine working longer than they have to, older workers often say they can’t imagine themselves not remaining on the job.
Though some who work into their 70s, 80s and beyond do so because their finances force them to, many others do so out of preference. Polls consistently show job satisfaction grows with age and for those who love their work, deciding to quit is a tough decision.
Jim Oppegard, a 94-year-old school bus driver in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, is wrestling with whether to return to work next month as a new school year begins.
He loves the children and having extra cash to donate, and he continues to pass annual exams to make sure he’s up to the job. The Guinness World Records certified him earlier this year as the world’s oldest bus driver, an honor that made him reflect on his future.
He’s considered retiring before but has always gone back. This time might be different.
“There’s something to be said,” Oppegard says, “for going out on top.”
___
Matt Sedensky can be reached at [email protected] and https://twitter.com/sedensky
___
Associated Press writer Linley Sanders in Washington contributed to this report.
veryGood! (148)
Related
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Prisoners with developmental disabilities face unique challenges. One facility is offering solutions
- Mi abuela es un meme y es un poco por mi culpa
- Lionel Messi makes 2024 goals clear: Inter Miami is chasing MLS Cup
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Vice President Kamala Harris to join in marking anniversary of Bloody Sunday on Alabama bridge
- Millions of Americans are family caregivers. A nationwide support group aims to help them
- An Indiana county hires yet another election supervisor, hoping she’ll stay
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- People seeking drug treatment can't take their pets. This Colorado group finds them temporary homes.
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- 'The Black Dog': Taylor Swift announces fourth and final version of 'Tortured Poets'
- Suspected drunk driver charged with killing bride on wedding night released on bail
- 2024 Masters Tournament: Who will participate at Augusta? How to watch, odds, TV schedule
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Collision of 2 firetrucks heading to burning house injures 6 firefighters, police chief says
- Getting off fossil fuels is hard, but this city is doing it — building by building
- Barry Keoghan Cheers on Sabrina Carpenter at Taylor Swift's Eras Tour in Singapore
Recommendation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
At least 2 wounded in shooting outside high school basketball game near Kansas City
How a student's friendship with Auburn coach Bruce Pearl gave him the strength to beat leukemia
Organizations work to assist dozens of families displaced by Texas wildfires
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
'Dune: Part Two' ending explained: Atreides' revenge is harrowing warning (spoilers ahead)
The semi driver rescued dangling from a bridge had been struck by an oncoming vehicle: mayor
From spiral galaxies to volcanic eruptions on Jupiter moon, see these amazing space images