Geriatric US Politics Reminder Of USSR Waning Years
General Secretary of the Communist Party of the USSR Konstantin Chernenko publicly appeared, as was customary for top Soviet leaders, casting a ballot, even if only on live TV. His performance was closely anticipated because he had been out of the public eye for two months.
He was shown at a Kremlin polling station, supposedly. Surrounded by government officials and newspaper photographers, he stood up and leaned on an aide. He looked gaunt. He mumbled a few greetings. Instead of reassuring citizens that the USSR was in sound hands the broadcast created an unsettling stir nationwide: Who, exactly, is in charge of the massive, one-party, nuclear-armed state?
In 2024, the United States, ostensibly an open political system in which such a spectacle could not take place, is facing a similar, if rather drawn-out drama over its leader's health. A visibly weak and confused President Joe Biden made a bumbling appearance at a debate last month with his political rival, ex-President Donald Trump. Since then, his self-portrait as a capable leader – shared publicly by members of his Democratic Party and favorable media stories – has fallen apart.
He is under siege by erstwhile backers who want him replaced in the election.
The parallel between the Biden situation and enfeebled Soviet leaders of the 1980s – Chernenko was the last of three sickly top officials who died in office – has brought on comparisons with the decaying USSR.
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