Former President Joe Biden on Friday attended his grandson’s high school graduation in Connecticut, marking his first public appearance since announcing his prostate cancer diagnosis.
Biden’s personal office announced last week that the 82-year-old had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer that had spread to his bones following a doctor’s visit because of “increasing urinary symptoms.” A follow-up statement on May 20 said that Biden had not been previously diagnosed with prostate cancer and had not been tested for it in more than a decade.
Biden’s most recent physical exam as president took place in February 2024. His physician, Kevin O'Connor, did not identify any signs of cancer in that report, describing Biden as a “healthy, active, robust 81-year-old male who remains fit to successfully execute the duties of the Presidency.”
Biden’s health became a focus during his re-election campaign. He had maintained he was fit to run for and serve a second term as president, despite a poor debate performance against then-Republican candidate Donald Trump that ultimately led to his withdrawal from the race.
Reacting to the news of Biden’s diagnosis, Vice President JD Vance wished the former president well but also questioned whether he had been fit for presidential duty.
“The cover-up of President Biden’s obvious mental decline is a historic scandal,” Comer said. “The American people deserve to know when this decline began, how far it progressed, and who was making critical decisions on his behalf.”
Comer’s letters were issued after the release of a new book, “Original Sin,” co-authored by CNN’s Jake Tapper—who moderated the June 2024 presidential debate—and Axios’s Alex Thompson. The two journalists described in their book how White House staffers and Democratic allies expressed concerns about Biden’s mental acuity in the closing months of his term, citing instances in which he struggled to recognize longtime political allies, lost his train of thought in important conversations, and forgot important dates.
“The people who wrote those books were not in the White House with us, and they didn’t see how hard Joe worked every single day,” she said. “He‘d get up, he’d put in a full day, and then at night—I'd be in bed reading my book—and he was still on the phone, reading his briefings, working with staff. It was nonstop.”