Black Political Thought

Icon

Just another WordPress.com weblog

President George W. Bush Ranks Near Bottom of Top Presidential Leaders in C-SPAN Poll

CSPAN– Historians Survey Results Category

Total Scores/Overall Ranking

<!–

–>

President’s Name 2009 Final Score Overall Ranking
2009 2000
Abraham Lincoln 902 1 1
George Washington 854 2 3
Franklin D. Roosevelt 837 3 2
Theodore Roosevelt 781 4 4
Harry S. Truman 708 5 5
John F. Kennedy 701 6 8
Thomas Jefferson 698 7 7
Dwight D. Eisenhower 689 8 9
Woodrow Wilson 683 9 6
Ronald Reagan 671 10 11
Lyndon B. Johnson 641 11 10
James K. Polk 606 12 12
Andrew Jackson 606 13 13
James Monroe 605 14 14
Bill Clinton 605 15 21
William McKinley 599 16 15
John Adams 545 17 16
George H. W. Bush 542 18 20
John Quincy Adams 542 19 19
James Madison 535 20 18
Grover Cleveland 523 21 17
Gerald R. Ford 509 22 23
Ulysses S. Grant 490 23 33
William Howard Taft 485 24 24
Jimmy Carter 474 25 22
Calvin Coolidge 469 26 27
Richard M. Nixon 450 27 25
James A. Garfield 445 28 29
Zachary Taylor 443 29 28
Benjamin Harrison 442 30 31
Martin Van Buren 435 31 30
Chester A. Arthur 420 32 32
Rutherford B. Hayes 409 33 26
Herbert Hoover 389 34 34
John Tyler 372 35 36
George W. Bush 362 36 NA
Millard Fillmore 351 37 35
Warren G. Harding 327 38 38
William Henry Harrison 324 39 37
Franklin D. Pierce 287 40 39
Andrew Johnson 258 41 40
James Buchanan 227 42 41

Filed under: Abraham Lincoln, Former President George W. Bush, Franklin D. Roosevelt, George Washington, John F. Kennedy, President Bill Clinton

Hillary Clinton’s Comments About Robert Kennedy’s Assassination Should Be Deathknell for Her Campaign

Hillary Clinton, has once again, put her foot in her mouth. Like Barack Obama, I will give her the benefit of the doubt. I don’t think that she would be that callous and dumb at the same time as to infer that she is remaining in the race because there may be a connection with the assassination of Robert Kennedy and Barack Obama. Barack Obama took the high road by saying in a statement to Puerto Rican radio station Isla, that “I have learned that when you are campaigning for as many months as Sen. Clinton and I have been campaigning, sometimes you get careless in terms of the statements that you make. And I think that is what happened here.””Sen. Clinton says that she did not intend any offense by it,” he added, “and I would take her at her word on that.”

Clinton’s remarks to the editorial board at the Argus Leader in South Dakota Friday struck some nerves partly because it came in the wake of Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy’s health problems and because of longstanding concerns about Obama’s security.”People have been trying to push me out of this ever since Iowa,” Clinton said Friday. “I find it curious because it is unprecedented in history. I don’t understand it.”You know, my husband didn’t wrap up the nomination in 1992 until he won the California primary sometime in the middle of June. Right?” she added later in the conversation. “We all remember Bobby Kennedy was assassinated in June in California. You know, I just– I don’t understand it.”

She apologized and was backed up by a supporter, Robert Kennedy, Jr. who said in a statement: “It is clear from the context that Hillary was invoking a familiar political circumstance in order to support her decision to stay in the race through June.” Today, the Rev. Al Sharpton talked to Clinton about her remarks and gave her the benefit of the doubt.”I don’t believe that anyone is dumb enough to suggest that something happen to Sen. Obama,” Sharpton said.

Her remarks were an enormous misstep for her, but I really do not believe she was being malicious in any way. This is further proof that this nomination process has gone on way too long and people are just tired of the back and forth between both candidates. Mathematically, Clinton cannot win the nomination but I suspect she may be jockeying for the VP spot, which in my opinion would be a bad idea for Obama to pick her, but her popularity with millions of people across the USA cannot be ignored.

Her comments were unfortunate and is a sensitive matter because Barack Obama has received a lot of death threats. It is puzzling as to why she brought Robert Kennedy’s name up. She could have cited other candidates to invoke a political circumstance similar to hers. She’s saying that anything can happen in this campaign, but it was a lack of sensitivity on her part. She has told us repeatedly that Barack Obama does not have a lot of experience and she is the best person for the job. With a gaffe like this, I seriously doubt that she can stake that claim now with a straight face. To add her to the ticket does not bode well for her because one has to ask, with comments like this, how trustworthy could be she? She has dealt a serious blow to what is left of her campaign and I wish she would take her cue to leave. Just my thoughts, you be the judge…..

Filed under: Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy