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The American President - by Philip B. Kunhardt, Jr. The American President - by Philip B. Kunhardt, Jr.
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AMLR
AMLR is on page 386 of 481
Mar 07, 2026 07:11PM Add a comment
The American President

AMLR
AMLR is on page 347 of 481
Feb 19, 2026 07:30PM Add a comment
The American President

AMLR
AMLR is on page 303 of 481
Feb 16, 2026 07:49PM Add a comment
The American President

AMLR
AMLR is on page 283 of 481
Feb 14, 2026 07:57PM Add a comment
The American President

AMLR
AMLR is on page 249 of 481
Feb 12, 2026 06:58PM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 450 of 481
"...all civil officers of the United States shall be removed from office on impeachment for, and on conviction of, treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors" (444).
Feb 11, 2025 09:46AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 442 of 481
"Elected governor in 1978, thirty-two-year-old Bill Clinton bristled with ideas and energy. But he also made a series of political miscalculations. By seeming not to listen to his constituents, by raising licensing fees, and by giving an impression of intellectual arrogance, in 1980 he lost his bid for reelection...'I think [the loss] was good for me...If you survive it, you normally come out ahead'" (432).
Feb 05, 2025 09:39AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 430 of 481
"Roosevelt's ambitions cast a pall over the second half of Taft's presidency, as did the disastrous midterm elections, which went decisively to the Democrats. As the pressures mounted, Taft reacted by overeating more and more, eventually ballooning to 355 pounds. To escape the anxiety, he played endless rounds of golf, took long trips across the country, and grew crankier by the day" (420).
Jan 31, 2025 10:08AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 418 of 481
"...there was the subject dearest to his heart: American expansionsim and 'manifest destiny.' Polk was determined, here too, to carry on a balanced national program, dividing his efforts between the Northwest and the Southwest. His twin goals were the settlement of the Oregon boundary with Britain, and the acquisition of Mexican-owned California, a subject closely linked to the Texas issue" (410).
Jan 26, 2025 10:32AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 408 of 481
"The Constitutional Convention was Madison's moment of special destiny, just as the Declaration of Independence had been Thomas Jefferson's. It was Madison who proposed the all-important Virginia Plan, outlining a tripartite government with separate legislative, executive, and judicial branches, with the legislature divided into a House and Senate" (401-2).
Jan 21, 2025 10:28AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 396 of 481
"'It's very difficult to psychoanalyze oneself,' Richard Nixon once said. 'Most people would give me rather low grades as far as "charisma" and "gregariousness" and all that sort of thing that the politician is supposed to have...But the essence of every great leader I have known - and I'm not saying I'm great - he was a lonely man'" (386).
Jan 16, 2025 07:13AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 386 of 481
"Roosevelt let solitude and open spaces and intense physical labor heal his broken heart. But more important, he taught himself how to channel his aggression into a new form of energy with a purpose. 'The only thing...to do is treat the past as past'" (375).
Jan 12, 2025 10:26AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 372 of 481
"'I remember well my early days,' Cleveland once wrote 'I have always felt that my training as a minister's son has been more valuable to me than any other incident of my life'" (361).
Jan 09, 2025 03:44PM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 360 of 481
"At six feet one inch, and weighing less than 140 pounds, Andrew Jackson cut a strange figure in the presidency. He wore thick coats to lend the illusion of substance, and he was often sick in the White House, coughing up blood caused by the old dueling bullet still lodged near his heart. To ease his pain he sometimes bled himself, using his penknife to open the veins" (352).
Jan 06, 2025 05:49AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 346 of 481
"His father, Prescott Bush, was a successful businessman who went on in later life to become a Senator. Bush credited him with passing on his core values: 'Tell the truth, be honest, work hard, try to see the other guy's point of view while sticking to your own principles. These were truisms, you might say that my three brothers and my sister and I had inculcated into us growing up'" (337).
Dec 28, 2024 07:10AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 336 of 481
"...when the Senate rejected the treaty, Wilson's great dream for a new world order was shattered. 'I have given my vitality, and almost my life, for the League of Nations,' Wilson wrote. 'If I were not a Christian I think I should go mad'" (327).
Dec 24, 2024 07:06AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 324 of 481
"McKinley took an active role in negotiating the Treaty of Paris, and forcefully stood up to the Speaker of the House, who opposed it. By so doing, he established the modern presidency as he preeminent force in American national government" (314).
Dec 18, 2024 09:14AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 312 of 481
"The last of the original Virginia presidents, he possessed none of Thomas Jefferson's eloquence, or James Madison's genius, or George Washington's stature. But James Monroe had presided over a vast expansion of the American empire. He had spoken out as if the United States were a world power, and as he did so, it began to become one" (309).
Dec 15, 2024 05:30AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 302 of 481
"To Reagan, much as it had been to Calvin Coolidge, big government was the enemy of the American way. Reagan's vision was one of individual enterprise and a return to what he called the self-confident spirit of the founding fathers. When he won the election by an electoral landslide, he called it 'the Reagan revolution of 1980'" (294).
Dec 07, 2024 07:34AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 292 of 481
"In contrast to the glitzy stars of the roaring twenties, Hoover projected an image of public-spiritedness and morality and, above all, competence. In 1921 he was named President Harding's secretary of commerce, a post to which he was reappointed by Calvin Coolidge. He was soon being described as 'Under-Secretary of everything else, ' as he staked out claims to many aspects of other departments" (284).
Dec 04, 2024 07:30AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 282 of 481
"My father...had the strong New England trait of great repugnance at seeing anything wasted...He regarded waste as a moral wrong" (273).
Nov 24, 2024 06:21AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 272 of 481
"America, for Jefferson, represented something new in history - a giant leap forward from the old ways of other countries. America was to be built upon enlightened individualism and self-government. It was to be a vast domain of liberty, filled with essentially equal people" (260).
Nov 23, 2024 09:03AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 258 of 481
"...Truman was severely criticized for dropping the bomb on Japanese citizens. But to the end of his life, he never doubted his decision. 'The greatest part of the President's job,' he said, 'is to make decisions - big ones and small ones, dozens of them almost every day...The President, whoever he is - has to decide. He can't pass the buck to anybody'" (251).
Nov 21, 2024 07:01AM Add a comment
The American President

Jeff Ragan
Jeff Ragan is on page 248 of 481
"But if Arthur became a creditable president, he also soon found he hated the office. Bored by the endless desk work and by matters of state, he routinely arrived late to the office and procrastinated on duties. He lived for his time off, and for his regular vacations, which he spent fishing or cruising on the presidential yacht" (240, 244).
Nov 19, 2024 06:06AM Add a comment
The American President

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