As Donald Trump celebrated his 80th birthday this week, a peculiar dispatch arrived from across the Atlantic: British royal physicians, the very doctors who attend to the ageing Windsors, offered their professional perspective on octogenarian leadership. It was an unusual intrusion into American political theatre, yet one that reveals a growing anxiety about age and power on both sides of the Atlantic. The doctors, speaking on condition of anonymity, suggested that the cognitive demands of high office at 80 require a level of physical and mental resilience that can't be assured.
They pointed to the Queen's own gradual withdrawal from public duties in her later years, noting that even a long-lived monarch eventually cedes responsibility. Trump, of course, has always thrived on defiance of expectation. His birthday was marked by a rally in Florida, where he waved to supporters with characteristic vigour, ignoring the elephant in the room: the creeping years that render every leader a temporary trustee of power.
Yet the real story is not Trump's age, but the cultural shift it represents. We are living through an era of gerontocracy, where leaders in their seventies and eighties hold sway from Washington to Beijing. The royal physicians' intervention is a reminder that biology is not a partisan issue.
For all the talk of policy and ideology, the human body remains the ultimate limit. On the streets of small-town America, I've found that people are more pragmatic. They worry less about birthdays and more about whether the person in charge can still remember their name.
They see Trump's age as both a liability and a reassurance: he is too old to be a radical, but also too old to be adaptable. It is a tension that polls cannot capture. The British doctors, with their quiet expertise, have merely given voice to what many already feel.
Age is not just a number, but a condition of leadership that we prefer not to examine too closely.









