Donald Trump lit the candles on his 80th birthday cake this morning. A milestone that has triggered a fresh wave of introspection in Westminster. Not about the former president's legacy, but about the age of our own leaders and the creeping reality of the grey workforce.
Downing Street sources are unusually candid. They admit the Trump birthday has given ammunition to both sides of the retirement reform argument. The 'silver ceiling' is cracking. But is that a good thing?
Let me decode the chatter from the Lobby. You have two camps. Camp one: the 'Stay Sharp' brigade. They point to Trump. Love him or loathe him, he is still a force. Still grabbing headlines. Still shaping a global movement. They argue that mandatory retirement ages are a relic. An affront to experience. They whisper that Sir Keir Starmer, at 62, is a spring chicken compared to some global leaders.
Camp two: the 'One Term and Out' faction. They whisper darker things. They say Trump's birthday is a reminder of gerontocracy. A warning. They point to the cognitive slips. The rambling speeches. They fear a leadership vacuum at the top of the UK's own parties. They note that the average age of a Conservative MP is now 54. Labour is not much younger.
But the real debate is not about Trump. It is about the OAP workforce. The government's own data shows over 65s are the fastest growing segment of the UK labour market. A million more since 2010. The Treasury loves it. More taxpayers. Less pension pressure. But union reps tell me something else. They talk of 'granny guilt trips'. People forced to work because the state pension is too meagre.
A senior minister, off the record, let slip that the Treasury is modelling a 'soft' increase to the state pension age. To 69 by 2030. Maybe 70 by 2040. But they dare not announce it. Not before the next election. Too toxic.
Meanwhile, polling data from YouGov this morning shows something curious. Among under 30s, 62% support a flexible retirement age. Let people choose. Among over 60s, only 34% agree. The older generation wants a hard stop. A definite endpoint. They do not want to work until they drop.
This is the game now. The Trump birthday is a mirror. It reflects our own anxieties. The average life expectancy is rising. But healthy life expectancy is flatlining. People live longer, but not better. The question Westminster is scared to ask: Should we work longer, or should we pay more now?
Backbenchers are circling. A group of Labour MPs, mostly new intake, are drafting a private members bill. They want a 'right to retire' at 65 with full pension. No means testing. No delays. The whips are nervous. They fear a revolt if the leadership caves to Treasury pressure.
On the Tory side, the 1922 Committee is restive. Some want a return to the triple lock plus. Others want to scrap it entirely. Chaos. Outgoing chair Sir Graham Brady is said to be 'exasperated'.
This story is not about Trump. It is about us. About the unspoken bargain between generations. About who carries the burden of an ageing state.
I am told the PM will avoid the topic at PMQs today. Safer ground. But the No.10 advisers know this will not go away. The birthday cake analogy is too perfect. Eventually, someone will have to cut it.
Watch this space. The 'silver vote' is organised. And they know where the voting booths are.








