In light of last week's elections and the protests that have gone on since, including rioting in downtown Portland, I took a look at the political parties espoused by each of our Presidents since the administration of Abraham Lincoln. I was curious to see if there is a consistent trend of switching parties in office, and how many years each party remains in the executive office.
This is a very simple, unsophisticated study and there are many more aspects of each party's incumbency that I could delve into, but for now what you see is what you get.
Including Lincoln's terms beginning in 1861, presidents have belonged to the Republican party for 88 years and the Democratic party for 68 years.
The longest unbroken stretch for any one party in office lasted 20 years, with Roosevelt's three full terms combined with Truman's almost 2 full terms.
In my lifetime (since 1954), Republicans have held the top office for 35 years and Democrats for 28 years.
I don't know what this all means. It might look unbalanced to Democrats, yet 'we the people' have made these choices. We aren't coerced in voting, we aren't intimidated at the booth; voting is secret and personal.
Winston Churchill supposedly said, "Democracy is the worst form of government except for all of the others." I have visited places where an incumbent president (aka dictator) receives 100% of the vote. Who does he think he's fooling? I imagine his people going to the polls with smiles on their faces, the dictator's photo prominently featured on their car windshield, then going home and weeping. Some Americans are weeping this week, and I understand they are sad to not get what they hoped and planned. Four years comes around again pretty fast though.
# President Term (s) Years per Party
16 Lincoln 1861-1865 4
17 Johnson 1865-1869 4
18 Grant 1869-1873
1873-1877
19 Hayes 1877-1881
20 Garfield 1881-1881
21 Arthur 1881-1885 16
22 Cleveland 1885-1889 4
23 Harrison 1889-1893 4
24 Cleveland 1893-1897 4
25 McKinley 1897-1901
26 Roosevelt 1901-1905
1905-1909
27 Taft 1909-1913 16
28 Wilson 1913-1917
1917-1921 8
29 Harding 1921-1923
30 Coolidge 1923-1925
1925-1929
31 Hoover 1929-1933 12
32 Roosevelt 1933-1937
1937-1941
1941-1945
33 Truman 1945-1949
1949-1953 20
34 Eisenhower 1953-1957
1957-1961 8
35 Kennedy 1961-1963
36 Johnson 1963-1965
1965-1969 8
37 Nixon 1969-1973
1973-1974
38 Ford 1974-1977 8
39 Carter 1977-1981 4
40 Reagan 1981-1985
1985-1989
41 Bush 1 1989-1993 12
42 Clinton 1993-1997
1997-2001 8
43 Bush 2 2001-2005
2005-2009 8
44 Obama 2009-2013
2013-2017 8
45 Trump 2017-
interesting!
ReplyDeleteI'd love to read your thoughts on the Electoral College sometime. I've seen so many pro/cons articles on Facebook.
ReplyDeleteDo you think it's an outdated method that should have been thrown out years ago? Is it wise to keep? Does it give smaller states more power than they should get? Would abolishing it mean presidential candidates would "camp out in only California and New York" as someone on the Diane Rehm Show stated the other day?
I'd love to hear your thoughts if you feel up to commenting here or on another post one day.