Friday, November 27, 2009

Opinion

John Aloysius Farrell

Lincoln, Washington, and ... Reagan?

August 12, 2008 09:03 AM ET | John Aloysius Farrell | Permanent Link | Print

In Alvin Felzenberg’s new book, The Leaders We Deserve (and a Few We Didn’t) we get a revisionist take on an academic parlor game: ranking the U.S. presidents.

Al is of a conservative bent, so it is no surprise that three Democratic Party icons–Franklin Roosevelt, Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson–get a good mugging here.

Or that his top five presidents are Republican (with the lone exception of George Washington.)

Or that Abe Lincoln tops the list.

Or that Ronald Reagan is in a tie for third with Teddy Roosevelt, just a whisper behind Washington and Lincoln.

(I have a vision of Al and Grover Norquist, jackhammers in hand, heading toward Mount Rushmore. Alert the curators at Monticello.)

Felzenberg contends that previous ratings–like the celebrated surveys of Harvard historians Arthur Schlesinger Sr. and Arthur Schlesinger Jr.–display the liberal bias of American historians. And Al, a political scientist who teaches at the University of Pennsylvania and George Washington University, will have none of that.

As a liberally-biased American historian, I have more than a few reservations about the Felzenberg ratings: like the way he rounds out his top 10 with Ulysses S. Grant, Zachary Taylor and William McKinley, placing them and Republican mediocrities like Calvin Coolidge and Benjamin Harrison above guys named Jefferson and Adams and Madison and Monroe.

Eisenhower at Number 5?

McKinley at Number 7? For what? Fattening the wallets of the robber barons and conquering the Philippines?

Gimme a break, Al.

I’d place Washington with Lincoln, trailed by FDR and Jefferson and Adams and Monroe: the presidents who most ably led the nation when its existence was at stake.

And then there’s a bunch of good guys like Teddy and Woodrow Wilson and Reagan and Jackson and maybe Ike and Harry Truman.

When demoting Democrats, Al offers one new, reasonable, rationale. In his criteria, he judges the presidents on their attitudes toward African-Americans. Democratic presidents like Jefferson and Wilson, sons of the Solid South, tend to fare poorly, while Republicans like Grant get a boost for kicking the Rebs around.

In the end, Al tends to prove his point that all ratings are subjective. (How else could that giant of the civil rights movement, Ronald Reagan, replace Roosevelt, Jefferson and Jackson at the pinnacle of presidential performance?)

And, looking ahead, one interesting tidbit caught my eye.

The president who entered office with, arguably, the most relevant experience for the job was James Buchanan, who ranks dead last in the Felzenberg rankings, and in the ratings of most historians.

And the man with the least relevant experience? That would be Lincoln, at Number One. The guy with the biggest monument of all.

So what, Al, does that say about Barack Obama?

Tags: Ronald Reagan | George Washington | Abraham Lincoln | William McKinley

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Reader Comments

Lincoln, Washington and Reagan

Even Andrew Jackson would take issue with your characterization of him as one of the "good guys." His wont was to instill fear. "Genocide Your Plan" Jackson's Your Man." Take it from the Cherokee. "John Marshall gave his opinion, let him enforce it," said Old Hickory.

And what of "good guy" segregationist Wilson? Bravo. (Let the record show that water fountains and lavatories in government facilities were not segregated under Taft and desegregated-all too slowly-under Harding, Coolidge and Truman. Who have I left out? A good administer, Old Woody made certain that civil service applications included photographs of applicants.

Please tell me what FDR ever did for civil rights? He opposed anti-lynching legislation and persuaded civil rights leaders to call off a march on Washington to protest discrimination in government employment and contracting in exchange for a promise he never kept. Oh, have I mentioned the internment of Japanese Americans that both those awful right wingers J.Edgar Hoover and Robert Taft (one of JFK's profiles in courage opposed. When informed that Eleanor Roosevelt had spoken out in favor federal legislation outlawing lynching and measures to admit more Jewish refugees in the pre-war years, FDR announced that he could not control the "Missus." (What would Hillary delegates have thought of that.

Time for Jack to calm down. I lowed the beloved FDR from 3rd to 7th place. Hardly the end of the world. I give him credit for ridding the world of one of the worst tyrannical regimes in history, which is more than my critics do for Reagan. (Even Dobyrin gave the Gipper that!)

These old myths die hard, I know. which is why I wrote the book. Let the record show that U.S. Grant was the last president before Ike to send federal troops to the south to enforce civil and voting rights for African Americans. And let the record show that Harry Truman, who I consider a brave, courageous, and neat-great president, was also beset by scandal. (Remember "Korea, Corruption, and Communism?)

Cheers,

Laughable Rankings

I will agree hands down about Lincoln being the best president this nation has ever had. But McKinley ranked in even the top half of all presidents is laughable! He began unnecessary wars with Spain and the the Philippines which cost untold lives and costs. He was a puppet of the Republican party. Hmmmm...history repeats itself?

Of course the Regan cult continues to grow for no apparent reason.

U.S. Grant? One of the most corrupt administrations in our history.

Felzenberg is obviousy so biased that his rankings are laughable.

http://abrahamlincolnblog.blogspot.com

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John Aloysius Farrell is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. An award-winning Washington reporter, he has written for The Boston Globe and The Denver Post and is the author of Tip O’Neill and the Democratic Century and an upcoming biography of the great American defense attorney, Clarence Darrow.

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