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President

Definition: President

President

Noun

1. An executive officer of a firm or corporation.

2. The person who holds the office of head of state of the United States government; "the President likes to jog every morning".

3. The chief executive of a republic.

4. The officer who presides at the meetings of an organization.

5. The head administrative officer of a college or university.

6. The office of the US head of state; "a President is elected every four years".

Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
 

Date "president" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1258. (references)

 

Specialty Definition: President

DomainDefinition

Satire

PRESIDENT, n. The leading figure in a small group of men of whom -- and of whom only -- it is positively known that immense numbers of their countrymen did not want any of them for President. If that's an honor surely 'tis a greater To have been a simple and undamned spectator. Behold in me a man of mark and note Whom no elector e'er denied a vote! -- An undiscredited, unhooted gent Who might, for all we know, be President By acclimation. Cheer, ye varlets, cheer -- I'm passing with a wide and open ear! Jonathan Fomry. Source: Devil's Dictionary.

Finance

Of the EIB Management Committee. Source: European Union. (references)

General

Person who presides over an organization or conference. Chairman can also be used to describe the person presiding over a committee or conference session. Source: European Union. (references)

Industry

Heavy slightly hairy cloth, made with reclaimed wool/cotton. Source: European Union. (references)

Law

By the State Constitution, the Lieutenant Governor is also President of the Senate. (references)

Occupations

Plans, develops, and establishes policies and objectives of business organization in accordance with board directives and corporation charter: Confers with company officials to plan business objectives, to develop organizational policies to coordinate functions and operations between divisions and departments, and to establish responsibilities and procedures for attaining objectives. Reviews activity reports and financial statements to determine progress and status in attaining objectives and revises objectives and plans in accordance with current conditions. Directs and coordinates formulation of financial programs to provide funding for new or continuing operations to maximize returns on investments, and to increase productivity. Plans and develops industrial, labor, and public relations policies designed to improve company's image and relations with customers, employees, stockholders, and public. Evaluates performance of executives for compliance with established policies and objectives of firm and contributions in attaining objectives. May preside over board of directors. May serve as chairman of committees, such as management, executive, engineering, and sales. (references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Specialty Definition: Calvin Coolidge

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Calvin Coolidge

Order:30th President
Term of Office:August 3, 1923 - March 4, 1929
Followed:Warren G. Harding
Succeeded by:Herbert Hoover
Date of BirthThursday, July 4, 1872
Place of Birth:Plymouth, Vermont
Date of Death:Tuesday, January 5, 1933
Place of Death:Northampton, Massachusetts
First Lady:Grace Anna Goodhue
Profession:lawyer
Political Party:Republican
Vice President:Charles G. Dawes
Nicknames:Silent Cal

John Calvin Coolidge, Jr. (July 4, 1872 - January 5, 1933) was the twenty-ninth (1921-1923) Vice President and the thirtieth (1923-1929) President of the United States, succeeding to that office upon the death of Warren Harding.

Biography

He was born in Plymouth, Windsor County, Vermont on July 4, 1872, but dropped John from his name upon graduating from college. He attended Amherst College, Massachusetts, graduating in 1895. He practiced law in Northampton, Massachusetts, and was a member of the city council in 1899, city solicitor from 1900-1902, clerk of courts in 1904, and a member of the State house of representatives 1907-1908.

Coolidge was elected mayor of Northampton in 1910 and 1911, was a member of the State senate 1912-1915, serving as president of that body in 1914 and 1915. He was lieutenant governor of the state 1916-1918, and Governor 1919-1920. He was elected Vice President of the United States on the Republican ticket headed by Warren G. Harding in 1920. He was inaugurated on March 4, 1921, and served until August 3, 1923. Upon the death of President Harding, Coolidge became President of the United States on August 3, 1923.

Unusually for a prominent politician, Coolidge was a man of few words, earning him the nickname "Silent Cal".

He was elected President of the United States in 1924 for the term expiring March 4, 1929. Coolidge made use of the new medium of radio and made radio history several times while president: his inauguration was the first presidential inauguration broadcast on radio, on February 12, 1924 he became the first President of the United States to deliver a political speech on radio and on February 22 he also became the first to deliver such a speech from the White House.

Coolidge was the last President of the United States who did not attempt to intervene in free markets, letting business cycles run their course. During his Presidency, the United States experienced a wildly successful period of economic growth: the so-called "Roaring Twenties". Coolidge was not only able to lower taxes, but also to reduce the national debt.

He was not a candidate for renomination in 1928; he announced his decision not to stand for reelection with the succinct statement "I do not choose to run". He served as chairman of the Nonpartisan Railroad Commission and as honorary president of the Foundation of the Blind. He died at "The Beeches", Northampton, Massachusetts, January 5, 1933. Interment is in Notch Cemetery, Plymouth, Vermont.

Supreme Court appointments

Related articles

External links

Preceded by:
Warren G. Harding
Presidents of the United States Succeeded by:
Herbert Hoover

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Calvin Coolidge."

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Characters in Atlas Shrugged

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Warning: Wikipedia contains spoilers -- reading these character summaries unravels some of the central mysteries in the novel.

Characters in Ayn Rand's novel, Atlas Shrugged

(in alphabetical order by first name):
see also Minor Characters in Atlas Shrugged

Balph Eubank is called "the literary leader of the age", despite the fact that he is incapable of writing anything that people actually want to read. What people want to read, he says, is irrelevant. He complains that it is disgraceful that artists are treated as peddlers, and that there should be a law limiting the sales of books to ten thousand copies. He is a member of the Looters. Ben Nealy is a railroad contractor who Dagny Taggart hires to replace the track on the Rio Norte Line with Rearden Metal. Nealy is incompetent, but Dagny can find no one better in all the country. Nealy believes that anything can get done with enough muscle power. He sees no role for intelligence in human achievement, and this is manifest in his inabillity to organize the project and to make decisions. He relies on Dagny and Ellis Wyatt to run things, and resents them for doing it, because it appears to him like they are just bossing people around. Bertram Scudder writes editorials for the magazine The Future. He typically bashes business and businessmen, but he never says anything specific in his articles, relying on innuendo, sneers, and denunciation. He wrote a hatchet job on Hank Rearden called The Octopus. He is also vocal in support of the Equalization of Opportunity Bill. Betty Pope is a wealthy socialite who is having a meaningless sexual affair with James Taggart that coincides with the overall meaninglessness of her life. She regrets having to wake up every morning because she has to face another empty day. She is deliberately crude in a way that casts ridicule on her high social position. Brakeman is an unnamed employee working on the Taggart Comet train. Dagny Taggart hears Brakeman whistling the theme of a concerto. When she asks him what piece it's from, he says Halley's Fifth Concerto. When Dagny points out that Richard Halley only wrote four concertos, Brakeman claims he made a mistake and he doesn't recall where he heard the piece.

Later, after Dagny instructs the train crew how to proceed, he asks a co-worker who she is, and learns she is the one who runs Taggart Transcontinental.

It is later discovered that the unknown brakeman is one of the strikers, when Dagny meets him in the valley.

Claude Slagenhop is the president of political organization Friends of Global Progress (which is supported by Philip Rearden), and one of Lillian Rearden's friends. He believes that ideas are just air, that this is no time for talk, but for action. He is not bothered by the fact that action unguided by ideas is random and pointless. Global Progress is a sponsor of the Equalization of Opportunity Bill. Dagny Taggart is the main character in Atlas Shrugged (also the name of her namesake Mrs. Nathaniel Taggart). Dagny is Vice-President in Charge of Operation at Taggart Transcontinental. Those in the know know she is the one who really runs the railroad. In the course of the novel, she forms numerous romantic liaisons with men of ability, which is to say corporate CEOs. Dan Conway is the middle-aged president of the Phoenix-Durango railroad. Running a railroad is just about the only thing he knows. When the Anti-dog-eat-dog Rule is used to drive his business out of Colorado, he loses the will to fight, and resigns himself to a quiet life of books and fishing. He claims that somebody had to be sacrificed, it turned out to be him, and he has no right to complain, bowing to the will of the majority. When pressed he says he doesn't really believe this is right, but he can't understand why it is wrong and what the alternative might be. He is trapped by a moral code that makes him a willing victim, and rather than challenge that morality, he simply gives up. Dick McNamara is a contractor who finished the San Sebastian Line and who is hired to lay the new Rearden Metal track for the Rio Norte Line. Before he gets a chance to do so, he mysteriously disappears.

Eddie Willers is Special Assistant to the Vice-President in Charge of Operation at Taggart Transcontinental. He grew up with Dagny Taggart. His father and grandfather worked for the Taggarts, and he followed in their footsteps. He is completely loyal to Dagny and to Taggart Transcontinental. He is also secretly in love with Dagny. Willers is generally assumed to represent the common man. Ellis Wyatt is the head of Wyatt Oil. He has almost single-handedly revived the economy of Colorado by discovering a way of extracting oil from wells that had been abandoned. Francisco d'Anconia is one of the central characters in Atlas Shrugged. By all accounts, he is a worthless millionaire playboy, owner by inheritance of the world's largest copper mining empire, the man behind the San Sebastian Mines, and a childhood friend and first love of Dagny Taggart.

Francisco began working on the sly as a teenager in order to learn all he could about business. While still a student at Patrick Henry University, he began working at a copper foundry, and investing in the stock market. By the time he was twenty he had made enough to purchase the foundry. He began working for d'Anconia Copper as assistant superintendent of a mine in Montana, but was quickly promoted to head of the New York office. He took over d'Anconia Copper at age 23, after the death of his father.

When he was 26, Francisco secretly joined the Strikers and began to slowly destroy the d'Anconia empire so the Looters could not get it. He adopted the persona of a worthless playboy, by which he is known to the world, as an effective cover.

His full name is Francisco Domingo Carlos Andres Sebastian d'Anconia.

According to Adam Reed ( Who is Francisco D'Anconia?), d'Anconia is the only Hero-class character who is recognizably Jewish (not in the religious, but in the historical sense, like Ayn Rand herself).

Hank Rearden is one of the central characters in Atlas Shrugged. He is the founder of Rearden Steel and the inventor of Rearden Metal. He lives in Philadelphia with his wife Lillian, his brother Philip, and an elderly woman known only as Rearden's Mother, all of whom he supports. Gwen Ives is his secretary.

The character of Hank Rearden has two important roles to play in the novel. First, he is in the same position as the reader in that he is aware that there is something wrong with the world but is not sure what it is. Rearden is guided toward an understanding of the solution through his friendship with Francisco d'Anconia, who does know the secret, and by this mechanism the reader is also prepared to understand the secret when it is revealed explicitly in Galt's Speech.

Second, Rearden is used to illustrate Rand's theory of sex. Lillian Rearden cannot appreciate Hank Rearden's virtues, and she is portrayed as being disgusted by sex. Dagny Taggart clearly does appreciate Rearden's virtues, and this appreciation evolves into a sexual desire. Rearden is torn by a contradiction because he accepts the premises of the traditional view of sex as a lower instinct, while responding sexually to Dagny, who represents his highest values. Rearden struggles to resolve this internal conflict and in doing so illustrates Rand's sexual theory.

Hugh Akston is identified as "One of the last great advocates of reason." He was a renowned philosopher and the head of the Department of Philosophy at Patrick Henry University, where he taught Francisco d'Anconia, John Galt, and Ragnar Danneskjold. He was, along with Robert Stadler, a father figure to these three. Akston's name is so hallowed that a young lady, on hearing that Francisco had studied under him, is shocked. She thought he must have been one of those great names from an earlier century. James Taggart is the President of Taggart Transcontinental and a leader of the Looters. Taggart is an expert influence peddler who is incapable of making decisions on his own. He relies on his sister Dagny Taggart to actually run the railroad, but nonetheless opposes her in almost every endeavor.

As the novel progresses, the moral philosophy of the Looters is revealed: it is a code of nihilism. The goal of this code is to not exist, to become a zero. Taggart struggles to remain unaware that this is his goal. He maintains his pretence that he wants to live, and becomes horrified whenever his mind starts to grasp the truth about himself. This contradiction leads to the recurring absurdity of his life: the desire to destroy those on whom his life depends, and the horror that he will succeed at this.

The question "Who is John Galt?" is asked repeatedly throughout Atlas Shrugged. Late into the book we learn that John Galt is the man who stopped the motor of the world and the leader of the Strikers. He is also the same character as the Mystery Worker.

John Galt was the son of a garage mechanic in Ohio. He left home at age 12 and began college at Patrick Henry University at age 16. There he befriended Francisco d'Anconia and Ragnar Danneskjold, all three of whom double-majored in physics and philosophy. They were the cherished students of Robert Stadler and Hugh Akston.

After graduating, Galt become an engineer at the Twentieth Century Motor Works where he designed a revolutionary new motor that had the potential to change the world. When the owners of the company decided to run the factory by the maxim, 'By each according to his ability, to each according to his need', Galt perceived what was wrong with the world and what had to be done to stop it. He put his mind on strike, and set about persuading the other men of the mind to go on strike as well.

Since everyone across the country is repeating the phrase, "Who is John Galt?", it is natural that many people have attempted to answer that question. Dagny Taggart hears a number of John Galt Legends before finding the real John Galt.

There is a clothing store in Vail Village, Colorado called John Galt Ltd. One presumes that, on occasion, a customer unknowingly walks in and asks, "Who is John Galt?"
Lillian Rearden is the wildly unsupportive wife of Hank Rearden. They have been married eight years as the novel begins.

Lillian is a Moocher who seeks to destroy her husband. She compares being Rearden's wife with owning the world's most powerful horse. Since she cannot comfortably ride a horse that goes too fast, she must bridle it down to her level, even if that means it will never reach its potential and its power will be wasted.

Lillian also serves to illustrate Rand's Theory of sex. She believes sex is a base animal instinct and that sexual indulgence is a sign of moral weakness. She is incapable of feeling this kind of desire, which she believes testifies to her moral superiority. However, according to the theory of sex Lillian's lack of sexual capacity results from her inability to experience value in herself; she is therefore unable to respond sexually when she experiences value in others.

Lillian tolerates sex with her husband only because she is 'realistic' enough to know he is just a brute who requires satisfaction of his brute instincts. In section 161 she indicates that she abhors Francisco d'Anconia, because she believes he is a sexual adventurer.

The Looters are a group of evil characters sometimes referred to as "James Taggart and his friends". They are similar to the Moochers. The Looters consist of men and women who use force to obtain value from those who produce it. They seek to destroy the producers despite the fact that they are dependent upon them.

The Looters include: Mr. Thompson, Balph Eubank, Floyd Ferris, James Taggart, Orren Boyle, Paul Larkin, Robert Stadler, Simon Pritchett, Wesley Mouch, and Cuffy Miegs. Midas Mulligan is a wealthy banker who mysteriously disappears in protest after he is given a court order to loan money to an incompetent loan applicant. The Moochers are a group of evil characters, similar to the Looters, who use guilt as a weapon against those who produce value. They seek to destroy the producers despite the fact that they are dependent upon them.

The Moochers include Lillian Rearden, Philip Rearden, and Hank Rearden's mother. Mort Liddy is a hack composer that writes trite scores for movies and modern symphonies that no one listens to. He believes melody is a primitive vulgarity. He is one of Lillian Rearden's friends and a member of the cultural elite.

Mr. Mowen is the president of the Amalgamated Switch and Signal Company, Inc of Connecticut. He is a businessman who sees nothing wrong with the moral code that is destroying society and would never dream of saying he is in business for any reason other than the good of society. He is unable to grapple with abstract issues, and is frightened of anything controversial. Dagny Taggart hires Mr. Mowen to produce switches made of Rearden Metal. He is reluctant to build anything with this unproven technology, and has to be ridden and cajoled before he is willing to accept the contract. Mystery Worker is a menial worker for Taggart Transcontinental who often dines with Eddie Willers in the employee's cafeteria. Eddie finds him very easy to talk to, and Mystery Worker not-so-subtly leads him on so that Eddie reveals important information about Dagny Taggart and Taggart Transcontinental. Eddie tells him which suppliers and contractors Dagny is most dependent on, and with remarkable consistency, those are the next men to mysteriously disappear. Mystery Worker will turn out to be one of the novel's central characters. The unnamed Newsstand Owner works in the Taggart Terminal. Twenty years ago he owned a cigarette factory but it went under, and he's been working at his newsstand ever since. He is a collector of cigarettes, and knows every brand ever made. He occasionally chats with Dagny Taggart when she comes by. On one occasion, in section section 132, after Dagny asks him about his collection, he bemoans the fact that there are no new brands and the old brands are all disappearing. He examines a cigarette given to Dagny by Hugh Akston, but it is a new brand that he has never seen before. It carries the sign of the dollar.

In his first appearance, the Newsstand Owner likens the fire of a cigarette to the fire of the mind. This alludes to the Greek myth of Prometheus, who gave mankind the gift of fire, allowing it to raise itself up and become civilized. In Atlas Shrugged, it is the mind of man that raises mankind. Thus the cigarettes become symbolic of the men of the mind. The disappearance of the old brands represents the disappearance of the men of the mind, and the Newsstand Owner's discovery of the new brand foreshadows Dagny's discovery of a new kind of men of the mind. Orren Boyle is the head of Associated Steel and a friend of James Taggart. He is one of the Looters. He is an investor in the San Sebastian Mines.

Owen Kellogg is Assistant to the Manager of the Taggart Terminal in New York. He catches Dagny Taggart's eye as one of the few competent men on staff. After seeing the sorry state of the Ohio Division she decides to make him to its new Superintendent. However, as soon as she returns to New York, Kellogg informs her that he is quiting his job. He admits that he loves his work, but that's not enough to keep him. He won't say why he is leaving or what he will do. Later, he is noticed working as transient labor by the unsuccessful/unmotivated businessman Mr. Mowen. Paul Larkin is an unsuccessful, middle-aged businessman, a friend of the Rearden family, and a member of the Looters. In section 121 Larkin visits Philadelphia to warn Hank Rearden of possible trouble from Washington. In section 131 he meets with the other Looters to work out a plan to bring Rearden down. James Taggart knows he is friends with Hank Rearden and challenges his loyalty, and Larkin assures Taggart that he will go along with them. Philip Rearden is the younger brother of Hank Rearden, and a Moocher. He lives in his brother's home in Philadelphia and is completely dependent on him. He believes that the source of his sustenence is evil and would love to see him destroyed. He has never had a career and spends his time perfunctorily working for various social groups. Ragnar Danneskjold is one of the original Strikers. He is now world famous as a pirate. Ragnar was from Norway, the son of a bishop and the scion of one of Norway's most ancient, noble families. He attended Patrick Henry University and became friends with John Galt and Francisco d'Anconia, while studying under Hugh Akston and Robert Stadler.

Ragnar seizes relief ships that are being sent from the United States to Europe. No one knows what he does with the goods he seizes. As the novel progresses, Ragnar begins, for the first time, to become active in American waters, and is even spotted in Delaware Bay. Reportedly, his ship is better than any available in the fleets of the world's navies.

When he became a pirate, he was disowned and excommunicated. There is a price on his head in Norway, Portugal, Turkey.

His name may be a pun on 'Dane's Gold', although "skjold" means shield, not gold.

Rearden's mother is unnamed in Atlas Shrugged. She is a Moocher who lives with her son Hank Rearden at his home in Philadelphia. She is involved in church-based charity work, and berates Rearden whenever she can. She insults him by saying he was always selfish, even as a child. She dotes on her weak son Philip Rearden. Richard Halley is Dagny Taggart's favorite composer, who mysteriously disappeared after the evening of his greatest triumph.

In section 141 we learn that Richard Halley spent years as a struggling and unappreciated composer. At age 24 his opera Phaethon was performed for the first time, to an audience who booed and heckled it. (It was based on the Greek myth in which Phaethon steals his father's chariot, and dies in an audacious attempt to drive the sun across the sky. Halley changed the story, though, into one of triumph, in which Phaethon succeeds.) For years Halley wrote in obscurity. After nineteen years, Phaethon was performed again, but this time it was received to the greatest ovation the opera house had ever heard. It appears his critics felt he had paid his dues long enough that he was at last worthy of their approval. The following day, Halley retired, sold the rights to his music, and disappeared.

Dr. Robert Stadler is a former professor at Patrick Henry University, mentor to Francisco d'Anconia, John Galt and Ragnar Danneskjold. He has since become a sell-out, one who had great promise but squandered it for social approval, to the detriment of the free. He works at the State Science Institute where all his inventions are perverted for use by the military, including the instrument of his demise: Project X. Dr. Simon Pritchett is the prestigious head of the Department of Philosophy at Patrick Henry University and is considered the leading philosopher of the age. He is also a Looter. He is certainly representative of the philosophy of the age - he is a crude reductionist who believes man is nothing but a collection of chemicals; he believes there are no standards, that definitions are fluid, reason is a superstition, that it is futile to seek meaning in life, and that the duty of a philosopher is to show that nothing can be understood. He explains all this in his book The Metaphysical Contradictions of the Universe, and at cocktail parties. The Strikers were people of the mind who go on strike because they do not appreciate being exploited by the Looters and demonized by a society who depends on them for its very existence.

The leader of the Strikers is John Galt. Other Strikers include: Hugh Akston, Francisco d'Anconia, Ragnar Danneskjold, Richard Halley, and the Brakeman. Characters who join the Strikers in the course of the book include: Dagny Taggart, Ellis Wyatt, Hank Rearden, Dick McNamara, and Owen Kellogg. Mr. Thompson is the "Head of the State," which essentially means that he's the President of the United States, though he's never referred to as such. One of the Looters, he's not particularly intelligent and has a very undistunguished look. He knows politics, however, and is a master of public relations and back-room deals. Cuffy Miegs is a Looter who's assigned by Wesley Mouch to keep watch over the workings of Taggart Transcontinental, and later assumes control over the company after Dagny Taggart leaves. He carries a pistol and wears a military uniform. The "intellectual heir" of Dr. Robert Stadler, Miegs comes to a fitting end at the hands of Project X. Wesley Mouch is a member of the Looters and Hank Rearden's man in Washington. Initially Wesley Mouch is the least powerful and least significant of the Looters - the other members of this group feel they can look down upon him with impunity. Eventually he becomes the most powerful Looter, and the country's economic dictator.

see also Minor Characters in Atlas Shrugged

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Characters in Atlas Shrugged."

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Franklin Delano Roosevelt

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Franklin Delano Roosevelt

Roosevelt in 1944
Order:32nd President
Term of Office:March 4, 1933 - April 12, 1945
Followed:Herbert Hoover
Succeeded by:Harry S. Truman
Date of BirthMonday, January 30, 1882
Place of Birth:Hyde Park, New York
Date of Death:Thursday, April 12, 1945
Place of Death:Warm Springs, Georgia
First Lady:Anna Eleanor Roosevelt
Profession:lawyer
Political Party:Democrat
Vice President:
  • John N. Garner (1933-1941)
  • Henry A. Wallace (1941-1945)
  • Harry S Truman (1945)
Nicknames:FDR

Franklin Delano Roosevelt (January 30, 1882 - April 12, 1945), often referred to as FDR, was the 32nd (1933-1945) President of the United States. He was elected to an unprecedented four terms of office - the only U.S. president elected more than twice, and part of the reason the United States Constitution was amended to limit presidents to 2½ terms (10 years). His main contributions were the instituting of major economic and social assistance programs, leading the country through a successful involvement in World War II, and the formation of the United Nations.

Biography

He was born on January 30, 1882 in Hyde Park, New York, and died on April 12, 1945 in Warm Springs, Georgia of a cerebral hemorrhage, leaving the famous Unfinished Portrait. He suffered from polio at the age of 39, which left him with severe difficulty in moving his legs. He often used a wheelchair when moving from one place or another. He took efforts to hide this disability throughout his life, and he tried not to be seen in his wheelchair. When a statue in his honor was commissioned in Washington, DC in 2001, controversy erupted because the statue consisted of Roosevelt sitting in a wheelchair. This was seen by many as a move towards political correctness, while some have even described it as a form of historical revisionism. From the age of one, through until 1936, Roosevelt spent his summers at Campobello Island, New Brunswick but because of his worsening polio, in later years he had to spend much of his time in Warm Springs, whose namesake warm springs provided him and others relief from their symptoms, and where he built the Little White House, now a Georgia state historic site. [1] He also created the town's Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation, which continues to help others with disabilities to this day. [1]

He graduated from Ivy League Harvard University in 1904, and from Ivy League Columbia Law School with a J.D. in 1908 before taking a job with a prestigious Wall Street firm. On St. Patrick's Day, 1905, he married Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, a distant cousin, who was the favorite niece of Theodore Roosevelt, his fifth cousin. They would have six children:

  1. Anna Eleanor Roosevelt May 3, 1906 - December 1, 1975
  2. James Roosevelt, December 23, 1907 - August 13, 1991
  3. Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr, March 18, 1909 - November 1, 1909
  4. Elliott Roosevelt, September 23, 1910 - October 27, 1990
  5. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr, August 17, 1914 - August 17, 1988
  6. John Aspinwall Roosevelt, March 13, 1916 - April 27, 1981

Government Positions include: Assistant Secretary of the Navy, 1913-1920; Governor of New York, 1929-1933. Roosevelt's Presidential campaign in 1932 saw the New York governor committing himself to battling the Great Depression, promoting a platform with "Three R's - relief, recovery and reform." He coined the term "New Deal" when he stated: "I pledge you, I pledge myself, to a new deal for the American people." On February 15, 1933 after his victory in the 1932 election, President-elect Roosevelt was nearly assassinated in Miami, Florida (the assassin did manage to kill Chicago, Illinois Mayor Anton J. Cermak). In reference to the Great Depression, Roosevelt gave his "We have nothing to fear, but fear itself" inauguration speech (March 4, 1933). Roosevelt's first weeks in office were called The Hundred Days, as during the first part of his administration he authored and approved a flurry of Congressional acts to institute immediate change and keep the nation's economy from destabilizing. He insituted a four-day "banking holiday" two days after he took office: a four-day period in which all banks in the country closed, allowing the institutions a brief period to recover and reorganize. During this time of crisis Roosevelt addressed the nation for the first time as President on March 12, 1933 in the first of many "Fireside Chats."

Of the various reform programs initiated by the Roosevelt administration, the most far-reaching and influential was the institution of the Social Security system, a form of welfare that was meant to provide support for low-income and elderly citizens.

In 1935-1936, the Supreme Court, which was dominated by conservatives with a narrow view of the interstate commerce clause of the Constitution, the basis of much New Deal legislation, struck down eight of FDR's New Deal programs. In response Roosevelt submitted to Congress in February of 1937 a plan for "judicial reform," which proposed adding a justice for every justice over the age of 70 who refused to retire, up to a maximum of 15 total. This came to be known as his attempt to "pack" the Court. Though the plan failed in Congress, as a threat to the Court it may have had its desired effect. In a move cynically referred to as "the switch in time that saved nine," one of the conservative justices inexplicably shifted his vote in West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, changing the ideological balance of the Court. It wasn't long before time allowed Roosevelt to further have his way on the bench, as vacancies allowed Roosevelt to eventually fill all nine seats with his appointments--the most of any presidency except George Washington's.

In 1937, Roosevelt became the first U.S. President to be inaugurated on January 20th, following adoption of the Twentieth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Prior to this, presidents had been sworn into office on March 4th.

Campaigning for re-election in 1940 against Wendell L. Willkie, Roosevelt said that he would not send American boys to fight in foreign wars. However, in 1941 the conflicting interests of Japan and the United States in Asia and the Pacific, especially in China, resulted in a breakdown of diplomatic relations to the point where war seemed inevitable (see entry for Hull note). Some have suggested Roosevelt had prior knowledge of the December 7, 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and welcomed it as a way to get the U.S. into World War II. Others point out, that while U.S. code-breakers had broken Japanese codes in Washington, D.C and knew something was about to happen, communication delays prevented the messages from getting to Pearl Harbor until 4 hours after the attack.

On January 14, 1943 Roosevelt became the first President of the United States to travel via airplane while in office with his flight from Miami, Florida to Morocco to meet with Winston Churchill to discuss World War II. The meeting was concluded on January 24.

In hindsight, perhaps the most controversial decision Roosevelt made was Executive Order 9066 which resulted in the internment in concentration camps of 110,000 Japanese nationals and American citizens of Japanese descent on the West Coast. Considered a major violation of civil liberties, it was even opposed at the time by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover as well as Eleanor Roosevelt as well as many other groups. The Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the Executive Order. Others have criticised him for failing to do anything to disrupt the Nazi operations in perpetrating the Holocaust despite having intelligence of the atrocity.

Some have said of all the American Presidents of the 20th century, that he was the most loved and most hated. He was so well known, he was referred to by his initials, FDR. Historians have often cited him as one of the three United States Presidents whose influence and leadership set a standard for greatness, along with George Washington and Abraham Lincoln.

Roosevelt was the first President to regularly address the American public through the medium of radio. He instituted a tradition of weekly radio speeches, which he called "fireside chats." These "chats" gave him the opportunity to take his opinions to the American people, and they often bolstered his popularity as he campaigned for various changes. During World War II the fireside chats were seen as important morale boosters for Americans at home.

One speech he is famous for delivering was his State of the Union Address in 1941. This speech is also known as the Four Freedoms Speech. His address to Congress and the nation on December 8, 1941 following the attack on Pearl Harbor entered history with the phrase, "December Seventh, 1941 - a date which will live in infamy."

He was elected to an unprecedented fourth term on November 7, 1944, beating Republican challenger Thomas E. Dewey. However, during the painting of his portrait, he died of a brain hemorrhage on April 12, 1945 and was succeeded by his vice president Harry S. Truman. In 1951 the Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution was passed, which limited all presidents from that point forward to two terms (this was previously just a custom that was established by George Washington and followed by every president up to Roosevelt).

Agencies founded during Roosevelt's Presidency

Supreme Court appointments

Related articles

External links

Preceded by:
Herbert Hoover
Presidents of the United States Succeeded by:
Harry S. Truman

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Franklin Delano Roosevelt."

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George W. Bush

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

George W. Bush
Order: 43rd President
Term of Office: January 20, 2001–present
Predecessor: Bill Clinton
Date of Birth: Saturday, July 6, 1946
Place of Birth: New Haven, Connecticut
First Lady: Laura Welch Bush
Profession: Businessman
Political Party: Republican
Vice President: Richard Bruce Cheney
Nicknames:Dubya, 43, Junior, Shrub

George Walker Bush (born July 6, 1946) is the 43rd and current President of the United States. Immediately before becoming President, he was Governor of Texas.

The name George W. Bush is commonly used (and the nicknames "Bush 43", "W.", and "Dubya" are used) to distinguish him from his father, George H. W. Bush, who was the 41st President of the United States. (Derogatory nicknames for George W. Bush include "Shrub", "Bush II", and "King George".)

Personal Life and Education

Bush was born in Connecticut and grew up in Midland and Houston, Texas. He has four younger siblings: Jeb, Neil, Marvin, and Dorothy. A younger sister, Robin, died of leukemia in 1953 at the age of three.

George Jr. followed his father and grandfather in education at Phillips Academy and Yale University, where he received a bachelor's degree in 1968 and where he joined Delta Kappa Epsilon and the Skull and Bones Society. He then received a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Harvard Business School. He is the first president with an MBA degree.

Bush enrolled in the Texas Air National Guard during the Vietnam War, and served as an F-102 pilot until being grounded after failing to appear for a mandatory physical exam and drug test. Controversy exists over whether he broke the law by going absent without leave (AWOL). Bush insists that he served as a pilot during his entire tour of duty, but no supporting documents have been made available.

Bush had serious problems with alcohol for years after college, including a drunk driving arrest in Maine in 1976. Allegations of past cocaine use have been widely circulated. Bush himself has refused to comment on any past history of drug use.

Bush married Laura Welch in 1977. In 1986, he forswore alcohol and became a born-again Christian, converting from Episcopalian Christianity to his wife's denomination, Methodism. They have twin daughters, Barbara and Jenna.

See also Bush political family.

Business and Political Career

Bush began his career in the oil industry in 1975 when he formed the oil and gas exploration company Arbusto Energy and continued working in the energy industry until 1986. His forays into the industry were disastrous, losing millions of dollars.

In 1978 Bush ran for the House of Representatives and was defeated by the Democratic State Senator Kent Hance.

After working on his father's successful 1988 presidential campaign, he assembled a group of partners from his father's close friends and purchased the Texas Rangers baseball franchise in 1989.

Bush was involved in controversial stock trades while serving on the board of directors of Harken Energy Corp. in 1990. Bush has claimed that he sold Harken stock on the assumption of a positive corporate outlook. However, on April 20 of that year, company President Mikel D. Faulkner told the directors that the company was facing grave financial problems, including a serious cash crisis that was exacerbated by pressure from lenders, as well as a slumping oil market. After receiving this dire news, in June Bush sold 212,140 shares of Harken stock. Shortly thereafter, on August 20, Harken reported a $23.2 million quarterly loss. Bush waited 36 weeks to file an SEC form about his sale. An SEC investigation, conducted while Bush's father was President of the United States, declared "the investigation has been terminated as to the conduct of Mr. Bush, and that, at this time, no enforcement action is contemplated with respect to him." but the investigation's termination "must in no way be construed as indicating that the party has been exonerated or that no action may ultimately result." As President, Bush has refused to authorize the SEC to release its full report on the investigation. When reporters asked Bush about his Harken activities, he told them that they "need to look back on the director's minutes", although this would in fact be impossible because Harken has declined to release its board records ever since questions were first raised concerning Bush's activities there.

The sale of Harken stock helped pay off a loan for his purchase of a partial interest in the Texas Rangers. He served as managing general partner of the Rangers until he was elected Governor of Texas on November 8, 1994 over incumbent Ann Richards. When the team was sold in 1998, Bush had earned $15,000,000.

He went on to become the first Texas governor to be elected to consecutive four-year terms. His tenure in office featured a reputation for bipartisan leadership, and some controversy, even international controversy. During Bush's tenure, Texas saw a sharp rise in capital punishment.

Bush became President on January 20, 2001, as the winner of one of the closest general elections in American history -- defeating Democratic Vice President Al Gore by only five electoral votes, while receiving fewer popular votes. (Until then, the most recent election in which a candidate lost the popular vote and won the election was in 1888.) The election results were hotly contested by Gore for several weeks, and are still disputed by some (see U.S. presidential election, 2000).

As the son of George H. W. Bush, George W. Bush is the second U.S. President to be the son of a President. The first was John Quincy Adams (the sixth President), who was the son of John Adams (the second President).

Public Image and Personality

According to some reports, George W. Bush's nickname with his family and close friends is "Junior" since he is the eldest son of George H.W. Bush. George W. Bush is also known for his like of nicknames and his practice of bestowing others with them.

Bush himself bestows nicknames on nearly everyone he meets. The best known nickname is probably "Pootie-Poot", bestowed by Bush on Vladimir Putin, the President of Russia. Another reported example was one given to Jean Chrétien, prime minister of Canada, is reputedly "Dino" (short for "Dinosaur"). This flippancy sometimes is picked up by others and is purported to occasionally backfire either on Bush or on them.

Questions about the intelligence of major candidates also became an issue during the 2000 election. Bush and Al Gore were both ridiculed with collections of assorted oddities. Some have attempted to compare their current respective intellectual capacities by going decades back to their academic achievements. According to that criterion, Bush's academic record and background was by and large comparable to Gore's. For example, Bush's verbal SAT score was 566, Al Gore's was 625. In addition, Gore received lower grades in his second year at Harvard University than any semester recorded on Bush's transcript from Yale, and Gore earned no degrees higher than a Bachelor of Arts in Government (Gore having flunked out of graduate school twice), while Bush earned a Master of Business Administration from Harvard. However, neither the correlation between SAT verbal scores and academic excellence, nor between academic excellence and intelligence, can be established; for example, Rhodes Scholar Bill Bradley's verbal SAT was a low 485, and an academic record does not take into account the difficulty of the classes taken or other factors that might impinge on a college record.

Popularity

Following the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks, President Bush enjoyed the highest approval ratings in history, upwards of 90 percent, according to most polls. High approval ratings are historically common for war-time Presidents, but Bush was able to maintain his high approval ratings a year later and, as of November 2002, had the highest approval rating of any President during a mid-term election, since Dwight Eisenhower. The polls were not universally favorable, however, and at least one poll showed that only a minority of the electorate would vote to re-elect him in 2004. Polls conducted during 2003 showed similar results, leading both Democratic and Republican pollsters to believe that his campaign for re-election could be as competitive as the 2000 race was.

In the 2002 mid-term elections, the Republican Party retook control of the U.S. Senate and added to their majority in the House of Representatives, bucking the historic trend. Historically, the party in the White House loses seats in the mid-term elections. It marked just the third time since the Civil War that the party in control of the White House gained seats in both houses of Congress in a mid-term election (others were 1902 and 1934). Some have suggested that the historic victory was due to Bush's popularity and his heavy campaigning for Republicans in numerous close races. However, others have argued that the Democrats lost seats in the election because of their timidity in criticizing Bush as a popular "war-time" President.

In 2003, Bush's approval ratings continued their slow descent from the 2001 highs. By late 2003, his approval numbers were in the low to middle 50's, around the lows of his Presidency. Nevertheless, his numbers were still historically solid for the third year of a Presidency, when the President's opponents typically begin their campaigns in earnest. Most polls tied the decline to growing concern over the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq and the economy's slow recovery from the 2001 recession.

A graphical summary of the trend of Bush's poll numbers can be seen at [1].

Platform

Main article: George W. Bush's 2000 Election Platform

September 11, 2001 radically modified his policy goals after the election.

Foreign policy

Bush's most significant foreign policy platform before coming to office involved support of a stronger economic and political relationship with Latin America, in particular Mexico, and a reduction in involvement in "nation-building" and other small-scale military engagements.

Bush's decision to impose a tariff on imported steel (ruled illegal by the W.T.O in November 2003, and withdrawn the following month), and to withdraw from global initiatives such as the Kyoto Protocol, ABM Treaty, an international land mine treaty and other multinational efforts, have convinced many that he (and his administration) has a policy of acting unilaterally, thus evading international responsibilities. Bush has justified these policies by arguing that these actions are in America's best interest. He has asserted, for example, that the Kyoto Protocol is "unfair and ineffective" because it would exempt 80 percent of the world and "cause serious harm to the U.S. economy."

Many governments have expressed their concern and dismay at what they see as a failure to ratify what they consider to be a key international environmental treaty and many nations (including the composite national grouping, the EU) are actively considering imposing sanctions against the US. However, blaming Bush for a failure to ratify may be rather off the mark. In 1997, the US Senate voted 95-0 that the United States should not become a party to the Kyoto Protocol unless developing nations were subject to scheduled limits or reductions of greenhouse gases. The Kyoto Protocol does not meet those criteria.

A change of focus immediately followed the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attack. His foreign (and domestic, to a lesser degree) policy was subsequently defined, above all, by the "War on Terrorism". This was first described in a special "Address to a Joint Session of Congress and the American People" on September 20, 2001 in which Bush announced that America was fighting a war on terrorism.

In July, 2002, Bush cut off $34 million in funding for the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). This funding had been allocated by Congress the previous December. Bush claimed that the UNFPA supported forced abortions and sterilizations in mainland China. His justification came from a bipartisan group of anti-abortion members of Congress and an anti-abortion organization called The Population Research Institute, which claimed to have obtained first-hand video taped evidence from victims of forced abortion and forced sterilization in county where the UNFPA operates in the PRC. The decision was praised by many in pro-life movement, including the United States' largest public policy women's organization, Concerned Women For America.

Abortion-rights supporters criticized the decision and point out that the PRI refused to release information that would allow the team to locate the women, and thus no independent verification of PRI's claims was possible. Nor was it possible to confirm that UNFPA funding was actually behind the abortion and forced sterilizations alleged in the video. However, he sent a fact finding team to the PRC to investigate the situation there, and the team reported that UNFPA funding did not go towards forced abortions or sterilizations. Bush thus disregarded the findings of his own investigatory mission on this matter. See [1] for more information on the PRI.

The Bush presidency has also been marked by diplomatic tensions with the People's Republic of China and North Korea, the latter of which admitted in 2003 to possessing nuclear weapons and threatened to use them if provoked by the US.

Bush has also maintained a desire to resume the peace process in Israel, and openly proclaimed his desire for a Palestinian state to be created before 2005. He outlined a "roadmap for peace" that featuring compromises that had to be made by both sides before Palestinian statehood could become a reality. One particular proposal was his instance for new Palestinian leadership; a stance that saw the appointment of the first ever Palestinian Prime Minister on April 29, 2003.

Military Campaigns

Once the source of the September 11 terrorist attacks was traced to Osama Bin Laden and his Al-Qaeda network operating out of Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, Bush launched a military campaign against the country. Though the original intent of the strikes was to destroy terrorist infrastructures and training camps, it soon became clear that Afghanistan's Taliban government was deeply connected to Bin Laden's terrorist organization. On November 13, 2001 American troops seized control of the capital city, Kabul, and overthrew the Taliban government. Exiled President Burhanuddin Rabbani was returned to office, and was soon followed by a special interim government headed by former Afghani territorial governor Hamid Karzai. Diplomatic relations between Afghanistan and the United States resumed, and Karzai became a close ally of Washington in the continued fight against terrorism.

The Bush Administration has been criticized for holding several hundred individuals accused of connections to Al-Qaeda or the Taliban at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba without trial. Under the Geneva Convention, prisoners of war cannot be held after the war has ended. The Bush Administration and its supporters, however, have countered that the war against America by Al-Qaeda is ongoing, that it is unconventional, and that the "battlefield" extends into America itself. George W. Bush is unapologetic about the detentions, labeling the detainees as "enemy combatants" and insisting that their detention is necessary.

The experiences encountered in dealing with the Taliban government inspired a new attitude in the Bush Administration's attitude towards foreign policy. Bush asserted that in America's continuing war against terror, the United States should not differentiate between terrorist groups, and the governments that support them. This view was highlighted in Bush's second State of the Union Address, in which he specifically singled out the nations of Iran, Iraq, and North Korea as particularly distressing examples of states that sponsor terrorism, dubbing them an Axis of Evil.

By early 2002 Bush began actively pressing for regime change in the nation of Iraq, indicating that his government had reason to believe that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had ties to terrorist groups and was developing weapons of mass destruction. This proposal was controversial with much of the world, and significant portions of the American public. Upon the advice of Secretary of State Colin Powell Bush agreed to pursue the "UN route" to disarming Iraq. On November 8, 2002 a US-proposed United Nations Security Council was unanimously passed, condemning the Iraqi regime and re-instating a team of UN weapons inspectors. The inspectors did not make any significant finds, but the Bush administration claimed they were being manipulated and deceived by the Iraqi regime. Powell made an appeal to the Security Council, showing photographs and conversations which the administration presented as proof that Iraq's government was engaging in widespread deception. As the Security Council did not react in favour of a military action against Iraq, Bush declared that the Council rendered itself "obsolete".

On March 20, 2003 Bush gave the go ahead for a full-scale military invasion of Iraq to overthrow the Iraqi regime. He did so using powers that had been granted to him by congress on October 16 of the previous year. After a few weeks of fighting, the Iraqi government was successfully overthrown on April 9, 2003 and US forces occupied the Iraqi capital. The military effort has now switched to an effort of maintaining Iraqi security, strengthening the nation's infrastructure, privatizing sectors of industry (notably not oil), and preparing to hand over power to a democratically elected government. As this process shows to be more difficult and expensive than previously predicted the US government turned again toward the UN, asking for financial and military support in Iraq.

Throughout the course of the Iraqi war Bush was often the target of harsh criticism. Both in America and in the rest of the world there were numerous anti-war protests. On February 15 2003 there were over 10 million people in the streets all over the world. Many of the protesters were vehemently critical of Bush, calling him a "warmonger," an oil-hungry "imperialist," a "fascist." Bush dismissed the protesters as being merely "a focus group". European leaders were also critical of the President, especially French President Jacques Chirac who soon became the leading international voice of opposition to the Bush plan of Iraqi regime change. German Justice Minister, Herta Däubler-Gmelin compared the methods of Bush to those of Hitler. These remarks drew strong condemnation from both the United States and Europe; the minister resigned.

There were also in the United States rallies that supported the President's actions in Iraq and also supporting the US and coalition forces. The people who participated in these rallies praised Bush's leadership and courage in confronting Iraq. In stark contrast, however, these rallies were much less attended, in some cases amounting to only a few dozen.

Before the war, polls of Americans themselves tended to indicate a 50/50 split on invading Iraq, with the lowest rankings tending to come from polls that broke the question down into three options -- opposition to the war with or without United Nations weapons inspections, support only if the United Nations agrees and has had adequate time to search for weapons of mass destruction, and unconditional support of the war. After the war began, however, a solid majority of the American people and their representatives in Congress, in striking contrast to international opinion, backed Bush's decision to invade Iraq, with poll numbers ranging from 62% to as high as 70% in favor of the war. The inability of the U.S. to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, however, has led to greater domestic criticism of the administration's Iraq policy.

Domestic Security

Following the September 11 terrorist attacks the Bush administration asked Congress to approve a series of laws that it stated were necessary to prosecute the War on Terror. These included a wide variety of surveillance programs, some of which came under heavy fire from civil libertarians who criticized the Bush administration of scaling back civil liberties.

Bush Security Initiatives

As mentioned, many of these actions were very controversial. Some accused the Bush administration of using the threat of terrorism as an excuse to clamp down on political dissent; indeed, many of Bush's critics were quick to allege that they were being unfairly targeted by the new security measures. Others accused the administration of over-reacting to the threat of terrorism, and participating in Big Brother style tactics with little justification.

Currently, a major controversy in the United States Congress is the debate over whether or not to expand the Patriot Act into a new Act known as Patriot Act II. This proposal would increase government surveillance on people in the United States suspected of terrorist activities and reduce judicial oversight over surveillance; authorize secret trials; and give the Justice Department the authority to revoke the American citizenship of anyone who belonged to an organization that the government deemed subversive. [1]

These laws are undoubtedly controversial. But many argue that in a world where well-funded, international conspiracies exist with the goal of, for instance, setting off a nuclear weapon in a major American city, the balance between security and liberty must shift somewhat. Supporters of the new law enforcement powers, such as Attorney General John Ashcroft have pointed out that against earlier predictions, nearly two years have passed without a single terrorist atrocity in the United States.

In any event, the debate over the proper role of government in people's lives will continue. Ultimately, the U.S. Supreme Court and lower Federal courts will rule on the constitutionality of the new laws.

Cabinet and Advisors

Main article: the Bush Administration

Among the most prominent cabinet members and Bush advisors are Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin Powell, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of Treasury John Snow, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice (not cabinet rank), and Attorney General John Ashcroft. Bush also took part in creating the Department of Homeland Security, which is led by Tom Ridge.

Legislation signed

Partial list:

Related articles

External links

Oppositional Bush links

Preceded by :
Bill Clinton
Presidents of the United States

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "George W. Bush."

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List of Federal Presidents of Austria

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of Federal Presidents of Austria since the founding of the Republic
Federal President
(Bundespräsident)
Born-Died From-To

Karl Seitz 1869 - 1950 1918 - 1920

Michael Hainisch 1858 - 1940 1920 - 1928

Wilhelm Miklas 1872 - 1956 1928 - 1938

Karl Renner 1870 - 1950 1945 - 1950

Theodor Körner 1873 - 1957 1951 - 1957

Adolf Schärf 1890 - 1965 1957 - 1965

Franz Jonas 1899 - 1974 1965 - 1974

Rudolf Kirchschläger 1915 - 2000 1974 - 1986

Kurt Waldheim 1918 - 1986 - 1992

Thomas Klestil 1932 - 1992 -

See also: Politics of Austria, Chancellor of Austria, Lists of incumbents

External link

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List of Hungarian rulers

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The following table enlists all rulers of Hungary since Arpad.
Affiliation Ruler Reigns of rulers Remarks
Árpád Árpád 896-907 founder, led Magyars into Eastern Europe
Árpád Zoltan 907-946
non-dynastic Val 946-952
Árpád Taksony 952-972
Árpád Geza 972-997
Árpád St. Stephen (István) 997-1038 first king of Hungary
dynastic struggle 1038-1046
non dynastic Peter Urseolo 1038-1041, 1044-1046 (Géza's grandson)
non dynastic Sámuel Aba 1041-1044 (Husband of Géza's daughter)
Vatha pagan rising 1046-1047 ?
Árpád Andrew I 1047-1061 Arpad dynasty restored
Árpád Bela I 1061-1063
Árpád Solomon (Salamon) 1063-1074
Árpád Géza I 1074-1077
Árpád St. Ladislaus (László) 1077-1095 All Ladislaus' are spelled with "laus" as in 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica, see talk page
Árpád Coloman or Kálmán 1095-1114 King of Hungary, & Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia
Árpád Stephen II 1114-1131
Árpád Béla II 1131-1141
Árpád Géza II 1141-1161
Árpád Stephen III 1161-1162
Árpád Ladislaus II 1162-1163
Árpád Stephen IV 1163
Árpád Stephen III, restored 1163-1172
Árpád Béla III 1172-1196
Árpád Emeric (Imre) 1196-1204
Árpád Ladislaus III 1204-1205
Árpád Andrew (András) II 1205-1235
Árpád Béla IV the Great 1235-1270 Mongol invasion
Árpád Stephen V 1270-1272
Árpád Ladislaus IV 1272-1290
Árpád Andrew III 1290-1301 last of Arpad dynasty
Premyslid Wenceslas (Vencel) III of Bohemia 1301-1305 Bohemian king, elected as King of Hungary
Wittelsbach Otto III of Bavaria 1305-1308
Angevin Charles (Károly) I 1308-1342 founded the Anjou line and established the Angevin dynasty in Hungary.
Angevin Louis I the Great (Nagy Lajos) 1342-1382
Angevin Mary 1382-1395
Angevin Charles II 1385-1386 also King of Naples as Charles III, in opposition to Mary
Luxembourg Sigismund (Zsigmond) 1387-1437 also Holy Roman Emperor and King of Bohemia
Habsburg Albert 1437-1439 son-in-law of the precedent, also German King and Albert V of Austria
Interregnum title dispute between Vladislav and Ladislaus
Jagiellon Ulászló I 1440-1444
Habsburg Ladislaus Posthumus 1444-1457 also King of Bohemia
non dynastic Matthias Corvinus the Just (Igazságos Mátyás) 1458-1490
Jagiellon Ulászló II 1490-1516
Jagiellon Louis II 1516-1526 killed in the Battle of Mohacs
Rival kings of Emperor Ferdinand and John Zápolya both claimed themselves as ruler of Hungary.
Habsburg Ferdinand (Ferdinánd) I 1526-1564 brother in law of Louis II, also Holy Roman Emperor. Ottoman invasion
Zápolya John Zápolya (Zápolya János) 1526-1540 Leader of groups of Hungarian nobles claiming no foreign ruler should be chosen King of Hungary. Claimed the throne with support of Hungarian nobles, and later the Ottoman Sultan. Ottoman invasion. (Zápolya is alternatively spelled as Szapolyai.)
Zápolya Isabel (Izabella) 1556-1559 After the death of his husband Zápolya János the areas was mainly controlled by nobles (with the lead of Fráter György), until the nobles recalled her with her child (II Zápolya Zsigmond) as Queen.
Zápolya John II Sigismund (Zsigmond) Zápolya 1540-1571 Son of precedents. King of Hungary and Prince of Transylvania (Erdély).
Hungary was effectively split into 3 parts: a Habsburg domain in the north and west, Ottoman domain in the center, and the Ottoman satellite Transylvania in the east after 1562.
Habsburg Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor 1563-1576
Habsburg Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor 1572-1608
Báthory Stephen Bathory 1571-1575 Prince of Transylvania
Báthory Christopher (Kristóf) Bathory 1575-1581 Prince of Transylvania and brother of precedent
Báthory Sigismund Bathory 1581-1597, August 1598- March 1599, 1599-1602 Prince of Transylvania and son of precedent. Abdicated three times, twice (1597, 1602), in favor of Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II and once (1599) of his cousin Andrew Cardinal Bathory.
Báthory Andrew Cardinal Bathory 1599 Prince of Transylvania
non dynastic Stephen Bocskay 1604-1606 Governor(1604) and Prince (1605) of Transylvania
Rákóczy Sigismund Rákóczy 1607-1608 elected Prince of Transylvania
Habsburg Matthias, Holy Roman Emperor 1608-1619
Báthory Gabriel (Gábor) Bathory 1608-1613 Prince of Transylvania
non dynastic Gábor Bethlen 1613-1629 Prince of Transylvania
Habsburg Ferdinand II 1618-1637
Rákóczy George (György) I Rákóczy 1630-1648 elected Prince of Transylvania
Habsburg Ferdinand III 1625-1657
Habsburg Ferdinand IV 1647-1654
Rákóczy George II Rákóczy 1648-1657 Prince of Transylvania
Habsburg Leopold I 1655-1705
non dynastic Emeric Thököly (or Tökölli) 1660-1682 against Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I
Movements of Hungarian liberation as a result of a prolonged war against Turks. Habsburgs began colonization of Serbs (1690) and Germans (1682-1699) in Southern Hungary.
Habsburg Joseph I 1687-1711
Rákóczy Francis II Rákóczy head of liberation movement (1703-1711) and elected Ruling Prince of Transylvania
Habsburg Charles III 1711-1740
Large scale German settlements in Hungary (1720-1800)
Habsburg Maria Theresa (Mária Terézia) 1740-1780
Habsburg Joseph II 1780-1790
Habsburg Leopold II 1790-1792
Habsburg Francis 1792-1835
Habsburg Ferdinand V 1835-1848
The Hungarian Republic (14 April - 13 August 1849) was proclaimed, with Louis Kossuth as Governor-President. Croats sought autonomous government and separation from Hungary. In 1849, the Habsburgs reasserted their authority with the help of Russian troops
Habsburg Francis Joseph I (Ferenc József) 2 December 1848- 21 November 1916
Habsburg Charles IV 21 November 1916 - 13 November 1918
Hungary declared complete independence from Austria on October 17 1918 and forms the Second Republic.
Károlyi Mihály 16 November 1918- 21 March 1919
Communist Sandor Garbai 21 March - 1 August 1919 Romania invades Hungary.
Acting Head of State Gyula Peidl 1 August - 6 August 1919
Second Republic abolished.
Archduke Joseph 6 August - 23 October 1919 Regent
Istvan Friedrich 23 October - 24 November 1919
Karoly Huszar 24 November 1919 - 1 March 1920
Monarchy Restored
"Monarchy" Miklos Horthy 1 March 1920 - 3 November 1944 Acting as regent.
pro-Nazi Ferenc Szalasi 4 November 1944 - 28 March 1945 Hungary is occupied by Nazi Germany.
anti-Nazi government in opposition to March 1945 Béla Zsedényi 21 December 1944 - 2 February 1946 Hungary is occupied by the Red Army.
Third Hungarian Republic
Communist Zoltan Tildy 2 February 1946 - 2 August 1948
Árpád Szakasits 2 August 1948- 26 April 1950

Renamed the "Hungarian Peoples Republic"
Communist Sándor Rónai 26 April 1950 - 14 August 1952
Socialist István Dobi 14 August 1952- 13 April 1967
Hungarian Revolt of 1956
Socialist Pál Losonczi 13 April 1967 - 25 June 1987
Socialist Károly Németh 25 June 1987 - 29 June 1988

Socialist Brunó Ferenc Straub 29 June 1988 - 18 October 1989
Fourth Hungarian Republic
Socialist Mátyás Szürös 18 October 1989 - 2 May 1990 Interim President
Democrat Árpád Göncz 2 May 1990 - 4 August 2000
Non-party Ferenc Mádl 4 August 2000-Present

General Secretaries of the Hungarian Communist/Socialist Workers' Party, 1945-1989

External links

https://secure.magyarorszag.hu/orszaginfo/tortenelem/uralkodokesallamfok/uralkodoallamfo.html

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Hungarian rulers."

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List of Presidents of Albania

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of Presidents of Albania

See Also

External Links

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List of Presidents of Algeria

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This page contains a list of presidents of Algeria

Presidents of Algeria, 1962-present

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List of Presidents of Argentina

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of Presidents of Argentina
Term President

1826 - 1827 Bernardino Rivadavia
1827 - 1827 Vicente López y Planes
1854 - 1860 Justo José de Urquiza
1860 - 1861 Santiago Derqui
1862 - 1868 Bartolomé Mitre
1868 - 1874 Domingo F. Sarmiento
1874 - 1880 Nicolás Avellaneda
1880 - 1886 Julio Argentino Roca
1886 - 1890 Miguel Juárez Celman
1890 - 1892 Carlos Pellegrini
1892 - 1895 Luis Sáenz Peña
1895 - 1898 José Evaristo Uriburu
1898 - 1904 Julio Argentino Roca
1904 - 1906 Manuel Quintana
1906 - 1910 José Figueroa Alcorta
1910 - 1914 Roque Sáenz Peña
1914 - 1916 Victorino de la Plaza
1916 - 1922 Hipólito Yrigoyen
1922 - 1928 Marcelo T. de Alvear
1928 - 1930 Hipólito Yrigoyen
1930 - 1932 José Félix Uriburu
1932 - 1938 Agustín Pedro Justo
1938 - 1942 Roberto María Ortiz
1942 - 1943 Ramón Castillo
1943 - 1944 Pedro Pablo Ramírez (de facto)
1944 - 1946 Edelmiro Julián Farrell (de facto)
1946 - 1955 Juan Domingo Perón
1955 Eduardo Lonardi (de facto)
1955 - 1958 Pedro Eugenio Aramburu (de facto)
1958 - 1962 Arturo Frondizi
1962 - 1963 José María Guido (de facto)
1963 - 1966 Arturo Umberto Illia
1966 - 1970 Juan Carlos Onganía
1970 - 1971 Roberto M. Levingston (de facto)
1971 - 1973 Alejandro A. Lanusse (de facto)
1973 Héctor José Cámpora
1973 Raúl Alberto Lastiri
1973 - 1974 Juan Domingo Perón (2nd time)
1974 - 1976 Isabel Perón
1976 Military Junta (de facto)
1976 - 1981 Jorge Rafael Videla (de facto)
1981 Roberto Eduardo Viola (de facto)
1981 - 1982 Leopoldo Galtieri (de facto)
1982 - 1983 Reynaldo Bignone (de facto)
1983 - 1989 Raúl Alfonsín
1989 - 1999 Carlos Menem
1999 - 2001 Fernando de la Rúa
2001 Ramón Puerta (interim)
2001 - 2002 Adolfo Rodríguez Saá (interim)
2002 Eduardo Camaño (interim)
2002 - 2003 Eduardo Duhalde (interim)
From May 25, 2003Néstor Kirchner

See also: Politics of Argentina, lists of incumbents

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Presidents of Argentina."

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List of Presidents of Benin

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This page contains a list of presidents of Benin.

Presidents of Benin, 1960-present

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List of presidents of Bolivia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of presidents of Bolivia :

René* Barrientos Ortuño See also: History of Bolivia, Politics of Bolivia, Bolivia

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of presidents of Bolivia."

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List of Presidents of Botswana

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This page contains a list of presidents of Botswana

Presidents of Botswana, 1966-present

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List of Presidents of Brazil

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This is a list of the Presidents of Brazil.

See also

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List of Presidents of Bulgaria

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This page will list the various republican heads of state of Bulgaria, as well as leaders of Bulgaria's communist party during the time when it played the "leading role" in the Bulgarian state.

Heads of State

Chairman of the Provisional Presidency, 1946-1947

Chairmen of the Presidium of the National Assembly, 1947-1971

Chairmen of the State Council, 1971-1990

Presidents, 1990-present

General Secretaries of the Bulgarian Communist Party, 1948-1990

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List of Presidents of Chad

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This contains a list of presidents of Chad.

see also lists of incumbents

Presidents of Chad, 1960-present

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List of Presidents of Chile

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Unlike many of the other countries in the region, Chile has a long history of democratic Presidents. The President of Chile is both the chief of state and the chief of goverment.

Here is the full list of them:

Before the presidential institution (at the beginning of the Republican and independent state), there was the figure of Director Supremo (Supreme Director). There were XX of them:

People who temporary fulfilled the role of President

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List of Presidents of Colombia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of Presidents of the Republic of Colombia

(1898) Guillermo Qunitero Calderón, José Manuel Marroquín
(1898-1900) Manuel Antonio Sanclemente
(1900-1904) José Manuel Marroquín
(1904-1909) Rafael Reyes
(1909) Jorge Holguín
(1909-1910) Ramón González Valencia
(1910-1914) Carlos Emilio Restrepo
(1914-1918) José Vicente Concha
(1918-1921) Marco Fidel Suárez
(1921-1922) Jorge Holguín
(1922-1926) Pedro Nel Ospina
(1926-1930) Miguel Abadia Méndez
(1930-1934) Enrique Olaya Herrera
(1934-1938) Alfonso López Pumarejo
(1938-1942) Eduardo Santos
(1942-1945) Alfonso López Pumarejo
(1945-1946) Alberto Lleras Camargo
(1946-1950) Mariano Ospina Pérez
(1950-1951) Laureano Gómez
(1951-1953) Roberto Udarneta Arbelaez
(1953-1957) Gustavo Rojas Pinilla
(1957-1958) Military Junta
(1958-1962) Alberto Lleras Camargo
(1962-1966) Guillermo Leon Valencia
(1966-1970) Carlos Lleras Restrepo
(1970-1974) Misael Pastrana Borrero
(1974-1978) Alfonso López Michelsen
(1978-1982) Julio César Turbay Ayala
(1982-1986) Belisario Betancur
(1986-1990) Virgilo Barco Vargas
(1990-1994) César Gaviria Trujillo
(1994-1998) Ernesto Samper Pizano
(1998-2002) Andrés Pastrana Arango
(2002- Álvaro Uribe Vélez

See also: Politics of Colombia, president, lists of incumbents

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Presidents of Colombia."

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List of Presidents of Côte d'Ivoire

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This page contains a list of presidents of Côte d'Ivoire.

See also lists of incumbents

Presidents of Côte d'Ivoire, 1960-present

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List of Presidents of Djibouti

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This page contains a list of presidents of Djibouti.

See also lists of incumbents.

Presidents of Djibouti, 1977-present

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List of Presidents of Ecuador

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

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List of Presidents of Eritrea

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This page contains a list of presidents of Eritrea.

See also lists of incumbents.

Presidents of Eritrea, 1993-present

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List of Presidents of Ethiopia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This page contains a list of heads of state of Ethiopia since 1974.

See also lists of incumbents, List of Emperors of Ethiopia

List of Heads of State of Ethiopia, 1974-present

Chairmen of the Provisional Military Administrative Council, 1974-1987

Presidents of Ethiopia, 1987-present

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List of Presidents of Gabon

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This page contains a list of presidents of Gabon

See also lists of incumbents

Presidents of Gabon, 1960 - present

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List of Presidents of Guinea-Bissau

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This page contains a list of presidents of Guinea-Bissau.

See also lists of incumbents, List of national leaders

Presidents of Guinea-Bissau, 1973-present

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List of Presidents of Iceland

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of Presidents of Iceland

see also: Politics of Iceland, list of Prime Ministers of Iceland, list of Icelandic rulers, lists of incumbents

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Presidents of Iceland."

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List of Presidents of Indonesia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of Presidents of Indonesia

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List of Presidents of Italy

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of Presidents of Italy

See also: Politics of Italy, List of Prime Ministers of Italy, Lists of incumbents

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Presidents of Italy."

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List of Presidents of Latvia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Nazi and Soviet occupation (1940-1990)

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List of Presidents of Liberia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The following is a list of Presidents of Liberia:

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List of Presidents of Lithuania

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Holders of the post of President of Lithuania.

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List of Presidents of Mexico

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This is a list of presidents of Mexico.

See also List of Aztec rulers and List of Viceroys of New Spain. The first leader of independent Mexico was Agustín de Iturbide, he was emperor, ruling from 1821-1823.

Presidents from the declaration of the Republic of Mexico to the 1917 Constitution:

This is a list of Presidents of Mexico since the adoption of the 1917 Constitution.

President FromTo
Venustiano Carranza 1917 1920
Adolfo de la Huerta 19201920
Álvaro Obregón 19201924
Plutarco Elías Calles19241928
Emilio Portes Gil 1928 1930
Pascual Ortiz Rubio1930 1932
Abelardo L. Rodríguez 19321934
Lázaro Cárdenas del Río1934 1940
Manuel Ávila Camacho 1940 1946
Miguel Alemán 1946 1952
Adolfo Ruiz Cortines1952 1958
Adolfo López Mateos 1958 1964
Gustavo Díaz Ordaz 1964 1970
Luis Echeverría Álvarez 1970 1976
José López Portillo19761982
Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado 1982 1988
Carlos Salinas de Gortari1988 1994
Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León1994 2000
Vicente Fox Quesada 2000 N/A

See also

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List of Presidents of Nicaragua

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of Presidents of Nicaragua

  1. 1984-1990: Daniel Ortega Saavedra
  2. 1990-1996: Violeta Barrios de Chamorro
  3. 1997-2001: Arnoldo Alemán Lacayo
  4. From 2001: Enrique Bolaños

    Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Presidents of Nicaragua."

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List of Presidents of Peru

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of presidents of Peru :

See also

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List of Presidents of Poland

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Heads of the Polish state:

See also: List of Polish rulers, List of Polish Prime Ministers

Second Republic - Druga Rzeczpospolita (1918 - 1939)

President of the Republic of Poland - Prezydent RP:

Polish Government in Exile - Rząd Polski na Wychodzstwie (1939 - 1990)

President of the Republic of Poland - Prezydent RP:

Communistic Poland - Polska Ludowa (1944 - 1952)

People's Republic of Poland - Polska Rzeczpospolita Ludowa (1952 - 1989)

The Council of State was theoretically collective head of state, however de facto the most important person was the First Secretary of the Central Committee of Polish United Workers Party

President of Council of State - Przewodniczący Rady Państwa:

First Secretary of the Central Committee of PUWP - Pierwszy Sekretarz KC PZPR:

Third Republic - Trzecia Rzeczpospolita (since 1989)

President of the Republic of Poland - Prezydent RP: ;RP = Rzeczpospolita Polska : Republic of Poland (official name 1918 - 1952 and since 1990) ;PRL = Polska Rzeczpospolita Ludowa : People's Republic of Poland (official name 1952 - 1989) ;KC PZPR = Komitet Centralny Polskiej Zjednoczonej Partii Robotniczej : Central Committee of Polish United Workers Party See also Lists of incumbents

External links

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List of Presidents of Portugal

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Presidents of Portugal
Alignment Leader Position Start End
  Manuel José de Arriaga Proclamation of the Portuguese Republic 1910 1912
  Manuel José de Arriaga President 1912 1915
  Bernardino Machado President 1915 1917
  Sidónio Pais Gen. President-Dictator 1917 1918
  João do Canto e Castro Provisional President 1918 1919
  António José de Almeida President 1919 1923
  Teixeira Gomes   1923 1925
  Bernardino Machado   1925 1926
Military António de Fragoso Carmona Gen. Dictator 1926 1928
Military António de Fragoso Carmona President 1928 1932
Military António de Fragoso Carmona Presidency under dictator António de Oliveira Salazar 1932 1951
Military Francisco Craveiro Lopes Presidency under dictator António de Oliveira Salazar 1951 1958
Military Américo Deus Tomás   1958 1974
Military António de Spínola military coup of April 25 - Carnation revolution 1974 1974
Military Francisco da Costa Gomes   1974 1976
Military António Ramalho Eanes   1976 1986
Socialist Mário Soares   1986 1996
Socialist Jorge Sampaio   1996 Present

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Presidents of Portugal."

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List of Presidents of Romania

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

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List of Presidents of Slovenia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Presidents of Slovenia:

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List of Presidents of Sri Lanka

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The following is a list of Sri Lankan presidents:

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List of Presidents of the Democratic Republic of the Congo

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This contains a list of presidents of what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo (also known as the Republic of the Congo, 1960-1966, and the Republic of Zaire, 1971-1997.

See also lists of incumbents.

Presidents of Congo (Kinshasa), 1960-present

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List of Presidents of Turkey

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Here is a list of Turkish presidents since the fall of the Ottoman Empire.

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List of Presidents of Uruguay

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

This is a list of Presidents of Uruguay.

From-ToPresidentTermParty
1903-1907José Batlle y Ordoñez1
1911-1915José Batlle y Ordoñez2
1973-1985
1985-1990Julio María Sanguinetti1Colorado Party
1990-1995Luis Alberto Lacalle1National Party
1995-2000Julio María Sanguinetti2Colorado Party
2000- Jorge Batlle1

See also: History of Uruguay, Politics of Uruguay

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Presidents of Uruguay."

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List of Presidents of Venezuela

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of Presidents of Venezuela

[1] Note: On April 12 2002 Chávez was temporarily overthrown by a military junta which placed Pedro Carmona Estanga in charge of the nation. Carmona was proptly forced to step down however, making Vice President Diosdado Cabello briefly president. Cabello in turn appointed Chavez as his Vice President, and prompty resigned.

See also: Politics of Venezuela | History of Venezuela | Venezuela | lists of incumbents

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Presidents of Venezuela."

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Politics of Senegal

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Senegal is a secular republic with a strong presidency, weak legislature, reasonably independent judiciary, and multiple political parties. Senegal is one of the few African states that has never experienced a coup d'etat. As noted above, power was transferred peacefully, if not altogether democratically, from Léopold Senghor to Diouf in 1981, and once again, this time in fully democratic elections, from Abdou Diouf to Abdoulaye Wade in March 2000.

The President is elected by universal adult suffrage to a 5-year term. The unicameral National Assembly has 120 members, who are elected separately from the President. The Socialist Party dominated the National Assembly until April 2001, when in free and fair legislative elections, President Wade's coalition won a majority (89 of 120 seats). The Cour de Cassation (Highest Appeals Court, equivalent to the U.S. Supreme Court) and the Constitutional Council, the justices of which are named by the President, are the nation's highest tribunals. Senegal is divided into 10 administrative regions, each headed by a governor appointed by and responsible to the President. The law on decentralization, which came into effect in January 1997, distributed significant central government authority to regional assemblies.

Senegal’s principal political party was for 40 years the Socialist Party (PS). Its domination of political life came to an end in March 2000, when Abdoulaye Wade, the leader of the Senegalese Democractic Party (PDS) and leader of the opposition for more than 25 years, won the presidency. Under the terms of the 2001 constitution, future presidents will serve for 5 years and be limited to two terms. Wade was the last President to be elected to a 7-year term.

President Wade has advanced a liberal agenda for Senegal, including privatizations and other market-opening measures. He has a strong interest in raising Senegal’s regional and international profile. The country, nevertheless, has limited means with which to implement ambitious ideas. The liberalization of the economy is proceeding, but at a slow pace. Senegal continues to play a significant role in regional and international organizations. President Wade has made excellent relations with the United States a high priority.

There are presently some 65 political parties, most of which are marginal and little more than platforms for their leaders. The principal political parties, however, constitute a true multiparty, democratic political culture, and they have contributed to one of the most successful democratic transitions in Africa, even among all developing countries. A flourishing independent media, largely free from official or informal control, also contributes to the democratic politics of Senegal. The country’s generally tolerant culture, largely free from ethnic or religious tensions, has provided a resilient base for democratic politics.

Country name:

Conventional long form: Republic of Senegal

Conventional short form: Senegal

Local long form: Republique du Senegal

Local short form: Senegal

'Data code: SG

Government type: Republic under multiparty democratic rule

Capital: Dakar

Administrative divisions: 10 regions (regions, singular - region); Dakar, Diourbel, Fatick, Kaolack, Kolda, Louga, Saint-Louis, Tambacounda, Thies, Ziguinchor

Independence: 4 April 1960 from France; complete independence was achieved upon dissolution of federation with Mali on 20 August 1960 (The Gambia and Senegal signed an agreement on 12 December 1981 (constituted February 1982) that called for the creation of a loose confederation to be known as Senegambia, but the agreement was dissolved on 30 September 1989)

National holiday: Independence Day, 4 April (1960)

Constitution: 3 March 1963, revised 1991

Legal system: Based on French civil law system; judicial review of legislative acts in Constitutional Court; the Council of State audits the government's accounting office; Senegal has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction

Suffrage: 18 years of age; universal

Executive branch:

Chief of state: President Abdoulaye WADE (since NA 2000)

Head of government: Prime Minister Niasse MOUSTAPHA (since NA 2000)

Cabinet: Council of Ministers appointed by the prime minister in consultation with the president

Elections: president elected by popular vote for a seven-year term; election last held 27 February 2000 (next to be held 27 February 2007); prime minister appointed by the president

Election results: Abdoulaye WADE elected president; percent of vote in the second round of voting - Abdoulaye WADE (PDS) NA%, Abdou DIOUF (PS) NA%

Legislative branch: unicameral National Assembly or Assemblee Nationale (140 seats; members are elected by direct popular vote to serve five-year terms)

Elections: last held 24 May 1998 (next to be held NA May 2003)

Election results: percent of vote by party - PS 50%, PDS 19%, UDS-R 13%, And Jef 5%, LD-MPT 4%, CDP 2%, FSD 1%, PDS-R 1%, RND 1%, BGC 1%, PIT 1%, other 2%; seats by party - PS 93, PDS 23, UDS-R 11, And Jef 4, LD-MPT 3, CDP 1, FSD 1, PDS-R 1, RND 1, BGC 1, PIT 1

Judicial branch: under the terms of a reform of the judicial system implemented in 1992, the principal organs of the judiciary are as follows: Constitutional Court; Council of State; Court of Final Appeals or Cour de Cassation; Court of Appeals

Political parties and leaders:

Political pressure groups and leaders: labor; Muslim brotherhoods; students; teachers

International organization participation: ACCT, ACP, AfDB, ECA, ECOWAS, FAO, FZ, G-15, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC, ICC, ICFTU, ICRM, IDA, IDB, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, ILO, IMF, IMO, Inmarsat, Intelsat, Interpol, IOC, IOM, ITU, MIPONUH, NAM, OAU, OIC, OPCW, PCA, UN, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNIDO, UNIKOM, UNMIBH, UNMIK, UNTAET, UPU, WADB, WAEMU, WCL, WCO, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WToO, WTrO

Flag description: three equal vertical bands of green (hoist side), yellow, and red with a small green five-pointed star centered in the yellow band; uses the popular pan-African colors of Ethiopia

See also : Senegal

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Politics of Senegal."

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President

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

A President is the head of state of a republic. He or she may be elected by a popular vote of the people, by the legislature, by a special electoral college or by another means, including dictatorship.


Theodore Roosevelt
President of the United States
(1901-1909)

Only a tiny minority of modern republics do not have a head of state; examples include the systems used in Switzerland and San Marino. While the Swiss system has a President of the Confederation, the headship of state is actually collectively vested in the seven-member Swiss Federal Council. The President is a member of the Federal Council elected by the Swiss Federal Assembly (the Swiss Parliament) for a year; and the President is merely primus inter pares (first among equals). Nevertheless, on the international stage he or she is treated as head of state. Letters of Credence appointing ambassadors are formally addressed to him or her by other heads of state.

Presidential systems

In states with what is called a Presidential system of government, the President is also the head of government, as well as the head of state. Countries with such a system include the United States and most nations in South America. In this system the office of President is very powerful, both in practice and theory. In the United States, the President is indirectly elected by the U.S. Electoral College made up of electors chosen by voters in the presidential election. In most U.S. states, each elector is committed to voting for a specified candidate determined by the popular vote in each state, so that the people, in voting for each elector, is in effect voting for the candidate. However, in several close U.S. elections (notably 1876, 1888, 2000), while one candidate received the most popular votes, another candidate managed to win more electoral votes in the Electoral College and so win the presidency.

Parliamentary systems


Mary McAleese
President of Ireland
(1997- present)
Other states have what is called a Parliamentary system of government, in which the President is only head of state, and the Prime Minister is the head of government. Countries with such systems include India, Ireland and Italy. Under such a system, executive authority if often vested in the president, with the Government governing in his or her name. However a president may also possess some reserve powers.

In parliamentary systems, the president's role is usually primarily ceremonial. However, due the combination of constitutionally established "reserve powers," protocol (which may require them to formally chair cabinet meetings and/or have access to all cabinet memoranda), and his or her role as the person in whose name executive authority is vested, often gives the president a degree of informal influence not often publicly realised.

Semi-presidential systems

A third system is the semi-presidential system, also known as the French system, in which like the Parliamentary system there is both a President and a Prime Minister, but unlike the Parliamentary system the President has significant day-to-day power. When his party controls the majority of seats in the National Assembly the president can operate closely with the parliament and prime minister, and work towards a common agenda. When the National Assembly is controlled by opponents of the President however, the president can find himself marginalized with the opposition party prime minister exercising most of the power. Though the prime minister remains an appointee of the president, the president must obey the rules of parliament, and select a leader from the house's majority holding party. Thus, sometimes the president and PM can be friends, sometimes bitter rivals. This situation is known as cohabitation. The French semi-presidential system, which can be considered a hybrid between the first two, was developed at the beginning of the Fifth Republic by Charles de Gaulle. It is used (of course) in France, Russia, and several other post-colonial countries which have emulated the French model.


Charles de Gaulle
President of the Fifth French Republic
(1958-1969)

Between 1870 and 1940, and again from 1945 to 1958, France operated a classic parliamentary system of government, with power in a cabinet chosen by the National Assembly, and a largely though not totally symbolic president. In 1877, President MacMahon showed that his office was constitutionally significant when he dismissed the then prime minister before calling new elections, in the hope of achieving a royalist majority to restore the monarchy. (In earlier periods, France operated under systems of absolute monarchy (pre the 1789 revolution), constitutional monarchy (1815-1848), a presidential system (1848-52) and an empire (early 1800s to 1815; 1852-1870).

In dictatorships, the title is frequently taken by self-appointed and/or military-backed leaders. Such is the case in many African states; Idi Amin in Uganda, for example. Sometimes the title is even extended into the more presumptuous form of "president for life." In some communist states the head of the Communist party was also given the presidency, Fidel Castro in Cuba, Mikhail Gorbachev in the Soviet Union. On other occasions in the Soviet Union, the real power was exercised by the General Secretary of the Communist Party, with some local notable holding the presidency.

Presidential symbols

As the country's head of state, in most countries the president is entitled to certain symbolic honors, as well as luxury perks that come with the office. For example, most of the world's presidents have a special residence; often a lavish mansion or palace. The President of the United States for example resides in the famous White House.

As well as an official residence, in some nations the Presidency brings with it certain symbols of office, such as an official uniform, decorations, or other accessories. Perhaps the most common presidential symbol are the presidential sashes worn by the presidents of South America. In these countries, the sash is a symbol of the presidency's continuity, and presting the sash to the new president is a key part of the inauguration ceremony.

Non-Governmental Presidents

President is also used as a title in a number of non-governmental circumstances. The head of a university or non-profit corporation, particularly in the United States of America, is often known as president. President is also a title in many corporations. In some cases the president acts as chief operating officer under the direction of the chief executive officer.

see also: CEOs of major corporations

Presidential chronologies

  • Albania
  • Algeria
  • Angola
  • Argentina
  • Benin
  • Bolivia
  • Botswana
  • Brazil
  • Burkina Faso
  • Burundi
  • Cameroon
  • Cape Verde
  • Central African Republic
  • Chad
  • Chile
  • Colombia
  • Comoros
  • Ecuador
  • European Commission
  • Ethiopia
  • Finland
  • France
  • Germany
  • Guatemala
  • Honduras
  • Iceland
  • India
  • Indonesia
  • Ireland
  • Iraq
  • Italy
  • Kenya
  • Latvia
  • Liberia
  • Lithuania
  • Mexico
  • Nicaragua
  • North Korea
  • North Yemen
  • Peru
  • Philippines
  • Poland
  • Portugal
  • Slovenia
  • South Korea
  • South Yemen
  • Sri Lanka
  • Swiss Confederation
  • Tajikistan
  • Turkey
  • United States
  • Uruguay
  • Venezuela
  • Yemen

Specific information

Additional reading

The powers, functions and functioning of presidents were reviewed by six international experts for Australia's Republic Advisory Committee in 1993. Reports by among others Professor Klaus Von Beyme (on Germany), A.G Noorani (on India), Jim Duffy (on Ireland) and Sir Ellis Clarke (on Trinidad and Tobago) outline the role of various presidencies. The full report is called An Australian Republic: The Options - The Appendices (ISBN 0644325895)

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "President."

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President (game)

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

President (also known as "Asshole" or "The Great Dalmuti") (or even Scum) is a card game for 3 or more players in which the object is to get rid of all of one's cards. There are many different variations, but the basic principles remain the same. This game is usually a drinking game. Or, score can be kept, with the asshole being given a score a 0, the vice-asshole a score of 1, and so on until the president scores 1 less than the number of players. (If there are 5 players, the president scores 4.) The total score for all hands played determines the winner.

The game can be played with any number of players. Usually 1 standard deck of cards (optionally including 1 or more jokers) is used per six or seven players. All cards are dealt out. The order of cards, from highest to lowest, is Joker, 2, Ace, King, Queen, Jack, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3. Before each round of play there is a settlement of cards depending on the players' order of finish in the previous hand. The "President", or player who got rid of all of his cards earliest, receives a set number of cards (typically 1 or 2) from the player who was not able to get rid of all of his cards (typically called the "Asshole"). The President then gives the same number of cards back to the Asshole, potentially getting rid of weak cards (i.e. singles). There may be other card exchanges depending on the number of players in the game.

Play proceeds as follows: The "Asshole" plays first. (Variant: The "President" plays first, giving the "President" an additional advantage.) Play proceeds in clockwise order. Each player must play a higher card or card combination than the previous player. A player may elect not to play, even if he is able to. Cards can be played either singly or in pairs, triples, etc. A pair ranks higher than a single card, and a triple ranks higher than a pair, etc. A Joker is the highest card of all. There are usually special rules concerning the 2. Some play that a single 2 beats any pair (and a pair of 2s beats a triple), while some play that a single 2 beats only other singles. Some variations hold that the only cards that can beat a 2 are a pair or triple of 2s or the joker.

The play proceeds around the table. In some variations the play continues around the table until all players pass. In other variations each player plays once in a round. The last player to play to a round leads to the next round. The first player to get rid of all of his cards becomes the "President" for the next hand. After the President has been determined, the remaining players continue to determine "Vice-President", "Vice-Asshole" and "Asshole". (With more than 4 players, make up additional names for the middle players.) Normally, there is no scoring and no way to win the game, other than the general satisfaction of being "President" as much as possible. For those who insist on keeping score, the method indicated above is best.

On the first hand, there is no "President", and no cards are exchanged. The person with the lowest card (usually the 3 of clubs) leads.

Optional Rules

Skip Rule

When a card is played that matches the rank of the previously played card, the next player must pass. For example, if the ten of hearts is played on the ten of clubs, the next player must pass, even if he wished to play a jack. This rule also applies when a pair is played on a pair of the same rank.

The skip rule allows one unusual situation. If only 2 players remain, skipping a player ends the round. For example, a six has just been played by player B. Player A has two sixes and a seven. Player B has an eight. Player A may now play a six, forcing player B to skip. This ends the round. Player A may start the new round by playing another six. However, this does not cause player B to skip again, because the end of the previous round removed the six from the table. Notice that player A would have been able to avoid becoming Asshole if he could force player B to skip twice.

Poker Hands

In addition to playing pairs and triples, you are allowed to play a 5-card poker hand. This includes straight, flush, full house, etc.. When you play 4 of a kind, you must also play any 5th card to complete the hand.

Suit Ranks Count

Ordinarily, the suits do not matter. Optinally, suits rank in alphabetical order, same as in Bridge. Diamonds beats clubs, hearts beats diamonds, and spades beats hearts. So, the ten of spades may be played on the ten of diamonds, but the ten of clubs may not be played on the ten of diamonds. Of course, the jack of clubs may still be played on the ten of diamonds.

Change Seats After Every Round

After every round, the seating changes, based on the order of finish in the prior round. The "President" gets the most comfortable chair. The vice-President sits to his left, and so on, until the "Asshole" sits to the "President"'s right, in the least comfortable chair. Since the President plays first, this gives a slight advantage to the players seated to the President's left

Deal All The Cards

If the number of cards is not evenly divisible but the number of players, the lowest ranked players get the extra cards. For example, with 5 players and a 52 card deck, the "Asshole" and "vice-Asshole" get 11 cards, and the other 3 players get only 10 cards. Some players remove the odd cards from the deck.

Must Match Previous Type

If the last person played a single card, then all plays for the rest of the round must be a single card. For example, a pair of threes may not be played on a seven. Similarly, three fours may not be played on a pair of sixes. The player who starts a new round (after all other players pass) may play anything he chooses.

Twos Beat Everything

When you play a two, that beats any other hand, including a pair, three-of-a-kind, or poker hand. The person who played the two immediately wins the round and leads to the next round, playing anything he wishes.

Threes Hold, Twos Clear

In this variation, threes are the second-highest card and twos are the highest (this version is played without jokers). A single three "holds the pile" and can only be beaten with another single three or a single two. A pair of threes or a single two "clears the pile" and wins the round.

Social Rule (or Socialism)

When this rule is in effect, the round can instantly be won by "socialing." Socialing is the act of playing cards out of turn in order to create a four-of-a-kind on the table. The opportunity to social is lost if higher cards are played before the opportunity is taken. Here is an example: You have two sevens, and the last two people to play each put a single seven on the table. You may then play out of turn and plonk down your two sevens. (In some circles you would be required to yell "SOCIAL!" while doing this or else it wouldn't count.) If someone else played on top of the sevens before you had the chance to social, you wouldn't be able to do it. The 'special cards' (twos, threes, jokers, or whatever you are using) cannot be socialed. Leading with a four of a kind is an instant social, so a hand with a four-of-a-kind is a good thing to be dealt.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "President (game)."

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President of Armenia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

There have been two Presidents of Armenia since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

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President of Estonia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Powers and Responsibilities

1. Election of the President of the Republic

An Estonian citizen by birth who has attained forty years of age may be nominated as a candidate for President of the Republic. The President of the Republic shall be elected for a term of five years. No one shall be elected to the office of President of the Republic for more than two consecutive terms. The right to nominate a candidate for President of the Republic rests with not less than one-fifth of the membership of the Riigikogu. According to Section 79 of the Constitution of the Republic of Estonia, the President of the Republic shall be elected by the Riigikogu by secret ballot. Each member of the Riigikogu shall have one vote. A candidate in favour of whom a two-thirds majority of the membership of the Riigikogu votes shall be considered elected. If no candidate receives the required majority, a new round of voting shall be held on the next day. Before the second round of voting, a new nomination of candidates shall be held. If no candidate receives the required majority in the second round of voting, a third round of voting shall be held on the same day between the two candidates who receive the greatest number of votes in the second round. If the President of the Republic is still not elected in the third round of voting, the Chairman of the Riigikogu shall, within one month, convene an electoral body to elect the President of the Republic. The electoral body shall be comprised of members of the Riigikogu and representatives of the local government councils. Each local government council shall elect at least one representative, who must be an Estonian citizen, to the electoral body. The Riigikogu shall present the two candidates who receive the greatest number of votes in the Riigikogu to the electoral body as candidates for President. The right to nominate a candidate for President also rests with not less than twenty-one members of the electoral body. The electoral body shall elect the President of the Republic by a majority of the voting electoral body members. If no candidate is elected in the first round, a second round of voting shall be held on the same day between the two candidates who receive the greatest number of votes. The specific procedure for the election of the President of the Republic is established by the President of the Republic Election Act.

2. Assuming office, legal status, and termination of powers

The beginning and expiry of the powers of the President of the Republic shall be established by The President of the Republic Rules of Procedure Act. The President of the Republic shall assume office by swearing the following oath of office at the Riigikogu:

"In assuming the office of President of the Republic, I (given name and surname), solemnly swear to steadfastly defend the Constitution and the laws of the Republic of Estonia, to exercise the power entrusted to me in a just and impartial manner, and to faithfully perform my duties with all of my abilities and to the best of my understanding, for the benefit of the people of Estonia and the Republic of Estonia."

Upon assuming office, the authority and duties of the President of the Republic in all elected and appointed offices shall terminate, and he or she shall suspend his membership in political parties for the duration of his term of office.

The President of the Republic enjoys immunity in accordance with Section 85 of the Constitution. Criminal charges may be brought against the President of the Republic only on the proposal of the Legal Chancellor, and with the consent of the majority of the membership of the Riigikogu. This issue is more specifically regulated by the Institution of Court Proceedings against the President of the Republic and Members of the Government Act. The powers of the President of the Republic shall be suspended when criminal charges are brought against him.

The powers of the President of the Republic shall terminate upon his resignation from office (not applicable during a state of emergency or a state of war), the entry into force of a conviction by a court against him or her, his or her death, and the assumption of office of the new President of the Republic.

If the President of the Republic is incapable of performing his duties for an extended period as decided by the Supreme Court, or if he or she is temporarily unable to perform them as in cases specified in the President of the Republic Rules of Procedure Act, his powers shall be suspended. In such cases, his or her duties shall temporarily be transferred to the Chairman of the Riigikogu. During the time when the Chairman of the Riigikogu is performing the duties of the President of the Republic, his powers as a member of the Riigikogu shall be suspended. The Chairman of the Riigikogu, acting as President of the Republic, has a more restricted competence, as he does not have the right, without the consent of the Supreme Court, to declare extraordinary elections to the Riigikogu or to refuse to proclaim laws. If the President of the Republic is unable to perform his official duties for longer than three consecutive months, or if his powers terminate prematurely, the Riigikogu shall elect a new President of the Republic within fourteen days.

3. Powers of the President of the Republic

The powers of the President of the Republic as the Head of State are established in Section 78 of the Constitution and more specifically in the President of the Republic Working Procedures Act and other specific laws.

3.1. Powers and responsibilities in international relations

The President of the Republic represents the Republic of Estonia in international relations. Proceeding from the fact that the Government of the Republic organises relations with other states, the President of the Republic co-ordinates his activities with the Government. The President of the Republic has both active and passive right of embassy. He or she shall appoint and recall diplomatic agents of the Republic of Estonia, on the proposal of the Government of the Republic, and receive the credentials of diplomatic agents accredited to Estonia. In concluding international treaties, it is the competence of the President of the Republic to ratify or denounce treaties, i.e. to sign them after they have been approved by the Riigikogu. According to Section 121 of the Constitution of the Republic of Estonia, such treaties are those, which alter state boundaries; the implementation of which requires the passage, amendment or repeal of Estonian laws; those by which the Republic of Estonia joins international organisations or unions; those by which the Republic of Estonia assumes military or proprietary obligations; and those in which ratification is prescribed. The President’s sole competence in foreign relations is declaring a state of war and proceeding therefrom, also the end of the war, in the case of aggression against Estonia, as well as making the proposal to the Riigikogu to declare a state of war, to order mobilisation or demobilisation, and a state of emergency.

On the proposal of the Government of the Republic the President confers diplomatic ranks that are conferred for life.

The President’s role, as well as his relations with other constitutional institutions are set down more specifically in the Foreign Relations Act and the Foreign Service Act.

3.2. The President’s Role in Domestic Affairs

3.2.1. Powers in National Defence

President of the Republic is the supreme commander of national defence. He has the specific task to make the proposal to the Riigikogu to declare a state of war, mobilisation and demobilisation, as well as to end the state of war. In enacting his competence in national defence, the President is assisted by the National Defence Council, which acts as an advisory body to the President and consists, as provided by law, of the Chairman of the Riigikogu, the Prime Minister, the Chairman of the National Defence Committee of the Riigikogu, the Minister of Internal Affairs, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Commander (in wartime the Commander-in-Chief) of the defence forces. The President of the Republic shall, on the proposal of the Government of the Republic and the Commander of the defence forces, appoint and release from office the leadership of the defence forces consisting of the Commander of the General Staff of the Defence Forces, the commander of the Defence League and the commanders of air, land and naval forces. The President of the Republic as the Supreme Commander of the defence forces shall, on the proposal of the Commander of the defence forces, issue orders for conferring officers’ ranks and for the substitution of the Commander of the defence forces. The competence of the President of the Republic in the field of national defence shall be specified by the Peacetime National Defence Act, the Wartime National Defence Act, and the Emergencies Act.

3.2.2. Responsibilities in regard to the Riigikogu

The President and the Riigikogu are connected by several formal and substantive powers of the President. The President of the Republic declares the regular elections to the Riigikogu, convenes and opens the first session of the new membership of the Riigikogu. The President has the right to convene additional and extraordinary sessions of the Riigikogu in cases as stated by law. In cases provided in the Constitution, the President of the Republic shall dissolve the Riigikogu and declare the extraordinary elections of the Riigikogu. The President of the Republic shall declare the extraordinary elections of the Riigikogu after the Prime Minister candidate designated by the President has two times failed to form a government, and the Riigikogu has presented its own candidate, who has in his turn failed to present his government membership to the President. The President shall also declare extraordinary elections to the Riigikogu if a referendum initiated by the Riigikogu does not receive a majority of votes in favour. The powers of the Riigikogu terminate prematurely also if the Riigikogu has not passed the state budget within two months after the beginning of the budgetary year; also in this case the President of the Republic shall declare extraordinary elections to the Riigikogu. The third reason for terminating the powers of the Riigikogu differs from the first two, as here the President of the Republic has to decide whether to declare the extraordinary elections of the Riigikogu or not. The President may declare extraordinary elections also in case of the expression of no confidence in the Government of the Republic or the Prime Minister by the Riigikogu. The relations between the President and the Riigikogu are specified in The Riigikogu Procedure Act.

3.2.3. Responsibilities in regard to the Government of the Republic

President of the Republic designates the Prime Minister candidate, to whom he assigns the task of forming the Government. The Prime Minister candidate, who has been authorised by the Riigikogu to form the Government, presents the membership of the government to the president of the Republic, who shall appoint the government to office. The President shall make changes to the appointed membership of the Government of the Republic i.e. release and appoint ministers, on the proposal of the Prime Minister.

The relations between the Government of the Republic and the President of the Republic are specified in the Government of the Republic Act.

3.2.4. Responsibility in regard to legislation

The President of the Republic shall proclaim the laws passed in the Riigikogu. This is the sole competence of the President of the Republic in which no other constitutional institution is involved. The President of the Republic may also refuse to proclaim a law passed by the Riigikogu and return it together with his reasoned resolution to the Riigikogu for a new debate and decision. The President has the right to control both the provisions of substantive and procedural law. If the Riigikogu again passes the law, which is returned to it by the President of the Republic, unamended, the President of the Republic shall proclaim the law or shall propose to the Supreme Court to declare the law unconstitutional. If the Supreme Court declares the law constitutional, the President of the Republic shall proclaim the law. During the term of office of the VII and the VIII Riigikogu the President of the Republic has refused to proclaim 35 laws, and turned to the Supreme Court on 8 cases. The Supreme Court decided in favour of the Head of State on 7 cases. During the working period of the IX membership of the Riigikogu, the President of the Republic has refused to proclaim 6 laws.

If the Riigikogu is unable to convene in a situation of emergency, the President of the Republic may, in matters of urgent state need, issue decrees which have the force of law, and which shall bear the counter-signatures of the Chairman of the Riigikogu and the Prime Minister. These decrees can not be used to amend the Constitution or the so-called constitutional laws (see Section 104 of the Constitution). The Riigikogu shall pass a law for the confirmation or repeal of these decrees on the next meeting. Thus, the decrees are a specific measure for maintaining governmental order, and in this case the President is acting as the guarantor of the rule of law in the state.

According to the Constitution, President of the Republic does not have the right to initiate laws, with the exception of amendments of the Constitution.

3.2.5 Powers to appoint and release public servants

The Head of State designates the Prime Minister Candidate, whom the Riigikogu shall authorise to form the Government of the Republic. He or she appoints and releases members of the Government on the proposal of the Prime Minister, the President of the Bank of Estonia on the proposal of the Board of the Bank of Estonia, county and city justices, administrative justices and circuit justices (i.e. the justices of I and II level) on the proposal of the Supreme Court, and the leadership of the defence forces on the proposal of the Government and the Commander of the defence forces. Being appointed by the President gives certain social respect to the public servant, enables control over the legality of the appointment, and provides the appointment with more publicity and gives a sense of stability to the public servant. The President shall make proposals to the Riigikogu for the appointment of the following senior public servants: Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Chairman of the Board of the Bank of Estonia, Auditor General, Legal Chancellor, and Commander or (in wartime) Commander-in-Chief of the Defence Forces. The appointment and release of public servants is executed in accordance with the procedures established by the President of the Republic Working Procedures Act.

3.2.6. Responsibilities regarding decorations

Conferring state decorations is the sole competence of the President of the Republic, and he is assisted by the Committee of Decorations as an advisory body. It is a common practice in the world that the Head of State confers state decorations. The state decorations of the Republic of Estonia, as well as the procedures for applying for decorations and conferring decorations are provided by the Decorations Act.

3.2.7. The President’s right of clemency

The President has the sole right to release or grant commutation to convicted offenders at their request by way of clemency. Clemency presumes that the court has already pronounced the convicting sentence and the individual in question has been transferred to the hands of executive bodies for the enactment of penalty. It is an international tradition that the Head of State may use his free will to enact justice after the court has guaranteed the enactment of law.

3.2.8. Criminal charges against the Legal Chancellor

The President makes the proposal to bring criminal charges against the legal chancellor. The President shall make the proposal to the Riigikogu on the application of the public prosecutor. He or she has the right to study the documents relevant to the case. The President’s role is provided in the Bringing Criminal Charges against a Member of the Riigikogu, Auditor General, Legal Chancellor, Chairman of the Supreme Court and a Member of the Supreme Court Act.

4. Benefits related to the President’s office

The benefits related to the office of the President of the Republic are the President’s salary and other advantages of the individual who has been elected President. The benefits related to the office are provided by the Benefits Related to the Office of the President of the Republic Act.

The President’s salary rate equals the double of the highest salary rate in the public servants’ salary scale, which is established annually by the State budget. In 1999, the respective rate was 12,500 EEK and the President’s salary thus 25,000 EEK. Besides that, the President receives representation allowance to cover his representational costs, in the amount of 20% of his salary.

During his term as the President of the Republic, the President has the right to use the official apartment, the office car and chauffeur services. He is entitled to a holiday of 35 days a year. The President himself shall decide the time and duration of his holiday. The President’s salary is maintained during the holiday. During his term of office as the President, he or she is protected by police (a security service).

After the termination of his powers as the President, the President shall receive a pension in the amount of 75% of the current rate of the President’ salary. If the President has completely lost the capacity for work during his powers as the President, the pension shall be increased by 25%. In case of the President’s death, also his family members incapacitated for work and his spouse are entitled to survivor’s pension. The pension of the President’s family member is one quarter of the President’s pension. After the termination of his powers as the President, the President is entitled to office space (the rent and stationary expenses shall be paid by the State), to a secretary at his disposal, to a single benefit in the amount of his one year’s salary and to the office car and chauffeur services. If necessary, the Prime Minister shall arrange protection for him.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "President of Estonia."

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President of Finland

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of Finland is the Head of State in Finland. The office was created in 1919. The president is elected for the term of six years. Since 1994, no president may be in office for more than two consecutive terms.

After Finland's independence and the Civil War in Finland the matter of republic or constitutional monarchy was much debated (see Väinö I of Finland), and the outcome was a compromise: a rather monarchy-like, strong presidency with great powers over Finland's foreign affairs and appointment of cabinet and officers of the civil service. The constitution was changed in year 2000, to distribute some of this power to the parliament and the cabinet. The new constitution specifies how principles of Parliamentarism are to be followed (which Finland's presidents have done since 1937 anyway).

Between 1919 and 1987, the president was elected indirectly by an electoral college made up of electors chosen by voters in the presidential election. In the 1987 presidential election, a direct and an indirect election were conducted in parallel: if no candidate would gain majority, the president was elected by an electoral college formed in the same elections. Since then, presidential elections have been two-staged: if no candidate wins majority in the first stage, the top two candidates rerun in the second stage.

There have been several exceptional presidential elections. The first president (Ståhlberg) was chosen by the parliament due to the transition rule of the constitution. In 1940 and 1943, the 1937 electoral college chose the president, as it was felt that a popular election could not be arranged due to war. In 1946 and 1973 the parliament appointed the president under special laws.

In the first years of Finland's independence Finland had two regents and an elected king, although the latter renounced the throne:

List of Presidents of Finland

External links

See also

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President of France

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of France is France's elected Head of State, currently Jacques Chirac.

Presidential attributions

Unlike many other European presidents, the office of the French President is quite a powerful one, especially in matters of foreign policy. However, it is the prime minister and his gouvernement that run the country.

Current constitutional attributions

The constitutional attributions of the president are defined in Title II of the Constitution of France.

Article 5 The President of the Republic shall see that the Constitution is observed. He shall ensure, by his arbitration, the proper functioning of the public authorities and the continuity of the State. He shall be the guarantor of national independence, territorial integrity and observance of treaties.

Article 8 The President of the Republic shall appoint the Prime Minister. He shall terminate the appointment of the Prime Minister when the latter tenders the resignation of the Government. On the proposal of the Prime Minister, he shall appoint the other members of the Government and terminate their appointments.

Article 9 The President of the Republic shall preside over the Council of Ministers.

Article 10 The President of the Republic shall promulgate Acts of Parliament within fifteen days following the final adoption of an Act and its transmission to the Government. He may, before the expiry of this time limit, ask Parliament to reconsider the Act or sections of the Act. Reconsideration shall not be refused.

Article 11 [the president may submit laws to the citizens in a referendum]

Article 12 The President of the Republic may, after consulting the Prime Minister and the Presidents of the assemblies, declare the National Assembly dissolved. A general election shall take place not less than twenty days and not more than forty days after the dissolution. The National Assembly shall convene as of right on the second Thursday following its election. Should it so convene outside the period prescribed for the ordinary session, a session shall be called by right for a fifteen-day period. No further dissolution shall take place within a year following this election.

Article 13 The President of the Republic shall sign the ordinances and decrees deliberated upon in the Council of Ministers. He shall make appointments to the civil and military posts of the State. [...]

Article 14 The President of the Republic shall accredit ambassadors and envoys extraordinary to foreign powers ; foreign ambassadors and envoys extraordinary shall be accredited to him.

Article 15 The President of the Republic shall be commander-in-chief of the armed forces. He shall preside over the higher national defence councils and committees.

Article 16 Where the institutions of the Republic, the independence of the Nation, the integrity of its territory or the fulfilment of its international commitments are under serious and immediate threat, and where the proper functioning of the constitutional public authorities is interrupted, the President of the Republic shall take the measures required by these circumstances, after formally consulting the Prime Minister, the Presidents of the assemblies and the Constitutional Council. He shall inform the Nation of these measures in a message. The measures must stem from the desire to provide the constitutional public authorities, in the shortest possible time, with the means to carry out their duties. The Constitutional Council shall be consulted with regard to such measures. Parliament shall convene as of right. The National Assembly shall not be dissolved during the exercise of the emergency powers.

Article 16 has been used only once, by Charles de Gaulle during the Algerian War, from April 23 to au September 29, 1961.

Article 17 The President of the Republic has the right to grant pardon.

Article 18 The President of the Republic shall communicate with the two assemblies of Parliament by means of messages, which he shall cause to be read and which shall not be the occasion for any debate. Outside sessions, Parliament shall be convened especially for this purpose.

Since 1875, the President is prohibited from entering the houses of Parliament.

Article 19 Acts of the President of the Republic, other than those provided for under articles 8 (first paragraph), 11, 12, 16, 18, 54, 56 and 61, shall be countersigned by the Prime Minister and, where required, by the appropriate ministers.

The fluctuating power of the French presidency

The position of France's presidents has grown and reduced in importance depending on the French constitution in place. Under the Second Republic the President possessed considerable power. Under the Third Republic France adopted a classic parliamentary system of government, with a weak presidency akin to a constitutional monarch. Though with somewhat different powers, the President under the Fourth Republic was also a weak, marginalised figure.

One of the major critics of that system was General Charles de Gaulle, the leader of the Free French during the German occupation in World War II who had urged the creation of a stronger presidency in the drafting of the Fourth Republic's constitution. De Gaulle's vision was reflected in the constitution of the Fifth Republic, which provided a classic dyarchy, with a strong president and a Prime Minister answerable to both parliament in the President (see semi-presidential system). Where the President's party controls the French National Assembly, he is the dominant political figure, controlling what is in effect his government. Where however the opposition control parliament, the President is forced to choose a prime minister from, or acceptable to, the opposition, leading to the sharing of power, a process known as cohabitation. Usually that involves the opposition-orientated prime minister and government dealing with the internal governance of France, without major policy involvement from the President. In turn the government give the President considerable freedom to represent France on the international stage, shaping foreign policy, with both the President and Prime Minister representing France at European Council meetings.

The changing fortune of presidents is reflected in their role with the Council of Ministers. All presidents since the Second Republic (1848-1852) have chaired the Council of Ministers. In most of the Republics, the Council operated as little more than a rubber stamp, to which decisions taken by ministers at separate extra-constitutional cabinet meetings chaired by the Prime Ministers were taken for formal adoption. Under the Fourth Republic the informal cabinet was given constitutional status as the Cabinet Council. However under the Fifth Republic, Council of Ministers' meetings under the President's chairmanship became the main and real formulator of governmental policy and not just a technical rubber stamp for decisions taken elsewhere.

Other information

The official residence and office of the president is the Élysée Palace in Paris. Other presidential residences include: Presidents of France are de jure Co-Prince of Andorra.

Presidents of France

The list below follows on from List of French monarchs.

Presidential elections results

French presidential election, 2002

Election results, first ballot (April 21, 2002):
Registered voters : 41 194 689
Number of voters : 29 495 733
Valid votes : 28 498 471

Election results, second ballot : See also : Politics of France, List of French prime ministers, List of Foreign Ministers of France

External link

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President of Georgia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

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President of Germany

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of Germany (German: Bundespräsident) is the head of state of the Federal Republic of Germany. The office today is largely ceremonial, and to prevent the problems that occurred with the Weimar Republic, the Basic Law carefully limits the President's power.

Description

In international relations, the president's duties include signing treaties, representing Germany abroad, and receiving foreign dignitaries. In the domestic sphere, the president has largely ceremonial functions. Although this official signs legislation into law, grants pardons, and appoints federal judges, federal civil servants, and military officers, each of these actions requires the countersignature of the chancellor or the relevant cabinet minister. The president formally proposes to the Bundestag a chancellor candidate and formally appoints the chancellor's cabinet members, but the president follows the choice of the Bundestag in the first case and of the chancellor in the second. If the government loses a simple no-confidence vote, the president dissolves the Bundestag, but here, too, the Basic Law (Grundgesetz) limits the president's ability to act independently. In the event of a national crisis, the emergency law reforms of 1968 designate the president as a mediator who can declare a state of emergency.

There is disagreement about whether the president, in fact, has greater powers than the above description would suggest. Some argue that nothing in the Basic Law suggests that a president must follow government directives. For instance, the president could refuse to sign legislation, thus vetoing it, or refuse to approve certain cabinet appointments. As of mid-2003, no president had ever taken such action, and thus the constitutionality of these points had never been tested.

The president is selected by secret ballot at a Federal Convention (Bundesversammlung) that includes all Bundestag members and an equal number of delegates chosen by the Land legislatures. This assemblage, which totals more than 1,000 people, is convened every five years. It may select a president for a second, but not a third, five-year term. The authors of the Basic Law preferred this indirect form of presidential election because they believed it would produce a head of state who was widely acceptable and insulated from popular pressure, while at the same time not giving the President the popular legitimacy which could be used to attack other institutions. Candidates for the presidency must be at least forty years old.

The Basic Law did not create an office of vice president. If the president is outside the country or if the position is vacant, the president of the Bundesrat fills in as the temporary head of state. If the president dies in office, a successor is elected within thirty days. As with many other provisions of the Basic Law, this provision was drafted in response to a weakness in the Weimar Constitution in which the Chancellor would act as President in his absence. This allowed Adolf Hitler to combine the two offices.

Usually one of the senior leaders of the largest party in the Bundestag, the president nonetheless is expected to be nonpartisan after assuming office. Although the formal powers of the president are limited, the president's role can be quite significant depending on his or her own activities.

History

During the Weimar Republic (1919-1933), the Reichspräsident was elected by popular vote and intended to be a figurehead. However, in the later years of the republic, the difficulty in creating a workable parliamentary majority allowed President Paul von Hindenburg to rule by decree, bypassing both the Chancellor and the Reichstag (parliament).

In 1934, after the death of Hindenburg, Adolf Hitler, who had previously been appointed Reichskanzler (Chancellor) by Hindenburg on January 30, 1933, solidified his hold on power by merging the offices of Chancellor and President to form a new office called Führer und Reichskanzler (Leader and Reich Chancellor; see Gleichschaltung). After Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945, days before World War II formally ended in Germany, the office was briefly held by Karl Doenitz, who surrendered Germany to the Allies on May 5.

Office holders

Weimar Republic

1919-1925 Friedrich Ebert
1925-1934 Paul von Hindenburg

Nazi Era

1934-1945 Adolf Hitler
1945 Karl Doenitz

Federal Republic of Germany

1949 Karl Arnold (Acting)
1949-1959 Theodor Heuss
1959-1969 Heinrich Lübke
1969-1974 Gustav Heinemann
1974-1979 Walter Scheel
1979-1984 Karl Carstens
1984-1994 Richard von Weizsäcker
1994-1999 Roman Herzog
1999- Johannes Rau

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "President of Germany."

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President of Guatemala

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of Guatemala has been the usual title of the leader of Guatemala since 1851, when that title was assumed by José Rafael Carrera, who had been acting as head of government as general and Caudillo since 1840. Earlier, Guatemala had been a state within the United Provinces of Central America since 1823, before that part of the Mexican Empire under Augustin de Iturbide, and before 1821 ruled by the Captain General of Guatemala, a Spanish colonial official owing allegence to the Viceroy of New Spain and the King of Spain, back to the Spanish conquest of the region in the early 16th century.

The title of "President of Guatemala" has been used by democratically elected leaders, appointed heads of state, and leaders who took power by military coup.

List of Presidents of Guatemala

(From 20 October 1944 to 15 March 1945 Guatemala was governed by a military Junta consisting of Francisco Javier Arana, Jacobo Arbenz Guzman, and Jorge Toriello Garrido)

(From 29 June 1954 to 8 July 1954 Guatemala was run by a Junta headed by General Elfego Hernán Monzón Aguirre; from then until 26 July 1957 by a Junta headed by Carlos Castillo Armas)

(From 24 October 1957 to 26 October 1957 Guatemala was ruled by a military Junta headed by Óscar Mendoza Azurdia)

The presidential election of 9 November, 2003 produced no candidate getting a majority of votes; top vote getters Óscar Berger and Alvaro Colom will face each other in a run-off election on 28 December.

See also: History of Guatemala

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "President of Guatemala."

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President of India

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of India is the ceremonial head of state and the supreme commander of the armed forces.

The current President of India is Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam.

Article 52 of the Constitution of India provides for a President of India. "There shall be a President of India". Article 53 states that executive power of the Union shall vest in the President, who shall exercise directly or through officers under him, this power in accordance with the Constitution. This provision is similar to the provision under Article II of the US Constitution. A remarkable feature under the Indian constitution could be seen under Article 53 whereby parliament has the authority to confer powers and functions exercised by the president to any other authority. Unlike 22nd amendment to US Constitution Indian President could be elected for any number of terms. the Constitution requires that the President must be a citizen of India but it is not a condition that he must be born citizen. In fact Indian president is a part of the Parliament (Article 79) and literally a nominal head of state. Although the Constitution explicitly says that the president is the executive head of the state but this real executive power is exercised by the council of ministers and Prime minister at the helm of it. This has to be inferred from Article 74 of the Indian Constitution ".. council of ministers to aid and advise the President who shall, in exercise of his functions, act in accordance with such advise".

The President is elected whenever the office becomes vacant by an electoral college consisting of:

Each elector casts a different number of votes. The general principle is that the total votes cast by Members of Parliament equals the total votes cast by Legislators. Also, legislators from larger states cast more votes than those from smaller states. Finally, the number of legislators in a state matters; if a state has a few legislators, then each legislator has relatively more votes; if a state has many legislators, then each legislator has fewer votes. The actual calculation for votes cast is as follows: First, determine the population of a certain State. Then, divide the population by one thousand. Finally, divide this quotient again by the number of legislators from the State voting in the electoral college. This number is the number of votes per legislator in a given state. For votes cast by those in Parliament, determine the total number of votes cast by all state legislators. Then, divide the sum by the number of members of both Houses of Parliament. This is the number of votes per member of either house of Parliament. (Note that India's electoral college is provided by law, not by the Constitution)

The constitution also provides the mechanism for the impeachment of the President (Article 61) for the violation of the Constitution. The place of the president is peculiar in the Indian governmental setup. His functions are to be exercised in accordance with the aid and advice of the council of ministers but powers are to be exercised by the President however the rider in favour of parliament vides Article 53 of the Constitution. The president of India swears before entering the office of the president that he shall protect, preserve and defend the Constitution (Article 60) which provides for an executive head of state who is nominal or ceremonial. The Indian Constitution must be seen as a purveyor of a system of governance where a mixture of presidential and parliamentary systems could be located.

Governors General of India after independence

Louis Mountbatten,
  Earl Mountbatten of Burma
1947-08-15 to 1948-06-21
Chhakravarthi Rajagopalachari)     1948-06-21 to 1950-01-26

Presidents of India

Dr. Rajendra Prasad 1950-01-26 to 1962-05-13
Dr. S. Radhakrishnan 1962-05-13 to 1967-05-13
Dr. Zakir Hussain 1967-05-13 to 1969-05-03
V.V.Giri (acting) 1969-05-03 to 1969-07-20
Muhammad Hidayat Ullah (acting) 1969-07-20 to 1969-08-24
V.V.Giri 1969-08-24 to 1974-08-24
Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed 1974-08-24 to 1977-02-11
Basappa Danappa Jatti (acting) 1977-02-11 to 1977-07-25
Neelam Sanjiva Reddy 1977-07-25 to 1982-07-25
Giani Zail Singh 1982-07-25 to 1987-07-25
Ramaswamy Venkataraman 1987-07-25 to 1992-07-25
Dr. Shankar Dayal Sharma 1992-07-25 to 1997-07-25
K. R. Narayanan 1997-07-25 to 2002-07-25
Dr. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam 2002-07-25 to present

External link

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President of Iran

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Since the overthrow of the Shah in 1979, Iran has been a republic. However, unlike most republics, Iran's head of state is not the president, but rather the Supreme Leader, who is a religous figure chosen by a council of Islamic clerics.

Iran still has a president, however and in recent years this once figurehead post has become a position of significant government influence, especially since the election of reformist president Mohammad Khatami in 1997.

The President of Iran was once appointed directly by the Supreme Leader and the council of clerics, but is now elected in a national election. There remain some obstacles to the election being truly democratic however. Only candidates and parties approved by the council are permitted to run.

When the President dies or is impeached a special provisional Presidential Council temporarily rules in his place until an election can be held.

Iran's Presidents

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President of Ireland

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of Ireland is the Irish head of state. The office was created in Bunreacht na hÉireann, the 1937 constitution of Éire. The office is open to every Irish citizen aged 35 and over. Though the constitution uses the male terms 'he' and 'him', the office can be held by either gender; of the eight presidents to date, six were men, and two women. Given the language of the constitution, this article uses 'he' or 'him' when quoting to the constitution, and 'she' elsewhere, to match the gender of the current president, Mary McAleese.

Presidents of Ireland

PresidentLifetimeTerm of officeParty
Dr. Douglas Hyde1860-19491937-'45Multi-party nomination
Sean T. O'Kelly1882-19661945-'59Fianna Fáil
Eamon de Valera1882-19751959-'73Fianna Fáil
Erskine Hamilton Childers1905-19741973-'74Fianna Fáil
Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh1911-19781974-'76Fianna Fáil
Dr. Patrick Hillery1923-1976-'90Fianna Fáil
Mary Robinson1944-1990-'97Labour
Mary McAleese1951-1997-Fianna Fáil

Presidential Powers

The President, in Irish 'an tUachtarán' (pronounced 'on t-ook-tar-on'), has a largely ceremonial role with relatively little real political power. Among her major powers (most unused) are

(This is the most widely used presidential power.) (This power has never been used.) (This power has never been used) (This power has never been used.) (This power has been used 4 times; by President de Valera once,
President Robinson twice and President McAleese once.)
(This power has not been used.) (This power has not been used, but has been considered for use in 1944, 1982 (twice) and 1994.)

Selecting the President

The President is formally elected by the citizens of Ireland every seven years (or when a vacancy occurs). Candidates can be nominated by

Where only one candidate is nominated, he or she is deemed elected without the need for a ballot.

Presidential Elections

Presidentials elections (victors in italics) [Note: The years link up to sites on the various Irish presidential elections]

1938 - 1 candidate
Douglas Hyde ( Fianna Fáil & Fine Gael agreed candidate -
elected unopposed)
1945 - 3 candidates
Sean T. O'Kelly (Fianna Fáil)
Sean MacEoin (Fine Gael);
Patrick MacCartan (independent)
1952 - 1 candidate
President O'Kelly (own nomination - elected unopposed)
1959 - 2 candidates
Eamon de Valera (Fianna Fáil);
Sean MacEoin (Fine Gael)
1966 - 2 candidates
President de Valera (Fianna Fáil);
Tom O'Higgins (Fine Gael)
1973 - 2 candidates
Erskine Hamilton Childers (Fianna Fáil);
Tom O'Higgins (Fine Gael)
1974 - 1 candidate
Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh (agreed FF, FG and Labour party
candidate- elected unopposed - replacing the late President Childers)
1976 - 1 candidate
Patrick Hillery (Fianna Fáil - replaced
President Ó Dálaigh, who had resigned)
1983 - 1 candidate
President Hillery (own nomination - elected unopposed)
1990 - 3 candidates
Brian Lenihan (Fianna Fáil);
Austin Currie (Fine Gael);
Mary Robinson (Labour)
1997 - 5 candidates:
Mary McAleese (Fianna Fáil);
Mary Banotti (Fine Gael);
Adi Roche (Labour);
Dana Rosemary Scallon (independent);
Derek Nally (independent).
(President Robinson had resigned the presidency one month early
to become United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.)

See List of Presidents of Ireland

Presidential Residence

The residence of the President of Ireland is the ninety-two room Áras an Uachtaráin, (pronounced 'Or-us an ook-tar-on' , the gaelic for the President's house) in the Phoenix Park, Dublin. The building formerly served as the 'out of season' residence of the Irish Lord Lieutenant and the residence of two of the three Governors-General, Tim Healy and James McNeill.

The President's Address & Style

The President is formally addressed as: 'President' (not 'Mr/Madam President', as in the United States) or Uachtarán (the Irish language version). Sometimes people use the version 'Your Excellency'.

The President's style is normally 'Her Excellency''.

The Presidential Oath

Article 12.8 of Bunreacht na hÉireann states that: ''The President shall enter upon his office by taking and subscribing publicly, in the presence of members of both Houses of the Oireachtas, of Judges of the Supreme Court and of the High Court, and other public personages, the following declaration:

As Gaeilge I láthair Dia na nUilechumhacht, táimse á ghealladh agus á dhearbhú go sollúnta is go fírinneach bheith i mo thaca agus i mo dhidín do Bhunreacht Éireann, agus dlíthe a chaomhnú, mo dhualgais a chomhlíonadh go dilís coinsiasach de réir an Bhunreacht is an dlí, agus mo lándícheall a dhéanamh ar son leasa is fónaimh mhuintir na hÉireann. Dia do mo stiúradh agus do mo chumhdach.

In English In the presence of Almighty God I do solemnly and sincerely promise and declare that I will maintain the Constitution of Ireland and uphold its laws, that I will fulfil my duties faithfully and conscientiously in accordance with the Constitution and the law, and that I will dedicate my abilities to the service and the welfare of the people of Ireland. May God direct and sustain me.

      

The Presidential Anthem

The Irish presidential anthem is taken from the Irish National Anthem, Amhrán na bhFiann (in english, the Soldier's Song) and involves playing the first two and last two lines of the anthem.

Problems over the term 'President of Ireland'

The original version of Bunreacht na hÉireann as adopted in 1937, in its controversial Articles 2 and 3, mentioned two geopolitical entities, a thirty-two county 'National Territory' (i.e., the island of Ireland) and a twenty-six county 'state' formerly known as the Irish Free State. (These Articles have since been changed!) The implication behind the title 'President of Ireland' was that the President would function as the head of all Ireland. However this implication was challenged by the Ulster Unionists and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland which was the state internationally acknowledged as governing Northern Ireland, a fact enshrined in the Better Government of Ireland Act, 1920, which created Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland, the latter of which became the Irish Free State in 1922, Éire in 1937 and the Republic of Ireland in 1949.

Ireland in turn challenged the proclamation by the British parliament of Queen Elizabeth II in 1952 as 'queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. The government of the Republic of Ireland refused to attend royal functions as a result; for example, President Hillery (1976-90) declined on Government advice to attend the wedding of the Prince of Wales to the late Lady Diana Spencer in 1981, to which he had been invited by Queen Elizabeth, while President Sean T. Ó Ceallaigh declined on government advice to attend the Coronation Garden Party at the British Embassy in 1953. Britain in turn insisted on referring to the President as 'President of the Republic of Ireland' or 'President of the Irish Republic.' Letters of Credence from Queen Elizabeth, on Her Majesty's Government's advice, appointing United Kingdom ambassadors to Ireland were not addressed to the 'President of Ireland' but to the president personally (e.g., 'President Hillery'.)

This dispute has largely been forgotten in recent years. President Robinson (1990-97) chose unilaterally to break the taboo by regularly visiting Britain for public functions, frequently to do with Anglo-Irish Relations or to visit the Irish emigrant community in Britain. In another breaking of precedent, she was invited to Buckingham Palace by Queen Elizabeth II. Interestingly, the Palace accreditation supplied to journalists covering the history-making visit referred to the visit of the President of Ireland. In recent times, both Presidents Robinson and her successor Mary McAleese (1997- ) have visited the Palace on numerous occasions, while the Prince of Wales, Duke of York, Earl of Wessex and Duke of Edinburgh have all visited successive presidents of Ireland in Áras an Uachtaráin (the presidential palace). Presidents have also have attended functions with the Princess Royal. Her Majesty the Queen and Her Excellency the President even jointly hosted a reception in St. James's Palace in London in 1995, to commemorate the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the foundation of the Queen's Colleges in 1850. (The Queen's Colleges are now known as Queen's University, Belfast, the National University of Ireland, Cork (formerly University College, Cork) and the National University of Ireland, Galway (formerly University College, Galway).)

Though the president's title implicitly claimed authority in Northern Ireland, in reality the Irish President needed government permission to visit Northern Ireland, it being treated as a 'foreign visit.' (The Irish state in Article 3 explicitly stated that its authority was limited to the twenty-six counties and did not apply to the six counties of Northern Ireland. Presidents up to the presidency of Mary Robinson (1990-97) were regularly refused permission by the Government of the Republic of Ireland to visit Northern Ireland.)

Since the 1990s under President Robinson, but in particular since the Good Friday Agreement the current president, Mary McAleese, who is herself the first President of Ireland from Northern Ireland, regularly visits the six counties. In a sign of the warmth of the modern Anglo-Irish Relationship, she has been warmly welcomed by leading Unionists. At the funeral for a child murdered by the Real IRA in Omagh she symbolically walked up the main aisle of the Roman Catholic Church hand-in-hand with the Ulster Unionist leader and First Minister of Northern Ireland, David Trimble, MP. Similarly when Queen Elizabeth II visited the Stormont Parliament Buildings on a trip to Northern Ireland as part of her Golden Jubilee Tour in 2002, and spoke of the sense of Irish identity of Northern nationalists, Sinn Féin chose not to launch any public pickets or protests, stating that the Queen, as a symbol cherished by unionists, was entitled to visit.

As a result of the repeal of Articles 2 and 3 as part of the Good Friday Agreement, though technically Mary McAleese's title is 'President of Ireland', in reality she is strictly speaking the 'President of the Republic of Ireland.

Who was the Irish Head of State between 1937 and 1949?

Before the adoption of the 1937 constitution the Irish Free State had the British monarch also as its monarch and head of state. In exercising their role in Ireland, in particular from the end of the 1920s, Kings George V, Edward VIII and George VI were unambiguously doing so as King of Ireland, with no role whatsoever for the British state, British government, British Crown or even from 1931 the British Great Seal of the Realm which the Irish replaced with their own Seal (on which the Irish King appeared with the harp and the words 'Saorstát Éireann)'. The person who wore the Irish and British Crowns may have been the same, but in law they were different entities, as shown when from 1931 not merely did British ministers not have to be present at meetings between Irish ministers and the King, they were barred from attendance, to their fury.

It is a matter of considerable historical, legal and political debate as to who was Irish head of state between 1936/7 and 1949. For the functions normally performed by a head of state were spread over three different elements by the new constitution and statute law; the President of Ireland, the King of Ireland (an office created by the Royal Titles Act) and the Government of Ireland. The President was the state's 'first citizen.' Executive authority, which in most constitutional systems is vested in the head of state, in Bunreacht na hÉireann is vested in the Government, while the role of representing the Irish state abroad (signing treaties, accrediting ambassadors, receiving credentials from ambassadors to Ireland, etc) was exercised by the King of Ireland under Section 3 of the External Relations Act, 1936.

Generally, the latter function, of representing the state in international diplomacy, is presumed to be the key defining characteristic of a head of state. As a result, almost every state with which Éire (as Ireland is formally described in Article 4 of Bunreacht na hÉireann) had diplomatic relations with between 1937 and 1949 concluded that the Irish head of state was the man proclaimed King of Ireland in December 1936, King George VI. This view was echoed by then taoiseach John A. Costello in a debate in Seanad Éireann (the Irish senate) in December 1948, where he stressed the fact that the Republic of Ireland Act he was introducing would make Irish head of state the man who ought to have been but wasn't, the President of Ireland. Until the Republic of Ireland came into force in April 1949, the President of Ireland had no international role, and such an inferior status that he never dared set foot outside the state. The fact that he was now clearly and unambiguously the Irish head of state was celebrated by President Ó Ceallaigh by visits to the Holy See and France. A visit to meet King George in Buckingham Palace was also provisionally planned, but timetabling problems with the President's schedule prevented the meeting.

On balance, the weight of evidence would suggest that King George VI, as King of Ireland, remained on as Irish head of state until 1949, when the key international representional role previously performed by the King was vested instead in the President of Ireland under the Republic of Ireland Act, 1948.

See also

Republic of Ireland, Éire, Irish Republic, President of Dáil Éireann, President of the Republic, Áras an Uachtaráin, Amhrán na bhFiann, Governor-General of the Irish Free State, Northern Ireland Elizabeth II, Eamon de Valera, Irish Free State, King of Ireland Irish presidential election, 2004

External Link

Áras an Uachtaráin website

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "President of Ireland."

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President of Israel

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of the State of Israel has a largely ceremonial role. The President has few powers and is elected to a seven-year term by a simple majority of the Knesset. A president cannot be re-elected to a second term. Until recently, the president was elected for a five-year term, and was allowed to serve up to two terms in office.

External link

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President of Malta

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)


Sir Anthony Mamo
The office of the President of Malta, known in Maltese as President ta' Malta, came into being on 13th December 1974, when Malta became a republic within the Commonwealth. The last Governor-General, Sir Anthony Mamo, became the first President of the Republic, and replaced Queen Elizabeth II as head of state. He served as President until 1976.

Like the British monarch, however, the President of Malta is a constitutional head of state, with executive power remaining with the Prime Minister. The President is elected by the unicameral House of Representatives, known in Maltese as Kamra tar-Rappreżentanti. The first woman to hold the post of President was the late Agatha Barbara, a former Labour government minister. The current President is Guido de Marco.

President's Flag


President's Flag 1988-
Until 1988, there was no flag for the President of Malta, who instead used the national flag, but in that year a new flag was introduced, with the coat of arms on a blue field, and a traditional Maltese cross in gold in each corner.

List of Presidents

External link

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President of Russia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

List of Presidents of Russia

See also: Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian SFSR

[1] Vladimir Putin was the acting president after Yeltsin's resignation, and in 2000, he was elected President of Russia.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "President of Russia."

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President of Singapore

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of Singapore is the head of state, being elected by universal suffrage since 1993. Previously, the President was elected by the unicameral Parliament, with executive power remaining with the Prime Minister. The President's official residence is called the Istana.

The office of President was created in 1965 after Singapore became a Republic on its departure from the Federation of Malaysia in that year. It replaced the office of Yang di-Pertua Negara, which had been created when Singapoe gained self-government in 1959. The last Yang di-Pertua Negara, Yusuf Ishak, became the first President. He was replaced by Benjamin Sheares, who served as President until his death in 1981, when he was succeeded by CV Devan Nair. Owing to personal problems, Nair stepped down in 1985 and was replaced by Wee Kim Wee, who served as President until 1993. In 1992, the Constitution was amended to allow for the direct election of the President, who would have the right of veto over civil service appointments and the use of government reserves. The first directly elected President was Ong Teng Cheong, a former government minister.

The incumbent President is SR Nathan.

List of presidents

  1. 1965-1970: Yusuf Ishak (1910-1970)
  2. 1970-1981: Benjamin Sheares (1907-1981)
  3. 1981-1985: CV Devan Nair (born 1923)
  4. 1985-1993: Wee Kim Wee (born 1915)
  5. 1993-1999: Ong Teng Cheong (1936-2002)
  6. From 1999: SR Nathan (born 1924)

External link

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President of South Africa

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of South Africa is the head of state and head of government under South Africa's Constitution. From 1961 to 1994, the head of state was called the State President, or Staatspresident in Afrikaans.

The President is elected by members of the National Assembly, the lower house of Parliament, usually being the leader of the largest party, which has been the African National Congress since the first non-racial elections were held of April 27, 1994. The first President to be elected under the new Constitution was Nelson Mandela, who was succeeded by Thabo Mbeki in 1999.

Under the interim Constitution, there was a Government of National Unity, in which the last State President, F.W De Klerk served as Deputy President, along with Mbeki, but he later resigned and went into opposition.

See also

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President of the Continental Congress

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of the Continental Congress was the leader of the Continental Congress elected by the delegates to the congress. The office was replaced with the President of the United States in Congress Assembled after the adoption of the Articles of Confederation.

The following men served as the President of the Continental Congress:

  1. Peyton Randolph (September 5, 1774 - October 21, 1774)
  2. Henry Middleton (October 22, 1774 - May 10, 1775)
  3. Peyton Randolph (May 10, 1775 - May 23, 1775) (same as #1)
  4. John Hancock (May 24, 1775 - October 30, 1777)
  5. Henry Laurens (November 1, 1777 - December 9, 1778)
  6. John Jay (December 10, 1778 - September 27, 1779)
  7. Samuel Huntington (September 28, 1779 - February 28, 1781)

Samuel Huntington was the last President of the Continental Congress by virtue of the fact that the Articles of Confederation were ratified on March 1, 1781 under his watch. Thus, he became the first President of the United States in Congress Assembled under the newly ratified Articles.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "President of the Continental Congress."

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President of the European Commission

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Presidents of the High Authority of the ECSC (prior to entry into force of Merger Treaty of 1967) Presidents of the European Commission The President of the Commission is currently given to one of the Commissioners, by the European Council

Under the new European constitution, the President of the Commission will be elected by the European Council, subject to a veto by the European Parliament.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "President of the European Commission."

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President of the People's Republic of China

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President (国家主席 Gúojiā Zhŭxí) is the head of state of the People's Republic of China. The office was created by the 1982 Constitution. Formally, the President is elected by the National People's Congress in accordance with Article 62 of the Constitution. In practice, who is President is determined after negotiations among the top leaders of the Communist Party of China.

The term President is the official translation for the term zhuxi (主席 zhŭxí) instead of the term zongtong (总统 zŏng tŏng) which is the usual translation for the term President. More confusingly zhuxi is usually translated Chairman in other contexts. The reason for the confusing translation was that the authors of the 1982 constitution considered the term zongtong to be too bourgeois while the English term Chairman had too many associations with Mao Zedong or was too informal.

The President and the State

Since the early 1990s, the President has generally be responsible for establishing general policy and direction for the state and leaves responsibility for the implementation details to the Premier of the People's Republic of China. In marked contrast to the system of the Soviet Union when the President was a powerless figurehead, the Chinese Presidency has grown be a quite powerful position.

The President and the Party

Also since the 1990s, it has been general practice for the President to also serve as the General Secretary of the Communist Party.

It is key for the general secretary to seal his power by adding the presidency to his powerful collection of titles. This effectively removes any power tension between the top communist leader and the Head of State.

The President and the Military

The relationship between the President and the military is a bit more murky. The potential for conflict is lessened when as during the Jiang era, the President is also chairman of the state Central Military Commission. However, there is a source of potential conflict when this is not the case as the situation in 2003 when top communist leader Hu Jintao was elected President without being elected the CMC. In addition, most of the members of both the Party and the State Central Military Commission are uniformed senior general which gives the People's Liberation Army a some degree of autonomy, which however is limited by the existence of political officers.

In principle, when the President is also party general secretary, he could order the Party Central Military Commission to order the state Central Military Commission to do something, however how this would work in a crisis in unclear.

There have been proposals to constitutionally change the system of command to form a National Security Council which is modelled after the National Security Council of the United States which would give the President undisputed command of the military which would then be just another ministry. These proposals are currently not being actively discussed because of opposition from senior generals and because such acts would be seen as a political attack against the Chairman of the CMC, Jiang Zemin.

The History of the Presidency

Originally, in the constitution of 1954, the President (or Chairman) of the PRC was intended to be very powerful. Serving both as the Head of State, and the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces. The president had special powers to call upon emergency meetings during a crisis or concerns of national security. This was not a problem during Mao Zedong's tenure as Head of State due to the fact that he concurrently served as the Chairman of the Central Military Commission. However, when Liu Shaoqi was President, it was evident in that the presidency was little more than a figurehead. The most notorious example of the disregard for the position was shown during the Cultural Revolution when President Liu Shaoqi was arrested and humiliated by the Red Guards.

During the period from 1969-1982, the presidency was abolished mainly due to the arrest of the President Liu Shaoqi. The duties associated with the Head of State were passed to the Chairman of the National People's Congress. The exact reason why Mao Zedong refused to reinstate the presidency was unclear, however it is now known that Mao did not want his political struggle with Liu Shaoqi to be remembered as his attempt to claim the title of the presidency for himself. During the early 1980s, it became clearer that China needed a person to serve as the Head of State. Song Qingling, the widow of Sun Yat-sen and former vice-chairwoman of PRC, was named to be the Honorary President of the PRC before the passage of the constitution of 1982.

In the constitution of 1982, the President was conceived of as a figurehead head of state with actual state power resting in the hands of the Premier of the People's Republic of China and the General Secretary of the Communist Party of China both of which were conceived of as being separate people. In the original (1982 constitution) plan, the Party would develop policy, the state would execute it, and the power would be divided to prevent a cult of personality from forming as it did with the case of Mao Zedong.

Subsequent events caused the office to have much larger powers than was originally intended. In 1989, the President Yang Shangkun was able in cooperation with the then head of the Central Military Commission Deng Xiaoping to use the office of the President to declare martial law in Beijing and order the military crackdown of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. This was in direct opposition to the wishes of the Party General Secretary Zhao Ziyang and probably a majority of the Politburo Standing Committee.

In the 1990s, the experiment of separating party and state posts was cancelled, and in 1992, the post of President was taken by Jiang Zemin who as General Secretary and chief of the Central Military Commission has continued to make the office of the President a powerful position.

Chairmen of the People's Republic of China

  1. Mao Zedong (1954 - 1959)
  2. Liu Shaoqi (1959 - 1969)1

Chairmen of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress2

  1. Zhu De (1975 - 1976)3
  2. Ye Jianying (1978 - 1983)

Presidents of the People's Republic of China

  1. Li Xiannian (1983 - 1988)
  2. Yang Shangkun (1988 - 1993)
  3. Jiang Zemin (1993 - 2003)
  4. Hu Jintao (since 2003)

Notes

  1. No successor of Liu Shaoqi was selected, so vice-chairman Dong Biwu acted as head of the State (alone from 1969-1972, together with vice-chairwoman Song Qingling from 1972-1975).
  2. The position of Chairman was officially abolished in 1975 and the functions of head of State were formally transmitted to the chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress.
  3. From July 6, 1976 to March 5, 1978 the position remained vacant. The 20 vice chairmen of the Standing Committee of the NPC collectively executed the duties of head of state.

See also

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President of the Philippines

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President is the head of state and of the government of the Republic of the Philippines. The president heads the Executive branch of the government, which includes the Cabinet, and is the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.

According to the current constitution (1987), the President must be at least 40 years of age, a Filipino citizen by birth, and is a resident of the Philippines for the past 10 years prior to election. The Filipinos directly elect the president who wins on a plurality vote. The president serves a term of six years and may no longer run for re-election, unless he/she becomes president through constitutional succession and have served for no more than 4 years as president.

The Presidents

The Philippines has had a total of fourteen presidents. Despite the differences in constitutions and government, the line of presidents is considered to be continuous. For instance, the current president, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, is considered the 14th president.

While Filipinos consider Aguinaldo to be the first president, he is not internationally recognized because the First Republic fell under the United States following the Philippine-American War. Manuel L. Quezon is considered to be the first president (and the first to win an election—Aguinaldo was appointed) in international diplomatic circles.

First Republic

Commonwealth of the Philippines

Second Republic (under Japan)

Third Republic

External Links

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President of the Republic of China

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of the Republic of China (中華民國總統) is the head of state of the Republic of China, the government which administered Mainland China from 1912 to 1949 and has administered Taiwan and several outlying islands from 1945 until the present. The President of the ROC is now commonly referred to as -- technically incorrect -- the "President of Taiwan" (台灣總統).

The President is currently selected by a first past the post direct election of the areas administered by the Republic of China (i.e., Taiwan province, and Kinmen and Lienchiang counties of Fujian province) for a term of four years. Before 1991, the President was selected by the National Assembly of the Republic of China for a term of seven years.

Until the 1980s power in the Republic of China was personalized rather than institutionalized which meant that the power of the President depended largely on who occupied the office. For example, during the tenure of Yen Chia-kan, the office was largely ceremonial with real power in the hands of the Premier of the Republic of China, Chiang Ching-Kuo, and power shifted back to the presidency when Chiang became President.

After 2000, and the election of Chen Shui-bian to the Presidency, the Presidency and the Legislative Yuan were controlled by different parties which brought forth a number of latent constitutional issues such as the role of the legislature in appointing and dismissing a Premier, the right of the President to call a special session of the legislature, and who has the power to call a referendum. Most of these issues have been resolved through inter-party negotiations.

List of Presidents

 
 
List of Presidents
Name Alignment Start End Remark
Provisional Constitution
Sun Yat-Sen KMT 1912 1913 Provisional government
Yuan Shikai 1913 1915 Declared himself Emperor in 1915, d. 1916
Warlord Government in Beijing¹
Li Yuan-Hung 1916 1917
Feng Kuo-Chang 1917 1918
Hsu Shih-Chang 1918 1922
Li Yuan-Hung 1922 1923
Tsao Kun 1923 1924
Tuan Chi-Jui 1924 1926
Chang Tso-Lin 1926 1928
Rival Government in Guangzhou
Sun Yat-Sen KMT 1921 1925
Chairman of National Government (Chinese Civil War)²
Chiang Kai-Shek KMT 1928 1932
Lin Sen KMT 1932 1943
Chiang Kai-Shek KMT 1943 1947
Constitution of 1947
Chiang Kai-Shek³ KMT 1947 1975
Yen Chia-kan KMT 1975 1978
Chiang Ching-kuo KMT 1978 1988
Lee Teng-hui KMT 1988 2000 First Popular Election (1996)
Chen Shui-bian DPP 2000 Present
(1) Warlord government and Yuan Shikai government after the 1913 Second revolution are regarded as illegitimate by the ROC.
(2) Chiang Kai-shek assumed role of "Commander-in-chief" from 1925-1928.
(3) Li Tsung-jen assumed role of "Acting President" following Chiang Kai-shek's resignation in January 1949, but Chiang reassumed presidency after the retreat to Taiwan in December 1949.

Elections

External links

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President of the United States

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The head of state of the United States is called the President, who also serves the functions of chief executive and commander in chief of the armed forces. By current law, the U.S. president serves a four-year term and may only be re-elected once, as a result of the twenty-second amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

As the most powerful person in the United States, a democratic republic and currently the world's only superpower, the President is sometimes referred to as "the leader of the free world," though this designation was more common during the Cold War. In slang, the President of the United States is sometimes called by the acronym POTUS. The wife of the President is traditionally referred to as the First Lady.

Presidential powers


George Washington
1st President
(1789-1797)

The office of president of the United States is one of the most powerful offices of its kind in the world. The president, the Constitution says, must "take care that the laws be faithfully executed." To carry out this responsibility, the president presides over the executive branch of the federal government — a vast organization numbering about 4 million people, including 1 million active-duty military personnel. In addition, the president has important legislative and judicial powers.

Presidential executive powers

Within the executive branch itself, the president has broad powers to manage national affairs and the workings of the federal government. The president can issue rules, regulations, and instructions called executive orders, which have the binding force of law upon federal agencies but do not require congressional approval. As commander-in-chief of the armed forces of the United States, the president may also call into federal service the state units of the National Guard. In times of war or national emergency, the Congress may grant the president even broader powers to manage the national economy and protect the security of the United States.


Abraham Lincoln
16th President
(1861-1865)

The president nominates — and the Senate confirms — the heads of all executive departments and agencies, together with hundreds of other high-ranking federal officials. (See United States Cabinet, Executive Office of the President.) In 2003, more than 3000 executive agency positions were subject to presidential appointment, with more than 1200 requiring Senate approval. The large majority of federal workers, however, are selected through the Civil Service system, in which appointment and promotion are based on ability and experience.

The President is also responsible for preparing the budget of the United States, although the Congress must approve it. (See Office of Management and Budget)

Presidential legislative powers

Despite the constitutional provision that "all legislative powers" shall be vested in the Congress, the president, as the chief formulator of public policy, has a major legislative role. The president can veto any bill passed by Congress and, unless two-thirds of the members of each house vote to override the veto, the bill does not become law.

Much of the legislation dealt with by Congress is drafted at the initiative of the executive branch. In annual and special messages to Congress, the president may propose legislation he believes is necessary. The most important of these is the annual State of the Union Address traditionally given in January. Before a joint session of Congress, the President outlines the status of the country and his legislative proposals for the upcoming year. If Congress should adjourn without acting on those proposals, the president has the power to call it into special session. But beyond this official role, the president, as head of a political party and as principal executive officer of the U.S. government, is primarily in a position to influence public opinion and thereby to influence the course of legislation in Congress.


Theodore Roosevelt
26th President
(1901-1909)

To improve their working relationships with Congress, presidents in recent years have set up a Congressional Liaison Office in the White House. Presidential aides keep abreast of all important legislative activities and try to persuade senators and representatives of both parties to support administration policies.

Presidential judicial powers

Among the president's constitutional powers is that of appointing important public officials. Presidential nomination of federal judges, including members of the Supreme Court, is subject to confirmation by the Senate. Another significant power is that of granting a full or conditional pardon to anyone convicted of breaking a federal law — except in a case of impeachment. The pardoning power has come to embrace the power to shorten prison terms and reduce fines.

Presidential powers in foreign affairs

Under the Constitution, the president is the federal official primarily responsible for the relations of the United States with foreign nations. The president appoints ambassadors, ministers, and consuls — subject to confirmation by the Senate — and receives foreign ambassadors and other public officials. With the secretary of state, the president manages all official contacts with foreign governments. On occasion, the president may personally participate in summit conferences where chiefs of state meet for direct consultation. Thus, President Woodrow Wilson headed the American delegation to the Paris conference at the end of World War I; President Franklin D. Roosevelt met with Allied leaders during World War II; and every president since then has sat down with world leaders to discuss economic and political issues and to reach bilateral and multilateral agreements.


Franklin D. Roosevelt
32nd President
(1933-1945)

Through the Department of State, the president is responsible for the protection of Americans abroad and of foreign nationals in the United States. The president decides whether to recognize new nations and new governments, and negotiate treaties with other nations, which become binding on the United States when approved by two-thirds of the Senate. The president may also negotiate "executive agreements" with foreign powers that are not subject to Senate confirmation.

Constraints on Presidential power

Because of the vast array of presidential roles and responsibilities, coupled with a conspicuous presence on the national and international scene, political analysts have tended to place great emphasis on the president's powers. Some have even spoken of "the imperial presidency," referring to the expanded role of the office that Franklin D. Roosevelt maintained during his term.

One of the first sobering realities a new president discovers is an inherited bureaucratic structure that can be difficult to manage and slow to change direction. The president's power to appoint extends only to some 3,000 people out of a civilian government work force of about 3 million.


John F. Kennedy
35th President
(1961-1963)

The president finds that the machinery of government (the civil service) often operates independently of presidential interventions, has done so through earlier administrations, and will continue to do so in the future. New presidents are immediately confronted with a backlog of decisions from the outgoing administration. They inherit a budget formulated and enacted into law long before they came to office, as well as major spending programs (such as veterans' benefits, Social Security payments, and Medicare health insurance for the elderly), which are mandated by law. In foreign affairs, presidents must conform with treaties and informal agreements negotiated by their predecessors in office.

As the happy euphoria of the post-election "honeymoon" dissipates, the new president discovers that Congress has become less cooperative and the media more critical. The president is forced to build at least temporary alliances among diverse, often antagonistic interests — economic, geographic, ethnic, and ideological. Compromises with Congress must be struck if any legislation is to be adopted. "It is very easy to defeat a bill in Congress," lamented President John F. Kennedy. "It is much more difficult to pass one."

Despite these constraints, every president achieves at least some of his legislative goals and prevents by veto the enactment of other laws he believes not to be in the nation's best interests. The president's authority in the conduct of war and peace, including the negotiation of treaties, is substantial. Moreover, the president can use his unique position to articulate ideas and advocate policies, which then have a better chance of entering the public consciousness than those held by his political rivals. President Theodore Roosevelt called this aspect of the presidency "the bully pulpit," for when a president raises an issue, it inevitably becomes subject to public debate. A president's power and influence may be limited, but they are also greater than those of any other American, in or out of office.

Though constrained by various other laws passed by Congress, the President's executive branch conducts most foreign policy, and his power to order and direct troops as commander-in-chief is quite significant. (The exact limits of what a President can do with the military without Congressional authorization are open to debate.)

Requirements to hold office

Article 2, Section 1, of the U.S. Constitution sets the requirements one must meet in order to become President:

  1. A natural-born citizen of the United States
  2. Thirty-five years of age
  3. Resident of the United States for 14 years.

Succession

There is a well-defined sequence of who should fill the Presidential office, upon the death, resignation, or removal from office (by impeachment and subsequent conviction) of a sitting President:

  1. the Vice President of the United States
  2. the Speaker of the House of Representatives
  3. the President pro tempore of the United States Senate.

This list is only partial. See the entire United States Presidential line of succession. The Twenty-fifth Amendment was ratified to define how the President is deemed incapable of discharging his powers and duties and when the Vice President becomes Acting President.

Presidents of the United States

  1. George Washington (1789-1797) (no political party)
  2. John Adams (1797-1801) Federalist
  3. Thomas Jefferson (1801-1809) Democratic-Republican
  4. James Madison (1809-1817) Democratic-Republican
  5. James Monroe (1817-1825) Democratic-Republican
  6. John Quincy Adams (1825-1829) Democratic-Republican
  7. Andrew Jackson (1829-1837) Democrat
  8. Martin Van Buren (1837-1841) Democrat
  9. William Henry Harrison (1841) Whig
  10. John Tyler (1841-1845) Whig (Democrat on Whig ticket)
  11. James Knox Polk (1845-1849) Democrat
  12. Zachary Taylor (1849-1850) Whig
  13. Millard Fillmore (1850-1853) Whig
  14. Franklin Pierce (1853-1857) Democrat
  15. James Buchanan (1857-1861) Democrat
  16. Abraham Lincoln (1861-1865) Republican
  17. Andrew Johnson (1865-1869) Republican (Democrat on Republican ticket)
  18. Ulysses Simpson Grant (1869-1877) Republican
  19. Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1877-1881) Republican
  20. James Abram Garfield (1881) Republican
  21. Chester Alan Arthur (1881-1885) Republican
  22. (Stephen) Grover Cleveland (1885-1889) Democrat
  23. Benjamin Harrison (1889-1893) Republican
  24. (Stephen) Grover Cleveland (1893-1897) Democrat (same as #22)
  25. William McKinley (1897-1901) Republican
  26. Theodore Roosevelt (1901-1909) Republican
  27. William Howard Taft (1909-1913) Republican
  28. (Thomas) Woodrow Wilson (1913-1921) Democrat
  29. Warren Gamaliel Harding (1921-1923) Republican
  30. (John) Calvin Coolidge, Jr (1923-1929) Republican
  31. Herbert Clark Hoover (1929-1933) Republican
  32. Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1933-1945) Democrat
  33. Harry S. Truman (1945-1953) Democrat
  34. Dwight David Eisenhower (1953-1961) Republican
  35. John Fitzgerald Kennedy (1961-1963) Democrat
  36. Lyndon Baines Johnson (1963-1969) Democrat
  37. Richard Milhous Nixon (1969-1974) Republican
  38. Gerald Rudolph Ford, Jr (1974-1977) Republican
  39. James Earl 'Jimmy' Carter, Jr (1977-1981) Democrat
  40. Ronald Wilson Reagan (1981-1989) Republican
  41. George Herbert Walker Bush (1989-1993) Republican
  42. William Jefferson Clinton (1993-2001) Democrat
  43. George Walker Bush (2001-present) Republican

Timeline

Former Presidents

After a President leaves office, he continues to be referred to as "President" for the rest of his life. Former Presidents continue to be important national figures, and in some cases go on to successful post-presidential careers. Notable examples have included former President William Howard Taft's appointment as Chief Justice of the United States and former President Jimmy Carter's current career as a global human rights campaigner.

Currently, there are five living former presidents, which is a record number. They are:

Previously, there have been several occasions where there have been four former presidents simultaneously living.

Presidential salary and perks

Presidential Pay History
Date establishedSalary
September 24, 1789$25,000
March 3, 1873$50,000
March 4, 1909$75,000
January 19, 1949$100,000
January 20, 1969$200,000
January 20, 2001$400,000

The first United States Congress voted to pay George Washington a salary of $25,000 a year, a significant sum in 1789. Washington, already a successful man, didn't take the money. Since 2001, the President has earned a salary of $400,000 a year, modest in comparison to the multi-million dollar salaries of most private-sector chief executive officers.

Traditionally, the President, as the most important official in the U.S. government, is to be the highest paid government employee. Consequently, the President's salary serves as a cap of sorts for all other federal officials such as the Chief Justice. The raise for 2001 was approved by Congress and President Bill Clinton in 1999 because other officials who receive annual cost-of-living increases had salaries approaching the President's. Thus, in order to raise the salaries of other federal employees, the President's salary had to be raised to avoid surpassing the President.

Modern Presidents enjoy many non-salary perks such as living and working in the spacious White House mansion in Washington, DC. While travelling, the President is able to conduct all the functions of the office aboard several specially-built Boeing 747s, which take the call-sign Air Force One when the President is aboard. The President travels around Washington in an armored Cadillac limousine, equipped with bullet-proof windows and tires and a self-contained ventilation system in the event of a biological attack. When traveling longer distances around the Washington area, the President travels aboard the Presidential helicopter, Marine One.

Additionally, the President has full use of Camp David in Maryland, a sprawling retreat occasionally used as a casual setting for hosting foreign dignitaries. At all times, the President and his family are protected by an extensive Secret Service detail.

Until the law was changed in 1997, all former Presidents and their family were protected by the Secret Service until their death. The last President to have Secret Service protection for life is Bill Clinton. George Walker Bush and all following Presidents will be protected by the Secret Service for a maximum of 10 years after leaving office.

Presidential facts

Four U.S. Presidents have been assassinated:

Four others died in office of natural causes: One President resigned from office: Two Presidents have been impeached, though neither was subsequently convicted: Four Presidents have been elected without a plurality of popular votes: Two Presidents have been elected without a majority of electoral votes, and were chosen by the House of Representatives: Five Presidents were not elected at all, although with the exception of Gerald Ford all were elected Vice President: While most presidents have been of English descent, there have been a few who came from a different European background: Kennedy was also America's first, and to date only Catholic president.

Presidential residences

The President's residence is the White House, but of course they have had other homes. This is a list of some of those homes:

Presidents of the Continental Congress

Main article: President of the Continental Congress

There were six men who served as President of the Continental Congress prior to the ratification of the Articles of Confederation. These men held very few powers that are now associated with the U.S. presidency and cannot be considered to have been heads of state. Their primary duty was to preside over the Congress (hence the original meaning of "president").

Presidents of the United States in Congress Assembled

Main article: President of the United States in Congress Assembled

There were ten Presidents under the Articles of Confederation. These men held few powers that are now associated with the U.S. presidency and cannot be considered to have been heads of state or the "Chief Executive". These men were simply heads of government with Congress holding all executive powers.

Miscellaneous information

On a less serious note:

Related articles

External links

There is also a rock band called The Presidents of the United States of America.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "President of the United States."

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President pro tempore of the United States Senate

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The United States Senate, according to the United States Constitution, (Article I), is required to choose a President Pro Tempore (or, "president for a time", often shortened to President Pro Tem), who presides over the Senate in the absence of the Vice-President. This position is usually given to the Senator of the majority party with the longest record of continuous service. Because of the smaller size of the Senate and because Senate rules of procedure give more power to individual senators, the President Pro Tem is not a powerful position especially in comparison to the Speaker of the House of Representatives or even the party leaders of the Senate.

In earlier times, when the Vice President usually presided over the Senate, a President pro tempore was chosen each time there was an absence. More recently, a sitting president pro tempore has been chosen.

Since 1947, the President Pro Tempore of the Senate has been third in line to succeed to the US presidency in the case of death or resignation, after the Vice-President and the Speaker of the House of Representatives. (See United States Presidential line of succession.)

The current President Pro Tempore of the Senate is Ted Stevens of Alaska. Before the Republicans regained control of the Senate on November 5, 2002, the President Pro Tempore was Robert Byrd of West Virginia. Prior to the shift of James Jeffords from Republican to Independent in May 2001, which shifted control of the Senate from the Republican to the Democratic Party, the office was held by J. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina.

Presidents pro Tempore of the United States Senate

1st Congress (1789-1791) 2nd Congress (1791-1793) 3rd Congress (1793-1795) 4th Congress (1795-1797) 5th Congress (1797-1799) 6th Congress (1799-1801) 7th Congress (1801-1803) 8th Congress (1803-1805) 9th Congress (1805-1807) 10th Congress (1807-1809) 11th Congress (1809-1811) 12th Congress (1811-1813) 13th Congress (1813-1815) 14th Congress (1815-1817) 15th Congress (1817-1819) 16th Congress (1819-1821) 17th Congress (1821-1823) 18th Congress (1823-1825) 19th Congress (1825-1827) 20th Congress (1827-1829) 21st Congress (1829-1831) 22nd Congress (1831-1833) 23rd Congress (1833-1835) 24th Congress (1835-1837) 25th Congress (1837-1839) 26th Congress (1839-1841) 27th Congress (1841-1843) 28th Congress (1843-1845) 29th Congress (1845-1847) 30th Congress (1847-1849) 31st Congress (1849-1851) 32nd Congress (1851-1853) 33rd Congress (1853-1855) 34th Congress (1855-1857) 35th Congress (1857-1859) 36th Congress (1859-1861) 37th Congress (1861-1863) 38th Congress (1863-1865) 39th Congress (1865-1867) 40th Congress (1867-1869) 41st Congress (1869-1871) '''42nd Congress (1871-1873) 43rd Congress (1873-1875) 44th Congress (1875-1877) 45th Congress (1877-1879) 46th Congress (1879-1881) 47th Congress (1881-1883) 48th Congress (1883-1885) 49th Congress (1885-1887) 50th Congress (1887-1889) 51st Congress (1889-1891) At this point, it was decided that presidents pro tempore should serve until a new one was elected. They were as follows:

on Frye's death, it proved difficult to elect a successor. For the remainder of the 62nd Congress (1911-1913), the position alternated among:

In the next Congress, things returned to normal:

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Presidents of Croatia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The President of the Republic of Croatia:

  1. represents and stands for the Republic of Croatia at home and abroad
  2. takes care of regular and harmonized functioning and stability of the state government
  3. is responsible for the defense of independence and territorial integrity of the Republic of Croatia
  4. takes a solemn oath before the President of the Constitutional Court swearing loyalty to the Constitution
  5. calls elections for the Croatian Parliament and convenes their first session
  6. calls referenda, in conformity with the Constitution
  7. confides the mandate to form the Government to the person who, upon the distribution of the seats in the Croatian Parliament and consultations held, enjoys confidence of the majority of its members
  8. grants pardons
  9. confers decorations and other awards specified by law
  10. cooperates with the Government in formulation and execution of the foreign policy
  11. decides on the establishment of diplomatic missions and consular offices of the Republic of Croatia abroad, at the Government's proposal and with the counter-signature of the Prime Minister
  12. appoints and recalls diplomatic representatives of the Republic of Croatia, with the prior counter-signature of the Prime Minister of the Republic of Croatia, at the proposal the Government and upon the opinion of the authorized committee of the Croatian Parliament
  13. receives letters of credence and the letters of recall from foreign diplomatic representatives
  14. appoints and relieves of duty military commanders
  15. may declare war and conclude peace, on the basis of the decision of the Croatian Parliament
  16. may with the counter signature of the Prime Minister, order the employment of the armed forces even if the state of war has not been declared, in case of an immediate threat to the independence, unity and existence of the State
  17. may issue decrees with the force of law on the grounds and within the authority obtained from the Croatian Parliament. If the Croatian Parliament is not in session, the President of the Republic is authorized to regulate all the issues required by the state of war by decrees with the force of law
  18. issues decrees with the force of law, at the proposal of the Prime Minister and with his counter-signature, in case of an immediate threat to the independence, unity and existence of the State, or if the governmental bodies are prevented from performing their constitutional duties regularly
  19. may call a session of the Government and preside over such a session, during the state of war or in case of an immediate threat to the independence, unity and existence of the State
  20. may propose to the Government to hold a session and consider certain issues
  21. may be present at the meeting of the Government and take part in deliberations
  22. cooperates in directing the operations of the security services with the Government
  23. dissolves the Croatian Parliament if the Parliament has passed a vote of no confidence to the Government, or if it has failed to approve the state budget within 120 days from the date when it was proposed, at the proposal of the Government and with the counter-signature of the Prime Minister, after consultations with the representatives of the clubs of parliamentary parties
  24. may restrict individual freedoms and rights guaranteed by the Constitution during a state of war or an immediate threat to the independence and unity of the State or in the event of severe natural disasters, if the Croatian Parliament is unable to meet, at the proposal of the Government and upon the counter-signature of the Prime Minister
  25. convenes emergency sessions of the Croatian Parliament
  26. may call a referendum on a proposal for the amendment of the Constitution or any other issue which he considers to be important for the independence, unity and existence of the Republic of Croatia, at the proposal of the Government and with the counter-signature of the Prime Minister
  27. promulgates laws within 8 days from the date when they were passed in the Croatian Parliament.
  28. may initiate proceedings to review the constitutionality of the law before the Constitutional Court, if he considers the promulgated law is not in accordance with the Constitution

List of Presidents of the Republic of Croatia:

  1. Franjo Tuđman (1990-1999)
  2. Stjepan Mesić (2000-)

The office of President of the Republic was declared after ammending the Constitution of Socialist Republic of Croatia (then member of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia) in summer 1990. That happened immediatelly after first democratic multi-party elections, transforming the Presidency of SR Croatia. President of the Presidency of SR Croatia Franjo Tudjman was declared President of the Republic of Croatia, according to the Ammendments.

New Constitution was passed on December 22, 1990.

1992 Presidential elections won by Tuđman.

1997 Presidential elections won by Tuđman.

President Tuđman dies at the end of 1999. According to the Constitution, President of the Parliament Vlatko Pavletić was acting president. After parliamentary elections in January 2000 new acting president was newly elected president of the Parliament Zlatko Tomčić.

2000 Presidential elections won by Mesić.

Current President of the Republic of Croatia is Stjepan Mesić. He is serving his 5-year mandate (until 2005).

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Presidents of Croatia."

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Presidents of South Korea

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Presidents of South Korea

Korean Government in exile

The government was based in Shanghai, China). Although the current South Korea insists on being its successor to assert legitimacy, the government was not internationally recognized.
  1. Rhee Syngman 이승만
  2. Park Eunshik 박은식

Korean Government after Deliveration of 1945

  1. Rhee Syngman 이승만 (1948 - 1960)
  2. Yoon Boseon 윤보선 (1960 - 1962)
  3. Park Chunghee 박정희 (1963 - 1979)
  4. Choi Kyuha 최규하 (1979 - 1980)
  5. Chun Doohwan 전두환 (1980 - 1988)
  6. Roh Tae-woo 노태우 (1988 - 1993)
  7. Kim Young-sam 김영삼 (1993 - 1998)
  8. Kim Dae-jung 김대중 (1998 - 2003)
  9. Roh Moo-hyun 노무현 (2003-present)

    Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Presidents of South Korea."

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Presidents of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

  1. Joseph Smith (1805-1844), served 1830-1844
  2. Brigham Young (1801-1877), served 1847-1877
  3. John Taylor (1808-1887), served 1880-1887
  4. Wilford Woodruff (1807-1898), served 1889-1898
  5. Lorenzo Snow (1814-1800), served 1898-1901
  6. Joseph F. Smith (1838-1901), served 1901-1918
  7. Heber J. Grant (1856-1918), served 1918-1945
  8. George Albert Smith (1870-1945), served 1945-1951
  9. David O. Mckay (1873-1970), served 1951-1970
  10. Joseph Fielding Smith (1876-1972), served 1970-1972
  11. Harold B. Lee (1899-1973), served 1972-1973
  12. Spencer W. Kimball (1895-1985), served 1973-1985
  13. Ezra Taft Benson (1899-1994), served 1985-1994
  14. Howard W. Hunter (1907-1995), served 1994-1995
  15. Gordon B. Hinckley (b. 1910), served from 1995

    Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Presidents of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints."

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Proposed President of Australia

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

There is no President of Australia. However, as part of a possible move from a constitutional monarchy to a republic Australia has been debating the creation of such an office for many years.

Currently, Australia's Head of State is Queen Elizabeth II, called the "Queen of Australia." She is represented by a Governor General, appointed by the Prime Minister. Many Australians resent the fact that the Queen retains constitutional and ceremonial powers over Australia, despite the nation's political independence from Britain. Also, many resent the perceived undemocratic nature of the Governor General's office, and want greater accountability for the person who has the authority to use the Crown's various prerogative powers.

All this has led to the rise of republicanism in Australia. Most members of this movement argue that the Governor General and Queen should be replaced with a President, who would become Australia's new Head of State.

There is much debate over the powers that such an office would have, however, and controversy over the President's appointment (or election) process caused the failure of a referendum in 1999 on the creation of an Australian presidency. The Australian Republican Movement advocated that the President be elected by both Houses of the Parliament of Australia, while other republicans advocated the election of the President by universal suffrage, citing Australians' traditional dislike and distrust of their politicians.

A small minority of republicans have advocated a 'minimalist' approach, known as the McGarvie model, after the former Governor of Victoria. An Australian Head of State would replace the Queen, but would retain the title of 'Governor General' instead of holding the title of President. If this were to happen, it would be a first, as all other former Commonwealth Realms have created presidencies upon becoming republics.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Proposed President of Australia."

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U.S. presidential election, 2004

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Presidential Candidate Electoral Vote Popular Vote Pct Party Running Mate
(Electoral Votes)
 
Other elections: 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016
Source: U.S. Office of the Federal Register

The next U.S. presidential election is scheduled to occur November 2, 2004.

For the same date is scheduled:

(the entire House of Representatives and one-third of the Senate are elected simultaneously with the President).

The newly elected or newly re-elected President will be inaugurated on January 20, 2005.

Timeline

Important future dates

Click here for a map of all primary dates

Candidates

Electoral College changes from 2000

With the completion of the 2000 census, Congressional re-apportionment took place, moving some representative districts from the slowest growing states to the fastest growing. As a result, some states will send a different number of electors to the U.S. Electoral College, since the number of electors allotted to a state is equal to the sum of the number of Senators and Representatives from that state. Since the results were so close in 2000, this could potentially impact the outcome of the 2004 election.

The following table shows the change in electors from the 2000 election. Red (+7) states represent those that Bush won in 2000 and blue (-7) states Gore won.

  • Arizona (+2)
  • California (+1)
  • Colorado (+1)
  • Connecticut (-1)
  • Florida (+2)
  • Georgia (+2)
  • Illinois (-1)
  • Indiana (-1)
  • Michigan (-1)
  • Mississippi (-1)
  • Nevada (+1)
  • New York (-2)
  • North Carolina (+1)
  • Ohio (-1)
  • Oklahoma (-1)
  • Pennsylvania (-2)
  • Texas (+2)
  • Wisconsin (-1)

See also: President of the United States, U.S. presidential election, U.S. Democratic Party Presidential Primary, 2004, U.S. Republican Party Presidential Primary, 2004, 2004

External links and references

Election 2004 link directories

Election 2004 global debate and voting

Election news wires

News articles

Election campaign funding

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Abbreviations & Acronyms: President

The following table is compiled from various sources, across various languages. When English abbreviations or acronyms come from a non-English source, this is noted.
EntrySourceExpressionField
Pres.EnglishPresidentGeneral, Labor

Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references).

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Synonyms: President

Synonyms: chair (n), chairman (n), chairperson (n), chairwoman (n). (additional references)

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Synonyms within Context: President

ContextSynonyms within Context (source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus).

Director

Head, head man, head center, boss; principal, president, speaker; chair, chairman, chairwoman, chairperson; captain; (master); superior; mayor; (civil authority); vice president, prime minister, premier, vizier, grand vizier, eparch.

Government

President, vice president, cabinet member, prime minister, minister; senator, representatative, president pro tem, speaker of the house; department head, section head, section chief; federal judge, justice, justice of the supreme court, chief justice; treasurer, secretary of the treasury; director of the FBI.

Office of the president, office of the prime minister, cabinet; senate, house of representatives, parliament; council; courts, supreme court; state, interior, labor, health and human services, defense, education, agriculture, justice, commerce, treasury; Federal Bureau of Investigation, FBI; Central Intelligence Agency, CIA; NIH; Postal Service, Post Office; Federal Aviation Administration, FAA.

Master

Crowned head, emperor, king, anointed king, majesty, imperator, protector, president, stadholder, judge.

Source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus.

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Crosswords: President

English words defined with "president": executive vice presidentPresident Adams, President Andrew Johnson, President Arthur, President Benjamin Harrison, President Buchanan, President Bush, President Carter, President Cleveland, President Clinton, President Coolidge, President Eisenhower, President Fillmore, President Ford, President Franklin Roosevelt, President Garfield, President Grant, President Harding, President Harrison, President Hayes, President Hoover, President Jefferson, President John Adams, President John Quincy Adams, President Johnson, President Kennedy, President Lincoln, President Lyndon Johnson, President Madison, President McKinley, President Monroe, President Nixon, President of the United States, President Pierce, President Polk, President Reagam, President Roosevelt, President Taft, President Taylor, President Theodore Roosevelt, President Truman, President Tyler, President Van Buren, President Washington, President William Henry Harrison, President Wilsonsenior vice presidentVice president. (references)
Specialty definitions using "president": Administration, Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and Negotiations, Advisory Committee On Trade Policy And Negotiation, After Verbs and Prepositions, Agricultural Adjustment Act Amendment of 1935, Aide toi et le Ciel taidera, Anticipate, AristidesBudget Resolution, BUSINESS MANAGER, COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITYCabinet Ministers, CEA, Cocked-hat Club, cohabitation, Comus, Conference of Group Presidents, Continuing Resolution, Contract sanctity, Cordeliers, CROKER, Crown, Cycdivision manager, divisional manager, Doug LenatEmergency Disaster Loan Program, executive, Expect, Export Administration Act of 1979Fast track authority, FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, Federal Open Market Committee, ForbësGraphics Interchange Format, Greg OlsonHildebrodInteractive Software Engineering, International Emergency Economic Powers Act, Introduce, Iomega Corporation, Ivan SutherlandJames GoslingKingly TitlesLeave, like nailing jelly to a tree, Limited global quota for upland cottonMACROBIAN, Madam Chair, Make, Manufacture, MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY, Mormon Creed, Mortar-board, Most-favored-nation treatmentNasi, National Drought Policy Commission, National Environmental Policy Act of 1970, NSDIOfficers, Omission, Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988Pacific Disaster Center, Paddle Your Own Canoe, Pegging Away, PIZZY CLUB, Present, Preside, President of the SenateQuitreciprocal jurisdiction, Refugee Authorized Admissions, ROOSEVELT, Rough and ReadySAM, Section 201, Section 22, Section 301, Sendmail Inc., Standard Industrial Classification system, Stephen Jobs, Stephen Kleene, story, STRATEGIC PETROLEUMRESERVE, Super 301, supervisory agentTAFT, tortoise, Trade Act of 1974U.S. attorney, United States Department Of Agriculture, Unix conspiracy, Uruguay Round Agreements Act of 1994, USTRWasserman, Watcom International, WILSON. (references)
Etymologies containing "president": Magistery. (references)
Non-English Usage: "President" is also a word in the following languages with English translations in parentheses.

Albanian (president), Dutch (chairman, president), Portuguese (president), Swedish (chairman, president).

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Modern Usage: President

DomainUsage

Screenplays

The President will get his baseball glove back and play catch with this guy's balls (Air Force One; writing credit: Andrew W. Marlowe)

That was before President Kennedy was shot, before the Beatles, when I couldn't wait to join the Peace Corps, and I thought I'd never find a guy as great as my dad. That was the summer we went to Kellerman's (Dirty Dancing; writing credit: Eleanor Bergstein)

Vice president Ford will be sworn into office at that hour in this office (Forrest Gump; writing credit: Eric Roth)

My father is no different than any powerful man, any man with power, like a president or senator (The Godfather; writing credit: Francis Coppola and Mario Puzo. Based on the novel by Mario Puzo.)

I see you standing over the grave of another dead president. (In the Line of Fire; writing credit: Jeff Maguire)

Lyrics

One just might be president (Only In America; performing artist: Brooks & Dunn)

Ride expensive cars stays in the president suite (Tricky, tricky; performing artist: Lou Bega)

Even the president needs passion (PASSION; performing artist: Rod Stewart)

Is it any wonder I'm not the president (Too Much Time On My Hands; performing artist: STYX; writing credit: Tommy Shaw)

First come here keep talkin' bout the president, won't stop air pollution ("Respect Yourself"; performing artist: The Staple Singers)

Clever

How come we choose from just two people to run for president and 50 for Miss America? (references; author: unknown)

Movie/TV Titles

President Nyerere's Visit to India (1973)

Shirley Chisholm for President (1972)

Making of the President 1968 (1969)

The Virgin President (1968)

Super President (1967)

Song Titles

Coco Jamboo (performing artist: Mr. President)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Commercial Usage: President

DomainTitle

References

  • President Chain Store Corp.: International Competitive Benchmarks and Financial Gap Analysis (reference)

  • Thai President Foods Public Co. Ltd.: International Competitive Benchmarks and Financial Gap Analysis (reference)

    (more reference examples)

  

Books

  • Class President (reference)

  • Crashing the Party: How to Tell the Truth and Still Run for President (reference)

  • Eisenhower: Soldier and President (reference)

  • Madam President (reference)

    (more book examples)

  

Periodicals

  • Rapport Au President De La Republique Suivi Des Reponses Des (reference)

  • Report To The President & The Congress Of United States (reference)

    (more periodical examples)

  

Theater & Movies

  

Music

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Image Slideshow: President

Photos:
President

More pictures...

Illustrations:
President

More pictures...

Computer Images:
President

More pictures...

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Photo Album: President

ThumbnailDescription & CreditThumbnailDescription & Credit

Shown is page 2 of the newspaper Washington Post on August 6, 1937 just after President Roosevelt signed a bill to authorize the erection of the National Cancer Institute, with Dr. Carl Voegtlin as the Chief. Shown are photos of Drs. Carl Voegtlin, R. H. Fitch, Herbert Kaher and Thomas Parran (Surgeon General). Shown is "'Conquer Cancer' Adopted as Battle Cry of the Public Health Service.". Credit: Unknown photographer/artist.

Shown here is President Richard Nixon signing the National Cancer Act on December 23, 1971. This is a formal setting with a row of senators visible and some other officials and dignitaries. See also AR001123. Credit: Linda Bartlett (photographer).

President Nixon and Dr. Paine Wait to Meet Apollo 11 Astronauts. Credit: NASA.

Mariner photos presented to President Johnson. Credit: NASA.

H. Arnold Karo and President Dwight David Eisenhower 150th Anniversary Dinner of the Coast and Geodetic Survey. Credit: Coast & Geodetic Survey Historical Image Collection.

George Miffllin Dallas Vice-President under President Polk Uncle of Alexander Dallas Bache. Credit: Coast & Geodetic Survey Historical Image Collection.

The United States Marine Hospital at Chelsea. The building was made of stone and built in 1827. Patients were sick and disabled seamen. Although run by the revenue collector of Boston and Charlestown, a physician and surgeon were appointed by the President of the United States. In: Historical Collections ... of Every Town in Massachusetts. 1841. Credit: America's Coastlines.

President George W. Bush.

Air Force Reservist Senior Airman Tom Kimball gets a hand straightening his tie from his son Airman Ben Kimball. Though he is 44 years old and the president of a successful multimedia production company, Ben's commitment to the Air Force inspired the elde.

President and land owner William Chambers and NRCS employee Karen Strohmeyer with no till pumpkin patch. Credit: Gary Wilson.

Source: pictures compiled by the editor from various references; see picture credits.

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Digital Photo Gallery: President
 

"War Shots - President Bush 5" by Erich Peters
Commentary: "President Bush greets the trrops."
"The First President" by Kelly Abbott
Commentary: "A continental soldier."

Source: photographs selected by the editor, with permission from the photographers.

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Familiar Quotations: President

AuthorQuotation

Daniel Defoe

Pride the first peer and president of hell.

President Abraham Lincoln

We meet this evening, not in sorrow, but in gladness of heart.

President Andrew Jackson.

John Marshall has made his decision: now let him enforce it!

President Calvin Coolidge

After all, the chief business of the American people is business.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt

The frontier of America is on the Rhine.

President Harry S. Truman

People are very much wrought up about the Communist bugaboo.

President William Mckinley

Expositions are the timekeepers of progress.

Vice President Theodore Roosevelt

The most practical kind of politics is the politics of decency.

Vice President Thomas R. Marshall

What this country needs is a really good 5-cent cigar.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

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Historic Usage: President

AuthorDateQuotation

US Constitution

1791

Clause 1: The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America. (reference)

Amendment to US Constitution

1795-1992

But in choosing the President, the votes shall be taken by states, the representation from each state having one vote; a quorum for this purpose shall consist of a member or members from two-thirds of the states, and a majority of all the states shall be necessary to a choice. (reference)

Marbury v. Madison

1803

It [is] decidedly the opinion of the court, that when a commission has been signed by the president, the appointment is made; and that the commission is complete, when the seal of the United States has been affixed to it by the secretary of state. (reference)

The Emancipation Proclamation

1862

Whereas on the 22nd day of September, A.D. 1862, a proclamation was issued by the President of the United States, containing, among other things, the following, to wit: "That on the 1st day of January, A.D. 1863, all persons held as slaves within any State or designated part of a State the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free; and the executive government of the United States, including the military and naval authority thereof, will recognize and maintain the freedom of such persons and will do no act or acts to repress such persons, or any of them, in any efforts they may make for their actual freedom." (Abraham Lincoln)

Treaty of Versailles

1919

The President shall be chosen by agreement between the two Governments concerned. (reference)

Winston S. Churchill

1946

It is also an honor, perhaps almost unique, for a private visitor to be introduced to an academic audience by the President of the United States. ("Iron Curtain" Speech)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

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Use in Literature: President

TitleAuthorQuote

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

Douglas Adams

Are you telling me, he said, "that you set yourself up to become President of the Galaxy just to steal that ship?

Les Miserables

Hugo, Victor

The mayor and the president made him the first visit, and he, on his part, paid like honour to the general and the prefect

Walden

Thoreau, Henry David

God is only the president of the day, and Webster is his orator

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

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Non-Fiction Usage: President

SubjectTopicQuote

Health

This fact sheet was also reviewed by Thomas Wadden, Ph.D., Director, Weight and Eating Disorders Program, University of Pennsylvania, and Goulda Downer, Ph.D., President, Metroplex Health and Nutrition Services. (references)

Acupuncture may correct imbalances of flow at identifiable points close to the skin. The practice of acupuncture to treat identifiable pathophysiological conditions in American medicine was rare until the visit of President Nixon to China in 1972. Since that time, there has been an explosion of interest in the United States and Europe in the application of the technique of acupuncture to Western medicine. (references)

The second initiative, called the President’s Initiative on Alzheimer’s Disease, was announced by President Clinton on July 16, 2000. In this effort, the NIH will set aside $50 million over the next 5 years to support new research on AD. The NIH will be soliciting applications to support meritorious research, including both basic research as a part of pre-clinical studies and clinical interventions to treat or prevent AD by targeting the production of disease-associated processes, such as formation of amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. (references)

Business

In 1992, President Zayed issued a new code of civil procedure. (references)

With President Menem’s re-election in 1995, foreign travel started to grow once again. (references)

Slightly over 26 percent of the Federal Parliament is female, including its President. (references)

Children

Guinea

There is a Minister of Youth and a Cabinet Minister, appointed by the President, charged with defending women's and children's rights, and a permanent committee dedicated to defending the rights of the child, with members chosen from different ministries, NGO's, and other sectors. (references)

Sri Lanka

The NCPA is comprised of representatives from the education, medical, retired police, and legal professions; it reports directly to the President. (references)

Cameroon

In 2000 President Biya announced the elimination of tuition fees for public elementary schools. (references)

Civil Liberties

Egypt

Citizens openly speak their views on a wide range of political and social issues, including vigorous criticism of government officials and policies, but generally avoid certain topics, such as direct criticism of the President. (references)

Egypt

The Penal Code stipulates fines or imprisonment for criticism of the President, members of the Government, and foreign heads of state. (references)

Albania

Broadcasting issues are governed by the National Council of Radio and Television (NCRT), a seven-member bipartisan body elected by the Parliament, with one appointment by the President. (references)

Discrimination

Namibia

During a March 19 speech at the University of Namibia, President Nujoma announced that "the Republic of Namibia does not allow homosexuality or lesbianism here. (references)

Economic History

Egypt

Authority is vested in an elected president who can appoint one or more vice presidents, a prime minister, and a cabinet. (references)

Ecuador

During a night of confusion and negotiations President Mahuad was obliged to flee the presidential palace for his own safety. (references)

Human Rights

Congo

On October 11, three citizens filed a complaint in a Belgian national court in Brussels against President Denis Sassou-Nguesso and a multinational oil company, alleging they had committed crimes against humanity by ordering or permitting targeted extrajudicial mass killings of civilian members of ethnic groups in late 1998 and early 1999. The charges included kidnaping, torture, and arbitrary arrest, and were based in part on a book of memoirs published in Europe. (references)

Dominican Republic

The Mejia administration acknowledged the problems with the police apparatus and created a Police Reform Commission made up of the Chief of Police, the Attorney General, the Secretary of the Armed Forces, the Legal Advisor to the President, representatives of human rights organizations, and legislators. (references)

Cote d'Ivoire

On March 8, the senior investigating judge summoned and questioned several persons about the December 2000 demonstrations, including Aly Keita, RDR Deputy Spokesperson, and Thierry Legre, president of a pro-RDR organization; no charges were filed against them. (references)

Indigenous People

Brazil

FUNAI president Carlos Frederico Mares resigned in protest over the treatment of indigenous people during the event. (references)

Nicaragua

In 1999 President Aleman signed a disarmament agreement with representatives of the Yatama armed groups. (references)

Indonesia

Then-Vice President Megawati Soekarnoputri visited the province in May and September 2000, and then-President Wahid provided $110,000 (Rp. 1 billion) for the holding of the Papuan congress. (references)

Minorities

Cuba

Nevertheless racial discrimination often occurred and was acknowledged publicly by high governmental officials, including President Castro during remarks at the World Conference on Racism in South Africa. (references)

Togo

The relative predominance in private sector commerce and professions by members of southern ethnic groups, and the relative predominance in the public sector and especially the security forces by members of President Eyadema's Kabye group and other northern groups, are sources of political tension. (references)

Nigeria

The crisis in Kaduna State in 2000 was the first major Muslim-Christian conflict during President Obasanjo's tenure. (references)

Political Economy

Guinea

It ended when the President agreed to address the soldiers' grievances, involving salaries and benefits. (references)

Ecuador

After hours of uncertainty, Gustavo Noboa, Vice-President at the time, replaced him as President. (references)

India

A meeting at the White House between former Prime Minister Rao and President Clinton in May 1994 marked a new beginning in these relations. (references)

Political Rights

Burundi

On November 1, President Buyoya was sworn in as president for the first 18 months of the 3-year transitional period. (references)

Algeria

One potential candidate was denied the ability to run because the electoral commission determined that he could not prove that he had participated in Algeria's war of independence against France, a legal requirement for candidates for President born before July 1942. With the withdrawal of the other candidates and the absence of foreign observers, it was impossible to make an accurate determination of turnout for the election; although it apparently was as low as 30 percent, the Government claimed a 60 percent turnout. (references)

Burkina Faso

The Compaore Government included a strong presidency, a Prime Minister, a cabinet presided over by the President, a two-chamber National Assembly, and the judiciary. (references)

Trade

Botswana

The other members are demanding that a secretariat with an elected president take over SARS' functions. (references)

Russia

In 1997, a bill attempting to harmonize tax holidays and other concessions for FEZs across Russia passed parliament only to be vetoed by the president. (references)

Mauritius

Further information is available from the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Industry and Commerce, Commerce Division, Air Mauritius Building (8th floor), President John Kennedy Street, Port Louis, Mauritius, Phone: (230) 210-3774; Fax: (230) 201-3289. (references)

Travel

Botswana

Mid-range hotels include the centrally located Cresta President and the Cresta Lodge. (references)

Cote D'ivoire

They should stop for a presidential motorcade, stand for the national anthem, and under no circumstances destroy or deface a portrait of the President. (references)

Egypt

Shipping lines serving Ports Said and Alexandria (the largest port on the Mediterranean) are Adriatica, Farrel, Lykes, Ogden, Prudential, and American President Lines. (references)

Women

Senegal

Vivian Wade, the wife of the President, was among the demonstrators. (references)

Pakistan

Maulvi Qari Mohammad Sharif, a cleric, was granted bail and pardoned by President Rafiq Tarar in late December 2000. Sharif had been convicted of marital rape and mutilating his wife in a highly publicized case in 1994. Sentenced to 30 years imprisonment, the punishment was reduced on appeal to 10 years before he was released. (references)

Guatemala

The Secretariat operates under the direction of the President, advising him on the coordination of policy affecting women and their development. (references)

Worker Rights

Colombia

In April Ricardo Orozco, vice president of the Hospital Workers Union was shot and killed near Barranquilla. (references)

Colombia

In March Valmore Locarno Rodriguez and Victor Hugo Orcasita, local president and vice president of miners' union SINTRAMINERGETICA at Drummond Corporation's La Loma coal mine in the northeastern department of Cesar, were abducted from their company bus and killed. (references)

Gabon

In March court magistrates went on strike to protest poor working conditions and benefits; however, the strike was postponed when President Bongo indicated that he might meet some of their demands. (references)

Lexicography

Devil's Dictionary

ADMINISTRATION, n. An ingenious abstraction in politics, designed to receive the kicks and cuffs due to the premier or president. A man of straw, proof against bad-egging and dead-catting.

Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits.

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Spoken Usage: President

SpeakerPhrase(s)

Colin Powell

It's not useful to try to draw out from us what is the president going to do, when the president has all of his options. He can decide.

Dennis Miller

The body of President Lincoln was barely even cold before someone got the idea to stamp his face on a circular piece of copper and sell it for a hundredth of a dollar.

John Thune

Look, every president going back to Jimmy Carter and actually before that, back to the Kennedy administration, has had flexibility when it comes to the issue of national security.

Judith Miller

Well I'm struck by the fact that there is still a difference in tone between Secretary Powell and the President.

Mark Shields

Governor Ridge, nobody questions the closeness of your relationship, the trust and confidence between you and the president.

Monica Lewinsky

Probably that I went to Washington with an agenda to seduce the president and then expose that relationship so I could become famous.

Robert Novak

Mrs. Dole, there's a lot of worries about a double-dip recession. The president is having an economic forum in Texas, coming up.

Rush Limbaugh

My guess is that President Kennedy would have, as most of the rest of us have, urged a bit bolder tax relief.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Speeches: President

SpeakerTermPhrase(s)

George Washington

1789-1797Previous to the execution of any official act of the President the Constitution requires an oath of office.

Harry S. Truman

1945-1953Instead it has called on the President to present a comprehensive Executive Budget.

Dwight Eisenhower

1953-1961Like every other citizen, I wish the new President, and all who will labor with him, Godspeed.

Lyndon B. Johnson

1963-1969Ten years ago our President pledged our help.

Richard Nixon

1969-1974But as President I must put the interests of America first.

Gerald Ford

1974-1977To the ears of the world, the President speaks for the Nation.

Ronald Reagan

1981-1989President, distinguished members of Congress, honored guests and fellow citizens.

George Bush

1989-1993There are certain things that a president can do without Congress, and I am going to do them.

Bill Clinton

1993-2001We have almost six million new jobs since I became President.

George W. Bush

2001-2005As I begin, I thank President Clinton for his service to our nation.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

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Usage Frequency: President

"President" is generally used as a noun (singular) -- approximately 61.42% of the time. "President" is used about 15,909 times out of a sample of 100 million words spoken or written in English. Its rank is based on over 700,000 words used in the English language. Some parts-of-speech are not covered due to the samples used by the British National Corpus. (note: percents less than one-hundredth of one percent have been omitted)
Parts of SpeechPercentUsage per
100 Million Words
Rank in English
Noun (singular)61.42%9,771969
Noun (proper)38.58%6,1381,587
                    Total100.00%15,909N/A

Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.

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Name Usage Frequency: President

The following table summarizes the usage of "president" based on a population census conducted in the United States. Ranks and frequencies are based on all names reported and classified.
NameUsage/GenderUsage per 100
million Persons
Rank in USA
PresidentLast name30024,309
Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.

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Usage in Company Names: President

CountryNameCountryName
South Africa

President Steyn Gold Mines Ltd.

Taiwan

President Chain Store Corp.

Thailand

President Rice Products Public Co. Ltd.

 (more examples...)  

Source: compiled by the editor from Icon Group International, Inc.

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Expressions: President

Expressions using "president": acting president as president elect smb. president executive vice president former university president honorary president Lord president outgoing president past president permanent president president Adams president Andrew Johnson president Arthur president Benjamin Harrison president Buchanan president Bush president Carter president Cleveland president Clinton president Coolidge president Eisenhower president elect president Fillmore president Ford president Franklin Roosevelt president Garfield president Grant president Harding president Harrison president Hayes president Hoover president Jefferson president John Adams president John Quincy Adams president Johnson president Kennedy president Lincoln president Lyndon Johnson president Madison president McKinley president Monroe president Nixon president of a court of appeal president of court president of the united states president Pierce president Polk president Reagam president Roosevelt president Taft president Taylor president Theodore Roosevelt president Truman president Tyler president Van Buren president Washington president William Henry Harrison president Wilson run for president senior vice president the then president vice president. Additional references.

Hyphenated Usage

Beginning with "president": president-designate, president-director, President-elect, President-for-life, president-in-exile, president-in-waiting, president-national.

Ending with "president": co-president, Life-president, Minister-president, vice-president.

Containing "president": Vice-president-elect.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Frequency of Internet Keywords: President

The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com.