Former Biden Aides See New Cover-Up With Cancer Announcement

Longtime aides to former President Biden told The Post on Monday they were alarmed that his stage 4 prostate cancer wasnโ€™t detected before it spread to his bonesโ€”and they worry that concerns over public reaction may have delayed its diagnosis.

โ€œI do believe that they felt like something was going on, and were worried about it and kind of hedged around it for a little bit,โ€ one White House staffer who worked closely with Biden, 82, told the New York Post.

Unlike what appears to have been a deliberate effort to hide his declining mental fitness, former aides told The Post they believe there was a willful disregard of his physical condition, driven by fears that a cancer diagnosis might have derailed last yearโ€™s election, when Biden refused to step aside and open the field to other Democratic contenders.

The former presidentโ€™s office revealed on Sunday that he only received a diagnosis two days earlier after reporting โ€œincreasing urinary symptoms.โ€

โ€œI just donโ€™t know how they just, kind of find this out on a Friday, and itโ€™s this far advanced and serious,โ€ the Biden White House aide said. โ€œ[If itโ€™s] in the bones, thereโ€™s gotta be a discomfort โ€ฆ I think they just didnโ€™t test.โ€

Another longtime Biden aide questioned why his presidential physician, Dr. Kevin Oโ€™Connor, did not conduct a Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA) blood testโ€”one of the most widely used methods for detecting prostate cancer.

The February 2024 physical report, Bidenโ€™s final medical examination while in office, made no mention of the test, The Postย noted.

โ€œI think the likely scenario, knowing Kevin Oโ€™Connor pretty well, is that they had a discussion on what a PSA test is, and they decided not to do one because it would likely be elevated and cause a story, since a lot of older men have high PSAs that are false positives,โ€ that source told the outlet.

โ€œA blood test has a paper trail. They probably just didnโ€™t do the test. I think it would leak if he had a PSA test they tried to bury,โ€ the source added.

โ€œWhatโ€™s ironic is that if they didnโ€™t give the president a PSA test because of the potential for optics of a possible false positive, that decision is ultimately going to lead to his death because they could have caught it earlier,โ€ the person noted further.

On Monday, a number of medical experts said Biden likely had prostate cancer for years before it metastasized to his bones.

โ€œHe did not develop it in the last 100, 200 days. He had it while he was president,โ€ oncologist Dr. Zeke Emanuel, an appointee to Bidenโ€™s COVID-19 advisory board, told MSNBCโ€™s โ€œMorning Joe.โ€

โ€œHe probably had it at the start of his presidency in 2021. I donโ€™t think thereโ€™s any disagreement on that,โ€ he added.

While in office, Biden faced growing concerns about his mental sharpness and visible signs of physical decline. He ultimately ended his re-election campaign on July 21, following a wave of defections from Democratic allies after a widely criticized debate performance against then-GOP frontrunner Donald Trump on June 27.

Biden had argued he was the partyโ€™s best hope to defeat Trump, but critics contend that his insistence on staying in the race ultimately helped clear the path for Trumpโ€™s return to power.

The announcement of Bidenโ€™s cancer diagnosis came just two days ahead of the release of โ€œOriginal Sin,โ€ a highly anticipated book alleging that his team actively concealed his physical and cognitive deterioration. The book was co-written by CNN host Jake Tapper, who chastised Lara Trump in 2020 when she tried to point out Bidenโ€™s mental decline months before he won the election.

One former White House aide expressed skepticism about the timing of the announcement, suggesting it was intended to preempt a potentially narrative-defining account of Bidenโ€™s decline, said The Post.

Biden did say in July 2022 he had cancer โ€” in the present tense โ€” but the White House press office rushed to say he was referring to historical skin cancer.


Posted

in

by

Tags:

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *