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Presidential Eligibility

This version was saved 14 years, 5 months ago View current version     Page history
Saved by Alex
on November 4, 2009 at 8:24:53 am
 

 

So Who Gets to Become President

 

     After centuries of rule under a harsh and ungodly royal dictator, it was only reasonable that the Founding Fathers would institute some amount of restrictions on who can assume the most coveted position in the United States government. They highlighted the most obvious targets; age, background, and any tangible way to measure loyalty. Thus, the great framers enacted a clause in Article 2 Section 1, that states "No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty-five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States." This sounds great; establish an age requirement so the president has enough wisdom and experience in life, make sure they have been a resident for 14 years to prove their loyalty to the Union, and they have to be natural born. But wait... what is this "natural born" clause?

     G. Edward White, a distinguished professor in the college of Law at the University of Virginia, recently wrote an article expanding on this topic. Professor White asserts that although the Constitution never explicitly defined the "natural born" term, to the casual citizen it seems fairly overt that the clause refers to people who are born inside the United States or to American parents. The early delegates chose to implement this restriction because, not surprisingly, they feared the impact the purely British born subjects may have. Yet this issue has since sparked much more debate, especially considering the extent to which we are an immigrant population and how we no longer need to fear any one country in particular. (1) 

 

 G. Edward White-http://www.law.virginia.edu/lawweb/faculty.nsf/PrFMPbW/gew

 

     The interesting impediments to the office of the Presidency have done a great deal in dictating who actually became president. The stated clause above, of course, cannot stand by itself. Other issues in the constitution have been equally momentous. For example, neither women nor African Americans were guaranteed any political rights in the original constitution; this was not formally achieved until 1870 for Blacks (15th amendment) and 1920 for women (19th amendment). In reality, however, prejudice against these minorities impeded full participation until the late 20th century. Such a political atmosphere has resulted in an executive office that has been primarily occupied by white males. There is one notable exception - our current president, Barack Obama, clearly does not fall under one of these descriptors. 

     Race and gender are not the only determinants to the presidency. Another prominent one is religion. Our great country, as you may already know, was founded at the hands of starch protestants. It is no surprise, then, that we have only had one Roman Catholic president (John F Kennedy).

     To be sure, there is a great degree of diversity amongst our many presidents. We’ve had a former peanut wholesaler from Georgia (Jimmy Carter), an actor (Ronald Reagan), a CIA chief (George H.W. Bush), and a former managing director of a major league baseball team (George W Bush).  Thus, the notion of anyone can one day become president does to some extent ring true.

 

 

 

Table 3.1 summarizes the demographics of our presidents. 

 

 

President Inauguration Age  Party Religion State (Political)
George Washington 57 NA Episcopalian Virginia
John Adams 61 Federalist Unitarian Massachusetts
Thomas Jefferson 57 Dem-Repub. Episcopalian Virginia
James Madison 57      Virginia 
James Monroe 58      Virginia 
John Quincy Adams 57      Massachusetts 
Andrew Jackson 61      Tennessee
Martin Van Buren 54      New York 
William Henry Harrison 68      Ohio
John Tyler 51      Virginia 
James K. Polk 49      Tennessee 
Zachary Taylor 64      Virginia 
Millard Fillmore 50      New York 
Franklin Pierce 48      New Hampshire 
James Buchanan 65      Pennsylvania 
Abraham Lincoln  52      Illinois 
Andrew Johnson  56      Tennessee 
Ulysses S Grant  46      Illinois 
Rutherford B Hayes  54      Ohio 
James Garfield  49      Ohio 
Chester Arthur  51      New York 
Grover Cleveland  47      New York 
Benjamin Harrison 55     Indiana 
Grover Cleveland 55     New York 
William McKinley  54      Ohio 
Theodore Roosevelt  42      New York 
William Howard Taft  51      Ohio 
Woodrow Wilson  56      New Jersey 
Warren Harding  55      Ohio 
Calvin Coolidge  51      Massachusetts 
Herbert Hoover  54      Iowa 
Franklin D Roosevelt  51      New York 
Harry Truman  60      Missouri 
Dwight Eisenhower  62      Kansas 
John F Kennedy  43      Massachusetts 
Lyndon B Johnson  55      Texas 
Richard Nixon  56      California 
Gerald Ford  61      Michigan 
Jimmy Carter  52      Georgia 
Ronald Reagan  69      California 
George H.W. Bush  64      Texas 
Bill Clinton  46      Arkansas 
George W. Bush  54      Texas 
Barack Obama  47      Illinois 
 
Did you know? John F. Kennedy is widely recognized as the youngest president? So why was Theodore Roosevelt younger during inauguration?? Roosevelt was not elected at that age because McKinley was assassinated. Thus, Kennedy was the youngest elected president. 

 

 

Next Section: Electing the President 

 

 

1) http://www.law.virginia.edu/html/news/2009_fall/white_oped.html 

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