List of US Presidents (ABW): Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 338: Line 338:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Warren G. Harding|28}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Leonard Wood|28}}
| [[File:Warren G Harding-Harris & Ewing.jpg|150px]]
| [[File:Leonard Wood, administrator, soldier, and citizen (1920) (14579077497).jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Harding, Warren G." | '''{{wp|Warren G. Harding}}'''<br>{{Small|(1865–1923)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Wood, Leonard" | '''{{wp|Leonard Wood}}'''<br>{{Small|(1860–1927)}}<br>
| {{dts|March 4, 1921}}<br/>–<br/>{{dts|August 2, 1923}}{{efn|name=diedintraterm}}
| {{dts|March 4, 1921}}<br/>–<br/>{{dts|August 7, 1927}}{{efn|name=diedintraterm}}
| style="background-color:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}}" |
| style="background-color:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}}" |
| {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}}
| {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}}
| {{wp|1920 United States presidential election|1920}}
| {{wp|1920 United States presidential election|1920}}
| {{wp|Calvin Coolidge}}
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Calvin Coolidge|29}}
| [[File:Calvin Coolidge cph.3g10777 (cropped).jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Coolidge, Calvin" | '''{{wp|Calvin Coolidge}}'''<br>{{Small|(1872–1933)}}<br>
| {{dts|August 2, 1923}}{{efn|Calvin Coolidge succeeded to the presidency upon the death of Warren G. Harding.}}<br />–<br/>{{dts|March 4, 1929}}
| style="background-color:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}}" |
| {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}}
| {{gray|{{endash}}}}
----
----
{{wp|1924 United States presidential election|1924}}
{{wp|1924 United States presidential election|1924}}
| ''Vacant&nbsp;through<br/>March 4, 1925''
| {{wp|Warren G. Harding}}
----
{{wp|Charles G. Dawes}}


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Herbert Hoover|30}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Henry L. Stimson|29}}
| [[File:President Hoover portrait.jpg|150px]]
| [[File:Henry Stimson, Harris & Ewing bw photo portrait, 1929.jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Hoover, Herbert" | '''{{wp|Herbert Hoover}}'''<br>{{Small|(1874–1964)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="L. Stimson, Henry" | '''{{wp|Henry L. Stimson}}'''<br>{{Small|(1867–1950)}}<br>
| {{dts|March 4, 1929}}<br />–<br />{{dts|March 4, 1933}}
| {{dts|August 7, 1927}}<br />–<br />{{dts|March 4, 1933}}
| style="background-color:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}}" |
| style="background-color:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}}" |
| {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}}
| {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}}
Line 372: Line 360:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt|31}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt|30}}
| [[File:FDR 1944 Color Portrait.jpg|150px]]
| [[File:FDR 1944 Color Portrait.jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Roosevelt, Franklin D" | '''{{wp|Franklin D. Roosevelt}}'''<ref>As the longest serving {{wp|American}} president in history at twelve years long, {{wp|Franklin D. Roosevelt}}, a {{wp|Democratic Party (United States)|Democrat}}, surpassed the previous record held by his fifth cousin and {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}} politician {{wp|Theodore Roosevelt}}. In this, {{wp|Franklin D. Roosevelt|Franklin}}, who took office in 1933, did so exactly twenty years after {{wp|Theodore Roosevelt|Theodore}}'s term as president ended in 1913, namely on the same date of March 4th.</ref><br>{{Small|(1882–1945)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Roosevelt, Franklin D" | '''{{wp|Franklin D. Roosevelt}}'''<ref>As the longest serving {{wp|American}} president in history at twelve years long, {{wp|Franklin D. Roosevelt}}, a {{wp|Democratic Party (United States)|Democrat}}, surpassed the previous record held by his fifth cousin and {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}} politician {{wp|Theodore Roosevelt}}. In this, {{wp|Franklin D. Roosevelt|Franklin}}, who took office in 1933, did so exactly twenty years after {{wp|Theodore Roosevelt|Theodore}}'s term as president ended in 1913, namely on the same date of March 4th.</ref><br>{{Small|(1882–1945)}}<br>
Line 392: Line 380:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Harry S. Truman|32}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Harry S. Truman|31}}
| [[File:TRUMAN 58-766-06 (cropped).jpg|150px]]
| [[File:TRUMAN 58-766-06 (cropped).jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Truman, Harry S." | '''{{wp|Harry S. Truman}}'''<br>{{Small|(1884–1972)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Truman, Harry S." | '''{{wp|Harry S. Truman}}'''<br>{{Small|(1884–1972)}}<br>
Line 406: Line 394:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower|33}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower|32}}
| [[File:Dwight D. Eisenhower, official photo portrait, May 29, 1959.jpg|150px]]
| [[File:Dwight D. Eisenhower, official photo portrait, May 29, 1959.jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Eisenhower, Dwight D" | '''{{wp|Dwight D. Eisenhower}}'''<br>{{Small|(1890–1969)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Eisenhower, Dwight D" | '''{{wp|Dwight D. Eisenhower}}'''<br>{{Small|(1890–1969)}}<br>
Line 418: Line 406:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of John F. Kennedy|34}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of John F. Kennedy|33}}
| [[File:John F. Kennedy, White House color photo portrait.jpg|150px]]
| [[File:John F. Kennedy, White House color photo portrait.jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Kennedy, John F." | '''{{wp|John F. Kennedy}}'''<ref>A {{wp|Roman Catholic}} throughout his life, {{wp|John F. Kennedy}} was the first {{wp|Roman Catholic}} to be elected president, defeating {{wp|Richard Nixon}}, and later the first {{wp|Roman Catholic}} to be re-elected, defeating {{wp|Barry Goldwater}} in the process, followed afterward by his younger brother {{wp|Robert F. Kennedy}}, the second {{wp|Roman Catholic}} to be elected and re-elected as president.</ref><br>{{Small|(1917-1995)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Kennedy, John F." | '''{{wp|John F. Kennedy}}'''<ref>A {{wp|Roman Catholic}} throughout his life, {{wp|John F. Kennedy}} was the first {{wp|Roman Catholic}} to be elected president, defeating {{wp|Richard Nixon}}, and later the first {{wp|Roman Catholic}} to be re-elected, defeating {{wp|Barry Goldwater}} in the process, followed afterward by his younger brother {{wp|Robert F. Kennedy}}, the second {{wp|Roman Catholic}} to be elected and re-elected as president.</ref><br>{{Small|(1917-1995)}}<br>
Line 430: Line 418:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Robert F. Kennedy|35}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Robert F. Kennedy|34}}
| [[File:Robert F Kennedy 1966 (cropped).jpg|150px]]
| [[File:Robert F Kennedy 1966 (cropped).jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Kennedy, Robert F." | '''{{wp|Robert F. Kennedy}}'''<ref>As the younger sibling of {{wp|John F. Kennedy}}, {{wp|Robert F. Kennedy}} is the first president to directly succeed a sibling. In addition, as a member of the {{wp|Kennedy family}}, he was the second {{wp|Roman Catholic}} to both be elected and re-elected, defeating {{wp|Richard Nixon}} and {{wp|Ronald Reagan}} respectively. Meanwhile, aged 43 years and 2 months at the time of his inauguration, {{wp|Robert F. Kennedy}} is the second-youngest president in {{wp|American}} history behind {{wp|Theodore Roosevelt}}, being only five months younger than his brother {{wp|John F. Kennedy}}, the third youngest, when the latter was inaugurated as president.</ref><br>{{Small|(1925-1999)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Kennedy, Robert F." | '''{{wp|Robert F. Kennedy}}'''<ref>As the younger sibling of {{wp|John F. Kennedy}}, {{wp|Robert F. Kennedy}} is the first president to directly succeed a sibling. In addition, as a member of the {{wp|Kennedy family}}, he was the second {{wp|Roman Catholic}} to both be elected and re-elected, defeating {{wp|Richard Nixon}} and {{wp|Ronald Reagan}} respectively. Meanwhile, aged 43 years and 2 months at the time of his inauguration, {{wp|Robert F. Kennedy}} is the second-youngest president in {{wp|American}} history behind {{wp|Theodore Roosevelt}}, being only five months younger than his brother {{wp|John F. Kennedy}}, the third youngest, when the latter was inaugurated as president.</ref><br>{{Small|(1925-1999)}}<br>
Line 442: Line 430:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Howard Baker|36}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Howard Baker|35}}
| [[File:Howard Baker (cropped).jpg|150px]]
| [[File:Howard Baker (cropped).jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Baker, Howard" | '''{{wp|Howard Baker}}'''<ref>Amidst an increasing wave of conservatism within the {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party}}, followed by consistent {{wp|Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic}} victories afterward under the new popular vote system, as of 2024, {{wp|Howard Baker}} remains the last {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}} president to be elected in forty-seven years until the election of {{wp|Nikki Haley}}, the first {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}} president elected after five successive {{wp|Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic}} officeholders.</ref><br>{{Small|(1925-2014)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Baker, Howard" | '''{{wp|Howard Baker}}'''<ref>Amidst an increasing wave of conservatism within the {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party}}, followed by consistent {{wp|Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic}} victories afterward under the new popular vote system, as of 2024, {{wp|Howard Baker}} remains the last {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}} president to be elected in forty-seven years until the election of {{wp|Nikki Haley}}, the first {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican}} president elected after five successive {{wp|Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic}} officeholders.</ref><br>{{Small|(1925-2014)}}<br>
Line 454: Line 442:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Walter Mondale|37}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Walter Mondale|36}}
| [[File:WLM.png|150px]]
| [[File:WLM.png|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Mondale, Walter" | '''{{wp|Walter Mondale}}'''<ref>Having lived to the age of ninety-three years old, {{wp|Walter Mondale}} is the longest-lived former president to date, having surpassed the previous record of ninety years held by {{wp|John Adams}}.</ref><br>{{Small|(1928-2021)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Mondale, Walter" | '''{{wp|Walter Mondale}}'''<ref>Having lived to the age of ninety-three years old, {{wp|Walter Mondale}} is the longest-lived former president to date, having surpassed the previous record of ninety years held by {{wp|John Adams}}.</ref><br>{{Small|(1928-2021)}}<br>
Line 466: Line 454:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Bill Clinton|38}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Bill Clinton|37}}
| [[File:Bill Clinton.jpg|150px]]
| [[File:Bill Clinton.jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Clinton, Bill" | '''{{wp|Bill Clinton}}'''<ref>Born in 1946, {{wp|Bill Clinton}} is the first of three presidents to be born after the {{wp|Second World War}} and thus the first of three of the {{wp|Baby Boomer}} generation, followed by his deputy {{wp|Al Gore}} and wife {{wp|Hillary Clinton}}. Moreover, he is also the first and only president to later serve as the spouse of another president, namely {{wp|Hillary Clinton}}, whose presidency saw him become the first of two {{wp|First Gentleman}} in history, followed by {{wp|Michael Haley (soldier)|Michael Haley}}, husband of {{wp|Nikki Haley}}.</ref><br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1946)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Clinton, Bill" | '''{{wp|Bill Clinton}}'''<ref>Born in 1946, {{wp|Bill Clinton}} is the first of three presidents to be born after the {{wp|Second World War}} and thus the first of three of the {{wp|Baby Boomer}} generation, followed by his deputy {{wp|Al Gore}} and wife {{wp|Hillary Clinton}}. Moreover, he is also the first and only president to later serve as the spouse of another president, namely {{wp|Hillary Clinton}}, whose presidency saw him become the first of two {{wp|First Gentleman}} in history, followed by {{wp|Michael Haley (soldier)|Michael Haley}}, husband of {{wp|Nikki Haley}}.</ref><br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1946)}}<br>
Line 478: Line 466:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Al Gore|39}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Al Gore|38}}
| [[File:Al Gore, Vice President of the United States, official portrait 1994.jpg|150px]]
| [[File:Al Gore, Vice President of the United States, official portrait 1994.jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Gore, Al" | '''{{wp|Al Gore}}'''<ref>Having previously served as vice president under {{wp|Bill Clinton}} from 1993 to 2001, {{wp|Al Gore}} is the first vice president in fifty-six years since {{wp|Harry S. Truman}} to be elected president, defeating {{wp|John McCain}} in 2000. Moreover, he is also the first vice president since {{wp|Albert J. Beveridge}} to be re-elected as president, defeating {{wp|Rudy Giuliani}} in 2004, and is the first president to be born in {{wp|Washington, D.C.}}</ref><br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1948)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Gore, Al" | '''{{wp|Al Gore}}'''<ref>Having previously served as vice president under {{wp|Bill Clinton}} from 1993 to 2001, {{wp|Al Gore}} is the first vice president in fifty-six years since {{wp|Harry S. Truman}} to be elected president, defeating {{wp|John McCain}} in 2000. Moreover, he is also the first vice president since {{wp|Albert J. Beveridge}} to be re-elected as president, defeating {{wp|Rudy Giuliani}} in 2004, and is the first president to be born in {{wp|Washington, D.C.}}</ref><br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1948)}}<br>
Line 490: Line 478:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Barack Obama|40}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Barack Obama|39}}
| [[File:President Barack Obama.jpg|150px]]
| [[File:President Barack Obama.jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Obama, Barack" | '''{{wp|Barack Obama}}'''<ref>With his election in 2008 and subsequent re-election in 2012, {{wp|Barack Obama}} is the first and only {{wp|African-American}} in history so far to be elected and re-elected president. Born in the [[Hawaiʻi|Kingdom of Hawaiʻi]] to an {{wp|American}} mother, {{wp|Barack Obama|Obama}} is also the first {{wp|American}} president after the country's foundation in 1776 to be born outside of the {{wp|United States}}. Meanwhile, as of 2024, with the election of {{wp|Nikki Haley}}, {{wp|Barack Obama|Obama}} is thus the first of two non-white presidents and the only non-white male president in {{wp|American}} history to date.</ref><br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1961)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Obama, Barack" | '''{{wp|Barack Obama}}'''<ref>With his election in 2008 and subsequent re-election in 2012, {{wp|Barack Obama}} is the first and only {{wp|African-American}} in history so far to be elected and re-elected president. Born in the [[Hawaiʻi|Kingdom of Hawaiʻi]] to an {{wp|American}} mother, {{wp|Barack Obama|Obama}} is also the first {{wp|American}} president after the country's foundation in 1776 to be born outside of the {{wp|United States}}. Meanwhile, as of 2024, with the election of {{wp|Nikki Haley}}, {{wp|Barack Obama|Obama}} is thus the first of two non-white presidents and the only non-white male president in {{wp|American}} history to date.</ref><br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1961)}}<br>
Line 502: Line 490:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Hillary Clinton|41}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Hillary Clinton|40}}
| [[File:Hillary Clinton Arizona 2016 .jpg|150px]]
| [[File:Hillary Clinton Arizona 2016 .jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Clinton, Hillary" | '''{{wp|Hillary Clinton}}'''<ref>With her election in 2016 and re-election in 2020, {{wp|Hillary Clinton}} is the first woman to have been both elected and re-elected as president. In addition, as the wife of President {{wp|Bill Clinton}}, she is also the first president to have been married to a previous president. Moreover, she is also the first woman to be nominated by a major {{wp|American}} political party, followed by {{wp|Kamala Harris}}, also by the {{wp|Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party}}, and, most recently, {{wp|Nikki Haley}} by the {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party}}.</ref><br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1947)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Clinton, Hillary" | '''{{wp|Hillary Clinton}}'''<ref>With her election in 2016 and re-election in 2020, {{wp|Hillary Clinton}} is the first woman to have been both elected and re-elected as president. In addition, as the wife of President {{wp|Bill Clinton}}, she is also the first president to have been married to a previous president. Moreover, she is also the first woman to be nominated by a major {{wp|American}} political party, followed by {{wp|Kamala Harris}}, also by the {{wp|Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party}}, and, most recently, {{wp|Nikki Haley}} by the {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party}}.</ref><br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1947)}}<br>
Line 514: Line 502:


|-
|-
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Nikki Haley|42}}
! scope=row | {{wp|Presidency of Nikki Haley|41}}
| [[File:Nikki Haley by Gage Skidmore 5.jpg|150px]]
| [[File:Nikki Haley by Gage Skidmore 5.jpg|150px]]
| data-sort-value="Haley, Nikki" | '''{{wp|Nikki Haley}}'''<ref>Having previously served as governor of {{wp|South Carolina}}, {{wp|Nikki Haley}} is the first {{wp|Asian American}} to be elected president, an office that she is also the second woman to hold after {{wp|Hillary Clinton}} after defeating her {{wp|Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic}} challenger {{wp|Kamala Harris}} in the first presidential election between two non-white candidates. After {{wp|Barack Obama}}, {{wp|Nikki Haley|Haley}} is the second non-white officeholder elected to the presidency. Moreover, being twenty-five years younger than her predecessor {{wp|Hillary Clinton}}, {{wp|Nikki Haley|Haley}}'s age gap between herself and her predecessor is the second largest in {{wp|American}} history after the twenty-seven-year gap between {{wp|John F. Kennedy}} and his predecessor {{wp|Dwight D. Eisenhower}}, the largest age gap between two {{wp|American}} presidents ever.</ref><br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1972)}}<br>
| data-sort-value="Haley, Nikki" | '''{{wp|Nikki Haley}}'''<ref>Having previously served as governor of {{wp|South Carolina}}, {{wp|Nikki Haley}} is the first {{wp|Asian American}} to be elected president, an office that she is also the second woman to hold after {{wp|Hillary Clinton}} after defeating her {{wp|Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic}} challenger {{wp|Kamala Harris}} in the first presidential election between two non-white candidates. After {{wp|Barack Obama}}, {{wp|Nikki Haley|Haley}} is the second non-white officeholder elected to the presidency. Moreover, being twenty-five years younger than her predecessor {{wp|Hillary Clinton}}, {{wp|Nikki Haley|Haley}}'s age gap between herself and her predecessor is the second largest in {{wp|American}} history after the twenty-seven-year gap between {{wp|John F. Kennedy}} and his predecessor {{wp|Dwight D. Eisenhower}}, the largest age gap between two {{wp|American}} presidents ever.</ref><br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1972)}}<br>

Revision as of 15:55, 10 November 2024


Cite error: <ref> tags exist for a group named "lower-alpha", but no corresponding <references group="lower-alpha"/> tag was found

  1. At 11 years and 5 months long, Theodore Roosevelt formerly held the record for the longest serving American president, having served two full terms in addition to completing the remainder of the term of his slain predecessor William McKinley. However, he would later be surpassed by his fifth cousin Franklin D. Roosevelt, a Democrat, with the latter serving as president for roughly twelve years long, a record that is unlikely to be surpassed given the subsequent introduction of two-term limits for presidents.
  2. As the longest serving American president in history at twelve years long, Franklin D. Roosevelt, a Democrat, surpassed the previous record held by his fifth cousin and Republican politician Theodore Roosevelt. In this, Franklin, who took office in 1933, did so exactly twenty years after Theodore's term as president ended in 1913, namely on the same date of March 4th.
  3. A Roman Catholic throughout his life, John F. Kennedy was the first Roman Catholic to be elected president, defeating Richard Nixon, and later the first Roman Catholic to be re-elected, defeating Barry Goldwater in the process, followed afterward by his younger brother Robert F. Kennedy, the second Roman Catholic to be elected and re-elected as president.
  4. As the younger sibling of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy is the first president to directly succeed a sibling. In addition, as a member of the Kennedy family, he was the second Roman Catholic to both be elected and re-elected, defeating Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan respectively. Meanwhile, aged 43 years and 2 months at the time of his inauguration, Robert F. Kennedy is the second-youngest president in American history behind Theodore Roosevelt, being only five months younger than his brother John F. Kennedy, the third youngest, when the latter was inaugurated as president.
  5. As a result of the ratification of the Twenty-eighth Amendment in January 1972, the Electoral College, the longstanding method used to elect American presidents since George Washington, became effectively defunct and replaced with the popular vote in which a candidate must secure 40% of the national popular vote to avoid a runoff election. Consequently, the ensuing election in 1972 made Robert F. Kennedy the last American president to be elected by the Electoral College and the first to be elected purely by the popular vote, with successive presidents also being elected in a similar way.
  6. Amidst an increasing wave of conservatism within the Republican Party, followed by consistent Democratic victories afterward under the new popular vote system, as of 2024, Howard Baker remains the last Republican president to be elected in forty-seven years until the election of Nikki Haley, the first Republican president elected after five successive Democratic officeholders.
  7. Having lived to the age of ninety-three years old, Walter Mondale is the longest-lived former president to date, having surpassed the previous record of ninety years held by John Adams.
  8. Born in 1946, Bill Clinton is the first of three presidents to be born after the Second World War and thus the first of three of the Baby Boomer generation, followed by his deputy Al Gore and wife Hillary Clinton. Moreover, he is also the first and only president to later serve as the spouse of another president, namely Hillary Clinton, whose presidency saw him become the first of two First Gentleman in history, followed by Michael Haley, husband of Nikki Haley.
  9. Having previously served as vice president under Bill Clinton from 1993 to 2001, Al Gore is the first vice president in fifty-six years since Harry S. Truman to be elected president, defeating John McCain in 2000. Moreover, he is also the first vice president since Albert J. Beveridge to be re-elected as president, defeating Rudy Giuliani in 2004, and is the first president to be born in Washington, D.C.
  10. With his election in 2008 and subsequent re-election in 2012, Barack Obama is the first and only African-American in history so far to be elected and re-elected president. Born in the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi to an American mother, Obama is also the first American president after the country's foundation in 1776 to be born outside of the United States. Meanwhile, as of 2024, with the election of Nikki Haley, Obama is thus the first of two non-white presidents and the only non-white male president in American history to date.
  11. With her election in 2016 and re-election in 2020, Hillary Clinton is the first woman to have been both elected and re-elected as president. In addition, as the wife of President Bill Clinton, she is also the first president to have been married to a previous president. Moreover, she is also the first woman to be nominated by a major American political party, followed by Kamala Harris, also by the Democratic Party, and, most recently, Nikki Haley by the Republican Party.
  12. Having previously served as governor of South Carolina, Nikki Haley is the first Asian American to be elected president, an office that she is also the second woman to hold after Hillary Clinton after defeating her Democratic challenger Kamala Harris in the first presidential election between two non-white candidates. After Barack Obama, Haley is the second non-white officeholder elected to the presidency. Moreover, being twenty-five years younger than her predecessor Hillary Clinton, Haley's age gap between herself and her predecessor is the second largest in American history after the twenty-seven-year gap between John F. Kennedy and his predecessor Dwight D. Eisenhower, the largest age gap between two American presidents ever.