Former Presidents that Returned to an Active Government Role.
Contemporary former
presidents don’t return to public service, although some, like Bill Clinton,
champion global causes. They write books, appear on television talk shows, and
appear on the lecture circuit. Former presidents often spend their lives pursuing
causes important to them such as Jimmy Carter through his Carter Center in
Atlanta, or rehabilitate themselves as elder statesmen as in the case of
Richard Nixon. But there were earlier presidents that returned to government
service and often made a greater impact than they had as presidents.
John Quincy
John Quincy Adams lost his
bid for reelection in the Election of 1828. The campaign was rancorous and
bitter. Adams refused to attend Andrew Jackson’s inauguration, returning to
William Howard Taft is
Appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
In 1921, former President
Taft was appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court by President Harding, a
position he held until 1930. Like
Elected in 1908 as the chosen
heir of Teddy Roosevelt, Taft soon drifted from
Taft stated that he was
appointed in June 1921 to “reverse a few decisions.” Historians view the Taft
court as one of the most pro-business and conservative courts in the history of
the federal judiciary. In one decision, Taft invalidated the 1919 Child Labor
Tax Act. He died in his sleep in 1930 and was buried at
Other Former Presidents
Returned to Government Service
John Tyler, the “accidental
president” who assumed office upon the death of William Henry Harrison in 1840,
was not considered for reelection by the Whigs in 1844. But during the Civil
War, he became a
Abraham Lincoln’s second
Vice-President, Andrew Johnson of
The Presidency as the
Pinnacle of Power
For a variety of reasons,
former Presidents went into retirement or business after leaving office. Only
Grover Cleveland won a second non-consecutive term in 1892. In many cases, the
burdens of high office left former presidents sick as in the case of Woodrow
Wilson. James K. Polk died shortly after leaving the White House.
Contemporary presidents
especially disdain any notion of returning to government service, other than
heading a special commission or acting as a “good-will” ambassador. The
The contemporary presidency
has global implications. Some pundits have suggested that, given the global
impact of the person in the White House, the election of an American President
should involve global participation. Leaving such an exalted office after four
or eight years, Presidents are reluctant to return to the Congress or serve as
a governor. The same is not true, however, for First Ladies.
Sources:
William A. DeGregorio, The Complete Book of
Alfred H. Kelly and Winfred
A. Harbison, The American Constitution:
Its Origins & Development, fifth edition (W.W. Norton & Company,
1976)
Published November 13, 2010 in Suite101 by M.Streich. copyright
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