Siena’s
6th Presidential Expert Poll 1982 – 2018
For the sixth time since its inception in 1982, the Siena College Research Institute’s (SCRI) Survey of U.S. Presidents finds that experts rank Franklin D. Roosevelt, Teddy Roosevelt, Abe Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson and George Washington as the United States’ top five chief executives.
The 157 participating presidential scholars for the first time
name Washington as number one with FDR second, Lincoln third, Teddy Roosevelt
fourth and Jefferson fifth.
Donald Trump enters the survey as the 42nd rated president, and he
joins Andrew Johnson, James Buchanan, Warren Harding and Franklin Pierce in the
bottom five.
Dwight Eisenhower moved up to sixth, the highest ranking he has
ever achieved, while Ronald Reagan was up five spots to 13th, and George W.
Bush was up six places but remains in 33rd place.
Barack Obama slipped two spots to 17th, Bill Clinton dropped to
15th from 13th, and Andrew Jackson fell five places to 19th.
“The top five, Mount Rushmore plus FDR, is carved in granite with
presidential historians who have ranked the presidents for Siena six times
since 1982 always just after a new president has had one year in office.
(Lots more....)
“But five through ten has seen some jockeying for position over the last 37 years. Eisenhower wasn’t even in the top ten in ’82 or ’90, but after one eighth place and two times at tenth, Ike has jumped to the sixth spot just out of the vaunted top five. And JFK has rejoined the top ten after two misses while Woodrow Wilson has dropped from eighth to 11th ” according to Don Levy, SCRI’s director.
“But five through ten has seen some jockeying for position over the last 37 years. Eisenhower wasn’t even in the top ten in ’82 or ’90, but after one eighth place and two times at tenth, Ike has jumped to the sixth spot just out of the vaunted top five. And JFK has rejoined the top ten after two misses while Woodrow Wilson has dropped from eighth to 11th ” according to Don Levy, SCRI’s director.
“While other ‘moderns’ are highly rated, including Truman at ninth
this year and six straight times in the top ten and Kennedy, tenth this year
and back in the top ten after narrowly missing in the last two surveys, no
president that has served since Kennedy is considered one of our ten best,”
according to Doug Lonnstrom, SCRI’s founding director and one of the survey’s
originators.
“The serving president has entered the survey between 15th ,
Obama, and 23rd , G.W. Bush, as scholars begin to observe their
accomplishments, assess their abilities and study their attributes. This year,
Donald Trump enters the survey at 42nd , and he is only ranked outside of the
bottom five in two of the twenty categories that scholars use to assess the presidents,
‘luck’ and ‘willingness to take risks,’” said Levy.
Scholars rate presidents on each of twenty categories that include
attributes – background, imagination, integrity, intelligence, luck and
willingness to take risks, abilities – compromising, executive ability,
leadership, communication, and overall ability and accomplishments – party
leadership, relationship with Congress, court appointments, handling the
economy, executive appointments, domestic accomplishments, foreign policy
accomplishments and avoiding mistakes.
Trump is last in "integrity" (more dishonest than Nixon) "intelligence" (dumber than Warren G. Harding), Presidential appointments and "overall ability" (worse than James Buchanan). |
Theodore Roosevelt is rated highest on attributes, Lincoln tops the list on abilities and Washington leads on accomplishments.
Scholars were asked which of all the presidents they wish could be
in office today to address each of seven current issues.
Obama was selected three times for addressing health care in the
U.S., ensuring that American values are afforded to all Americans regardless of
their race, ethnicity or socio-economic position and, tied with FDR, for
developing a shared vision of America’s role in the next century.
Eisenhower was the top pick for resolving the crisis with North
Korea and combating the threat of global terrorism. Bill Clinton was the
choice for promoting sustainable growth in the American economy and Washington
was top rated on enhancing trust in the federal government.
The scholars that responded to the survey said that of all 44 presidents*, Franklin D. Roosevelt had the best first year in office followed by Washington and Lyndon Johnson.
Donald Trump is named as the president whose first year in office
was the worst followed by Andrew Johnson and George W. Bush.
The survey also added a series of questions that asked scholars to
say whether the presidents of the last fifty years – Richard Nixon (ranked
29th), Gerald Ford (27th), Jimmy Carter (26th), Reagan, George.H.W. Bush
(21st), Bill Clinton (15th), G.W. Bush, Obama and Trump will ultimately be
judged by history as moving the country in the right direction or on the wrong
track on foreign affairs, the domestic economy, human rights, and the quality
of our democracy.
Both Clinton and Obama were seen by respondents as strongly moving
the country on the right track on all four. Ford, Carter and G.H.W. Bush moved
the country on the right track on each except the domestic economy.
Reagan moved the country on the right track on two of four –
foreign affairs and the quality of our democracy while Nixon moved the country
forward on only foreign affairs.
Historians say that neither G.W. Bush nor Trump moved the country on
the right track on any of the four aspects of leading the country.
“The perfect president? Scholars agree that Washington today is
ranked first and encourages trust in the federal government. FDR is close,
ranked second and remembered for his first year. Lincoln may have had the
greatest skills, Teddy Roosevelt, the right stuff, and Eisenhower today is the
leader many would like addressing international trouble spots.
“Jefferson, Madison, Monroe remain profoundly respected and among
the moderns, Reagan, Clinton and Obama are highly regarded. While Trump has
entered the rankings near the bottom, despite his initial low scores, it is
early in his presidency and history not these historians will determine his
ultimate place among American presidents,” said Levy.
The Siena College Research Institute (SCRI) Survey of U.S.
Presidents is based on responses from 157 presidential scholars, historians and
political scientists that responded via mail or web to an invitation to
participate.
Respondents ranked each of 44 presidents on a scale of 1 (poor) to
5 (excellent) on each of twenty presidential attributes, abilities and
accomplishments. Overall rankings were computed by assigning equal weight to
each of those twenty categories.
For additional information about the survey visit www.siena.edu/sri/research or contact Don Levy at 518-783-2901, dlevy@siena.edu or Doug Lonnstrom at 518-783-2362.
For additional information about the survey visit www.siena.edu/sri/research or contact Don Levy at 518-783-2901, dlevy@siena.edu or Doug Lonnstrom at 518-783-2362.
* Grover Cleveland was the 22nd and the 24th president. As such
there are 44 unique individuals who have held the U.S. Presidency.