- George H.W. Bush (oilman)History shows businessmen make bad presidents
October 18, 2012
The surveys produce remarkably similar results. The top tier is always Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Franklin and Teddy Roosevelt, Wilson and Truman. The only post-19th century presidents to crack the bottom quartile are George W. Bush and Warren Harding. An aggregate of the five surveys that included W rank him 34th; presidents ranked lower include such notables as Millard Fillmore, James Buchanan and Andrew Johnson.
For post-19th century presidents, the highest ranked are the Roosevelts, Truman, and Eisenhower. The lowest ranked are Hoover, Coolidge, George W. Bush and Harding. Harding was very successful in business but is consistently rated as one of the worst presidents, so one of the most successful businessmen was a conspicuous failure as president ...
So the number of highly successful businessmen who became highly successful presidents? None. Or conversely, the number of successful presidents who were successful businessmen? None. The number of successful businessmen who failed as president? Three. Truman, a very successful president, failed in business.
http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-b...history-shows-businessmen-make-bad-presidents
- Warren Harding (newspaperman)
- Andrew Johnson (tailor)
- Herbert Hoover (mining)
Trump's claim to fame is his success as a businessman - but the track record shows that being a successful businessmen doesn't translate into being a successful president.