Logo

President Biden once pitied an older senator who was showing early signs of Parkinson’s disease, saying the “poor son of a bitch” was no longer up to the job.

Biden, now 81, made the cutting remark in the mid-1990s when asked about Sen. Claiborne Pell (D-RI), who was then in his late 70s, younger than the oldest-ever president is now, former White House reporter Tom Galvin recalled in an op-ed for Politico.

“I asked Biden if given Pell’s diminished capacity, he’d make a move to replace him,” Galvin recalled of Biden’s ambitions to oust Pell as chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.


  The 81-year-old president once pitied an older senator who he claimed was no longer up to the job because he’d started to show signs of Parkinson’s disease. AP The 81-year-old president once pitied an older senator who he claimed was no longer up to the job because he’d started to show signs of Parkinson’s disease. AP

The reporter said Biden replied, “That poor son of a bitch.”

“Pell was no longer up for the job, he told me, but like so many of his elderly colleagues, Pell couldn’t imagine a life outside Congress,” Galvin said of Biden, who was then the senator for Delaware.

The reporter, who now works as a communications strategist, said he was “stunned” by Biden’s remark, which he believes took place after President Bill Clinton’s 1994 State of the Union address.

However, he didn’t print it because at the time he had “no intention of writing about Pell,” who in 1995 would confirm being diagnosed with Parkinson’s.

Pell ended up losing the Foreign Relations Committee chair when Republicans seized control of the Senate later in 1994. After serving six terms in the Senate, his illness eventually forced him to retire in early 1997.

Pell was the sponsor of the federal education program known as Basic Educational Opportunity Grants, which has been giving students money since the 1973-74 school year. In 1980, the financial aid packages were renamed Pell Grants in his honor. Pell died on Jan. 1, 2009, weeks after his 90th birthday.

Biden’s apparent sympathy for Pell’s health emerged as the president faces mounting calls to give up his 2024 re-election campaign.


  Biden (center), who was the senator for Delaware at the time, dropped the remark about the health of Sen. Claiborne Pell (right) when he was speaking to a political reporter in the mid-1990s. Getty Images Biden (center), who was the senator for Delaware at the time, dropped the remark about the health of Sen. Claiborne Pell (right) when he was speaking to a political reporter in the mid-1990s. Getty Images

  Rhode Island Sen. Claiborne Pell began showing signs of Parkinson’s in his mid-70s. Getty Images Rhode Island Sen. Claiborne Pell began showing signs of Parkinson’s in his mid-70s. Getty Images

The commander-in-chief, who on Wednesday was diagnosed with COVID, has sparked widespread panic among Democrats about his cognitive fitness ever since his rambling June 27 debate performance.

The White House initially hid the fact that he had been seen by a Parkinson’s specialist, later claiming it was part of a regular checkup.

New York-based neurologist Dr. Tom Pitts is among experts to have raised the alarm, saying the president exhibits such “classic features of neurodegeneration” that he “could have diagnosed him from across the mall.”

A defiant Biden has so far resisted calls to drop out of the race, while the White House has insisted he doesn’t need a fresh medical exam.

Comments
anonymous profile image
Powered by RoundtableBuilt on infrastructure designed for real-time media. Learn more at RTB.io.© Roundtable 2026. By using this site you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy