Outgoing Rep. Annie Kuster says she decided not to run again after seeing Biden’s decline
Outgoing Representative Annie Kuster (D-N.H.) said that she made the decision not to run for her seat again after meeting with President Joe Biden early in the campaign and seeing his decline.
Kuster, 68, said this March she would not run for re-election to the House seat she's held for nearly 12 years. She told the Boston Globe on Thursday that she'd made the decision after flying with Biden on Air Force One. She says that though she felt he was capable of serving the rest of his term as president, she could see the signs of aging.
“Just in my heart, [I] reached the conclusion that this would be a very challenging campaign for him, and to put himself out there for another four-year term was was going to be a struggle," she told the Globe.
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She also suggested that Biden's advisers may have tried to hide the effect that the president's age had on him, but wasn't sure how much the party had. When the Democratic party first started floating the idea of replacing him on the ticket, she compared it to discussing end-of-life care for loved ones.
“It was painful. I haven’t had these kind of conversations since I talked to my own parents about, you know, their aging and their limitations,” she said.
Kuster hopes other senior citizen politicians follows her lead.
“I’m trying to set a better example,” she said. “I think there are colleagues — and some of whom are still very successful and very productive — but others who just stay forever.”