NEW YORK — A swath of Americans watching President Joe Biden is seeing something beyond debate-stage stumbles and prime-time miscues: Themselves.
Debate about the 81-year-old Democrat's fitness for another term is especially resonating with other older Americans who, like him, want to stay on the job.
''People were telling me I should retire too,'' says 89-year-old D'yan Forest, a New York comedian. ''But you've got to keep working, no matter what.''
Forest has stumbled on an occasional joke and finds it more difficult to memorize her lines. But she's busier than ever, drawing audiences and getting big laughs with bawdy jokes and ukulele-strummed songs. She dismisses Biden's debate performance as a ''blip'' and grows angry that a single night would cause people to look past all the benefits age brings.
People 75 and older are the fastest-growing age group in the U.S. workforce. All told, about one in five Americans aged 65 and older are employed, according to the Census Bureau.
Many older adults are wary of seeing a peer shoved aside because of his age and, like Forest, insist it should be up to each individual when they decide to exit the workplace.
''He has the experience,'' she says. ''He has judgment. He's seen it all.''
Even among that growing population of older workers, though, some want Biden to give up.