President Biden’s onstage tumble at the U.S. Air Force Academy made headlines around the world. But he’s far from the only world leader or political candidate who has taken a highly visible fall.
From Chinese leader Xi Jinping (whose 2019 slip commentators dubbed the “great fall of China”) to Gerald Ford (whose fall while disembarking Air Force One in 1975 was the subject of late-night comedy skits) and other politicians around the world, trips and tumbles are fodder for laughs, cringes — and hot takes.
When the mighty fall, we just can’t look away.
“It breaks the image of infallibility of powerful figures,” Bart Cammaerts, a professor of politics and communication at the London School of Economics, told The Washington Post. Projecting the right image is serious business for politicians. In Biden’s case, his critics immediately used it as an opportunity to highlight the oldest U.S. president’s age and question his fitness for office.
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But there is also something captivating about politicians appearing more human. “Think of slapstick comedy, breaking the seriousness and ceremonial aspect of the event,” Cammaerts said.
“With people in power, there is so much effort to control the public image — body language, speech, facial expressions — that seeing all those things fall away all at once, in a total loss of control, is particularly gripping,” said Dan Stevens, professor of political behavior in the United States and Britain at Exeter University.
Here are other memorable political falls or trips.
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A media frenzy ensued when Hillary Clinton, as Democratic presidential nominee, buckled and stumbled in 2016 after becoming sick during a 9/11 memorial service in New York.
While Clinton was diagnosed with pneumonia, and her doctor said she became overheated and dehydrated at the event, the incident became a hot button in a highly charged campaign — when her rival Donald Trump had repeatedly questioned her “stamina” for office and accused her of being “exhausted,” The Post reported at the time.
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Trump, as president, looked unsteady on his feet at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 2020. His slow, unsteady walk while descending a ramp led his critics to use the hashtag #TrumpIsNotWell. As The Post reported at the time, Trump is “exceptionally attuned” to his public image and keen on being seen as strong — and his critics were quick to compare the incident with videos of his rival Biden jogging. Trump tweeted that the ramp was “very long & steep, had no handrail and, most importantly, was very slippery” and insisted that the “last thing I was going to do is ‘fall’ for the Fake News to have fun with."
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He also made headlines in the United Kingdom when he clutched the hand of Prime Minister Theresa May in 2017 during her visit to the White House. Trump appeared to grab her hand as he walked down a ramp, before patting it and letting go. The incident came as a “surprise” to May, her advisers later reportedly said.
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Exactly 48 years ago to the day of Biden’s June 1 tumble, President Gerald Ford was also captured falling down by the media. The embarrassing incident occurred overseas as he was disembarking Air Force One in the rainy Austrian city of Salzburg.
Accompanied by his wife, Ford, 61, walked tentatively down the wet plane steps before seeming to lose his balance and skidding down the remaining stairs, ending up in a heap on the tarmac as officials clambered to get him back on his feet. He apparently later quipped: “Thank you for your gracious welcome to Salzburg, and I am sorry I tumbled in.”
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The incident was caught on camera and beamed globally. It was also used in late-night comedy shows at the time portraying the president as bumbling and clumsy.
Stumbles, especially from older politicians, are often framed as part of a narrative about fitness for office, Stevens said, also citing the example of Bob Dole who at age 73 ran against Bill Clinton in 1996 and fell off a stage at a campaign event.
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China’s leader Xi Jinping caused a commotion when he nearly slipped off a stage in Russia during the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in 2019. On a crowded platform, surrounded by U.N. Secretary General António Guterres and other world leaders, Xi appeared to get close to the crowd, bending and waving before almost falling toward them.
He swiftly regained his footing, although he looked a little sheepish, before coolly walking away and waving. Commentators labeled it the “great fall of China” and mused about the implications for his image in a country that goes to extreme lengths to portray Xi as a strong leader and avoids any public criticism.
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Zimbabwe’s late leader, Robert Mugabe, went flying down red-carpeted steps in the capital Harare in 2015.
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An immediate government denial followed, and some members of the press were forced to delete their photographs by security officials. “Nobody has shown any evidence of the president having fallen down because that did not happen,” Information Minister Jonathan Moyo told the state-owned Zimbabwe Herald, labeling speculators “malcontents.” He then blamed poor carpeting. “To be honest with you, even Jesus, let alone you, would have also tripped in that kind of situation,” he added.
The authoritarian leader appeared to struggle with the stairs and then miss one, falling down as he headed for his car. His critics pointed to his age — 90 — and saw it as another reason for him to walk away after more than three decades in power in the southern African country.
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Russia’s President Vladimir Putin is known for carefully curating his image, releasing photographs of him bare-chested riding a horse or swimming in a freezing Siberian lake or practicing judo in apparent displays of his strength and manliness.
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But in 2019 the world saw him floored during another pursuit: playing ice hockey at Sochi’s Bolshoy Ice Dome. After winning the game, Putin glides around the rink in a victory lap clapping and waving at fans. The Russian leader then slammed into the floor before being helped up and skating off.
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Another male leader said to care about his image — Britain’s former prime minister Boris Johnson — also makes the epic falls list. Johnson, often appearing with his hair uncombed and shirts untucked, has been perceived by some British media as a curated image of his nonchalant approach to government.
In 2015, the then-mayor of London made tabloid headlines when he slipped during a charity tug-of-war game at a World War I commemoration event with Britain’s armed forces. Clenching his teeth and grimacing, Johnson pulled hard in the game taking place along the River Thames. He was heard exclaiming “oh bugger,” before ultimately losing his footing and falling on the muddy grass before regaining his composure.
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“In the current era of promotional politics, a politician’s ‘brand’ — or public persona — is as critical for gaining public acceptance as their policies,” said Lee Edwards, professor of strategic communication and public engagement at LSE.
All public appearances are therefore scrutinized and “where weaknesses emerge, they are highly visible and up for discussion,” she said. Memes and social media commentary “perpetuate the story, along with the embarrassment, for much longer than used to be the case.”
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Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt fell down steps in Paris in 2015, landing her on her hands and knees. She was exiting France’s Elysee Palace wearing high heel shoes before she wobbled and her ankles appeared to give way, causing her to tumble and let out a scream. She quickly dusted herself off and proceeded to take questions from nearby reporters.
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British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher fell down after politically fraught meetings in Beijing in 1982, in which she was negotiating the future of the British colonial territory of Hong Kong.
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As she left the Great Hall of the People, she stumbled down the steps — a moment captured on camera. At the time, her fall was perceived by many in Hong Kong as a sign that negotiations were not going well for the British — some described it as an embarrassing or ominous moment in the negotiations, or a moment that symbolized how Britain’s power was waning at a time when China was adopting an increasingly bullish position on Hong Kong.
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