News about John Tyler

Since being assassinated by a murderer and did not campaign for a second term, Biden and the 140-year-old ghost of the last president of the United States were refused their nomination: Chester Arthur was officially admitted to the White House in Maynation

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 2, 2024
President Biden is set to seek his second term, and Democratic party leaders have mostly rallied behind him despite growing concerns about his age and mental health. However, political parties don't just ignore sitting incumbents, at least not if they were first elected as Biden was in 2020, if history is anything to go by.

Scholars who ranked Trump 'worst ever president' SLAMMED for 'liberal bias' by polling academic group that's 'barely distinguishable from the Democratic Party and its far-left wing'

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 20, 2024
The University of Houston's political scientist Brandon Rottinghaus and Justin Vaughn of Coastal Carolina University released their scorecard over Presidents' Day weekend, placing Trump in 45th place, which is far from the bottom of the chart. Users of social media reacted positively to the findings, accusing the academics of polling only a select group of experts with a shared outlook that is increasingly incompatible with regular Americans. According to one X/ Twitter user, 'a total of 154 people participated in the 'poll'. 'And they are all embedded in academia's uber-liberal tradition.' Another 'laughable survey' that struggled to identify the respondents by name was smuggish.

After the anti-Semitism and plagiarism scandal, Obama may be the next president (of Harvard University): Barack is among those rumored to replace disgraced Claudine Gay

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 9, 2024
The former president of the United States, who graduated from Harvard Law School in 1991, may be a candidate for the position, but he would not be the first ex-POTUS to head an elite college. Alan M. Garber is now the interim president of Harvard University, but the university is reportedly considering a permanent replacement for Gay. The Harvard University - who has not identified any candidates - said the hunt for a new leader would include broad involvement and discussion with the Harvard community ahead.'