Zachary Taylor had a plan. But then, so did the Cylons, and how did that work out for them?
George Washington (None, 1789-1797)
Thomas Jefferson (Democratic-Republican, 1801-1809)
James Monroe (Democratic-Republican, 1817-1825)
John Quincy Adams (Democratic-Republican, 1825-1829)
James Polk (Democrat, 1845-1849)
Abraham Lincoln (Republican, 1861-1865)
Chester Arthur (Republican, 1881-1885)
Grover Cleveland (Democrat, 1885-1889, 1893-1897)
William McKinley (Republican, 1897-1901)
Theodore Roosevelt (Republican, 1901-1909)
William Howard Taft (Republican, 1909-1913)
Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Democrat, 1933-1945)
Harry S. Truman (Democrat, 1945-1953)
Dwight Eisenhower (Republican, 1953-1961)
John Fitzgerald Kennedy (Democrat, 1961-1963)
Lyndon Baines Johnson (Democrat, 1963-1969)
George Herbert Walker Bush (Republican, 1989-1993)
William Jefferson Clinton (Democrat, 1993-2001)
Eliminated Presidents:
James Buchanan (Democrat, 1857-1861)
Franklin Pierce (Democrat, 1853-1857)
Andrew Johnson (National Union, 1865-1869)
Warren Harding (Republican, 1921-1923)
Millard Fillmore (Whig, 1850-1853)
Richard Milhous Nixon (Republican, 1969-1974)
Herbert Hoover (Republican, 1929-1933)
Ronald Reagan (Republican, 1981-1989)
Andrew Jackson (Democrat, 1829-1837)
Rutherford Hayes (Republican, 1877-1881)
Ulysses Grant (Republican, 1869-1877)
John Tyler (Whig, 1841-1845)
James Earl Carter (Democrat, 1977-1981)
James Madison (Democratic-Republican, 1809-1817)
Martin Van Buren (Democrat, 1837-1841)
Woodrow Wilson (Democrat, 1913-1921)
Calvin Coolidge (Republican, 1923-1929)
John Adams (Federalist, 1797-1801)
Benjamin Harrison (Republican, 1889-1893)
Gerald Ford (Republican, 1974-1977)
Zachary Taylor (Whig, 1849-1850)
I’ll continue to vote for John F. Kennedy. The Vietnam War was a very big mistake, and I don’t think the good things he did outweigh that mistake.
Voting closes at 2 PM Monday.
What does anyone think about going to Monday/Wednesday/Friday, at least until we’re down to the last 10 or so?
Kennedy and Jefferson are the most overrated presidents left, but I’m not ready to vote for either of them. The short list, I’d think, would be Monroe, Adams, Arthur, McKinley, and Taft.
I’ll take Adams this time out. A very good Secretary of State prior to the presidency, and a notable opponent of slavery after, but as president…not one of our country’s greatest leaders.
Looking at Quincy Adams’ wikipedia article, I can certainly see the argument. He deserves credit for standing up for Native Americans, though his ineffectiveness opened the doors to Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren.
J.Q. Adams for me, too. A capable diplomat before the White House, a courageous congressman and advocate (the Amistad case) after, but no great shakes as President.
JFK didn’t begin U.S. military involvement in Vietnam; Truman and Eisenhower had both sent advisors. It was under LBJ, of course, that we went whole hog. There is contemporary evidence that JFK would have reduced the U.S. commitment there in his second term.
Polk did everything he said he would do. In terms of truth in political advertising, and solid accomplishments during a single term in office (whether or not you like what he did), Polk is hard to beat.
I think I’ll jump on the J.Q. Adams bandwagon. I believe in his policies. He was a staunch supporter of the Monroe Doctrine, being one of its designers. He also supported the rights of Native Americans and in general fought against Jacksonites.
Unfortunately, he was an ineffective president. He just didn’t know how to get the Jacksonites on his side, and he didn’t do enough to combat them. Though part of his failures as a president have to do with the sheer power of his opposition. Lets face it; how many presidents could have managed to compromise with such a powerful political movement?
Don’t forget the “Herbert” - GWB was Bush Jr, GHWB was Bush Sr.
Honestly, apart from running out the clock on the Cold War and booting Saddam out of Kuwait, what did Bush Sr do that in any way made America or the world a better place?
The Bay of Pigs was indeed a disaster. But it taught JFK to not accept everything the military told him. This saved all of us during the Cuban Missile Crisis, when the military was advocating a full nuclear attack on the USSR. If George W. Bush had been president then, we’d all be dead now.
I agree. One of the members of ExComm (the executive committee of the NSC), I think it might’ve been Paul Nitze, said shortly afterwards that, if any of the other candidates for President in 1960 had been in charge in October 1962, World War III would have broken out.