Joe Biden has accidentally introduced the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, as âPresident Putinâ in a gaffe that will fuel further concerns about his mental acuity that have threatened to scuttle his presidential campaign.
Biden made the mistake while flanked by Nato leaders during a signing ceremony alongside Zelenskiy on the final day of the Nato summit in Washington. It came just an hour before a rare press conference by Biden that has been called âmake-or-breakâ for his campaign, as a growing number of political allies and donors have been calling for him to drop out of the race.
Concluding his opening remarks, Biden handed over to Zelenskiy with the words: âNow I want to hand it over to the president of Ukraine, who has as much courage as he has determination.â
He said: âLadies and gentlemen, President Putin!â
A number of European leaders began clapping hesitantly. German chancellor Olaf Scholz and Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni turned their heads in surprise as Biden mentioned the Russian leader, while other European leaders broke into an awkward smattering of applause.
Realising his mistake, Biden caught himself and said: âPresident Putin! Weâre going to beat President Putin. President Zelenskiy. Iâm so focused on beating Putin. Weâve got to worry about it. Anyway, Mr President.â
âIâm better,â Zelenskiy said, shaking Bidenâs hand.
âYou are a hell of a lot better,â Biden responded in concluding his remarks.
The remark elicited gasps in a press centre, where hundreds of journalists were watching the remarks live on an internal television feed. A number of people in the room shouted out âZelenskiyâ to correct Bidenâs mistake, after which he returned to the podium.
Zelenskiy had been due to give a press conference at the end of the Nato summit an hour later. But journalists who were waiting were told at short notice that the event was cancelled â meaning he didnât have to respond to questions about Bidenâs gaffe.
The news about the mistake quickly filtered into other press conferences with heads of government, rehashing questions about Bidenâs mental state that have loomed over the conference since it began.
Keir Starmer, asked about President Bidenâs gaffe, insisted that the Nato summit had made breakthroughs that were welcomed by President Zelenskiy and had left Nato in a stronger position.
Pressed by reporters on whether the US president was capable of serving another four years in office, he said: âLook, I was with him last night. We spent the best part of an hour together. We covered a lot of ground.
âWeâve been through two days of this council and come to a very good outcome. Heâs led through all, spoken at every session, pulled people together, and we got a good outcome and I think he should give credit for that.â
French president Emanuel Macron in his press conference said: âSlips of the tongue happen, itâs happened to me.â
Scholz was asked, in English, about Bidenâs gaffe in a press conference a few minutes later. He sidestepped the question, and said he hoped that Biden would continue to strongly support Ukraine.