Worst Presidents: John Tyler (1841-1845)

February 16, 2007 RSS Feed Print

At sixth worst, Virginian John Tyler was the first president to rise by succession from the vice presidency—when William Harrison succumbed to pneumonia only 30 days after being sworn into office.

Born into the planter aristocracy, Tyler began his political career as a Jefferson Republican, opposing Federalist schemes for high protective tariffs and federally funded "internal improvements."

As a U.S. senator, he supported President Andrew Jackson's crusade against the national bank but soon fell out with Old Hickory when he quashed South Carolina's attempt to nullify a modest tariff. (Tyler, a steady champion of states' rights and slavery, defended South Carolina's prerogative to secede if it wished.)

Joining the young Whig Party, he ran with popular war hero Harrison, and the ticket of "Tippecanoe and Tyler Too" trounced the Democratic candidates.

But once he became president, Tyler opposed everything his adopted party stood for, including a national bank. One fellow Whig accused Tyler of reviving "the condemned and repudiated doctrines and practices of the worst days of Jackson's rule." The entire Harrison-appointed cabinet resigned, and Tyler had to fight an attempt to impeach him.

His one triumph: establishing the principle that a vice president who succeeds to the top office has no less authority than an elected president. No small accomplishment when most of his own party despised him.

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P.S. J. Laub. Don't be a tool bag. First Nation American Indian people have not gotten over genocide and Jews have not gotten over the holocaust. That's not the way oppression works. If it worked that way, Indians would have a national voice & power outside the reservation and Israel would have no need for statehood. Think.

salemowalk of TX 5:42PM January 19, 2012

The question of why theses antebellum presidents are ranked so poorly has less to do with their stance on slavery itself, and more to do with their inaction and appeasement around the issue. When the nation is in crisis, it needs a President who will make sound, thoughtful, and ethical decisions to avert crisis. Most of these presidents failed to do that. In fact, they all seem to fit into one (or more) of four categories: failure in preventing succession, failure in preventing/ending financial crisis, failure to end corruption in their administration, and failure to stay alive long enough to enact policies. It seems that Americans value wrong decision more than indecision.

salemowalk of TX 5:31PM January 19, 2012

This guy is a really bad president or thats my opinion!

Sally of KY 1:40PM January 05, 2012

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