World

Biden falls on stage at air force graduation

White House says US president ‘totally fine’ after appearing to trip on sandbag

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 02 Jun 2023 3:30PM

Biden falls on stage at air force graduation
Conservative social media users have been quick to react to US President Joe Biden’s fall on stage at a graduation ceremony at the US Air Force Academy in Colorado. – AFP pic, June 2, 2023

WASHINGTON – US President Joe Biden fell after handing out the final diploma during a graduation ceremony at the US Air Force Academy in Colorado today, the second time the 80-year-old has tumbled since taking office, reported German news agency (dpa).

Biden turned to return to his seat as the ceremony neared its end when he tripped and went down on both knees, his right arm breaking his fall. An air force official and two Secret Service agents quickly reached the fallen president and helped him to his feet, according to videos posted on social media.

After being helped up, Biden pointed at an object on the stage and appeared to indicate he tripped on it. A reporter travelling with Biden sent a dispatch indicating the object was a sandbag. The reporter said the president stood until the ceremony ended a few minutes later.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, travelling with Biden, later told the pool reporter the president is “totally fine” and wore a “big smile” as he boarded Air Force One.

Biden has twice stumbled while climbing airport tarmac staircases while boarding Air Force One, once a few months after taking office in 2021 and again while departing Warsaw earlier this year. Conservative social media users were quick to react to today’s fall with a mix of declarations he is too old for office or jokes about his physical condition.

Former president Donald Trump, 76, is already attempting to make Biden’s age a 2024 campaign issue.

Biden is not the first senior US official to take a tumble this year, after Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell tripped and fell at a fundraising event in Washington. The Kentucky Republican, 81, missed several weeks of Senate work after suffering a concussion and injuring his ribs.

Collectively, their tumbles underscore the ages of many top leaders heading into what promises to be a heated election cycle.

Voters will decide about Biden’s age in November 2024. If he seeks reelection, Kentuckians would decide on McConnell’s two years later. – Bernama, June 2, 2023

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