Mobhare
Matinyi, Washington DC. The Citizen,
Tanzania. Friday, 09 November 2012 09:42
By winning on Tuesday, Barack Obama becomes the second Democrat to be elected twice since the Second World War era that witnessed a Democrat, President Franklin Roosevelt, winning four presidential polls in 1932, 1936, 1940 and 1944.
By winning on Tuesday, Barack Obama becomes the second Democrat to be elected twice since the Second World War era that witnessed a Democrat, President Franklin Roosevelt, winning four presidential polls in 1932, 1936, 1940 and 1944.
President
Roosevelt, who is well respected as the leader of the United States during the
Second World War, and the man who rescued the nation from the great economic
depression, died on April 12, 1945 after serving as president for 12 years, one
month, one week and one day.
President
Roosevelt was the last beneficiary of the old system which did not have a
presidential term limit, a reason why he ran four times. Later the
Twenty-second Amendment of the US Constitution set a presidential term limit of
two terms, which was ratified in 1951.
After
his death, his Vice President, Harry Truman, assumed the presidency but
thereafter only won one term in 1948, as he lost, in 1952, to a Republican,
General Dwight Eisenhower, a military commander in the Second World War. Thus,
after Roosevelt, it took America 52 years until 1996 to elect a Democrat, Bill
Clinton, to a second term, following his first in 1992. But what happened after
Roosevelt and thereafter?
Maybe
Americans grew tired of Democrats, so with Truman’s perceived weakness at the
start of the Cold War, they elected a general-turned politician, Republican
Eisenhower, who then served two terms until January 1961.
Then
Eisenhower’s Vice President, Richard Nixon, took the challenge to face the
Democrats but lost to John Kennedy in one of the most closely-contested
presidential polls in US history. Unfortunately for Kennedy, he was
assassinated on November 22, 1963 in Dallas, Texas.
Notably,
President Kennedy was a close friend of Julius Nyerere, by then the President
of the Republic of Tanganyika. Nyerere visited Kennedy at the White House in
July 1963, four months before his assassination.
After
Kennedy’s death, his Vice President Lyndon Johnson took over immediately,
sworn-in on board Air Force One. He was elected easily in 1964 by a sympathy
vote and went on to escalate the Vietnam War grossly in 1965 when he dispatched
200,000 American troops.
After
messing up in Vietnam, he decided not to run for re-election in 1968 leaving
the door open to Nixon to realize his dream. Nixon started his effort to end
the conflict and won re-election in 1972. He didn’t finish his second term as
he was forced to resign in August 1974 following the Watergate Scandal.
Before
his resignation, Nixon lost his vice president, Spiro Agnew, to an embarrassing
resignation over a corruption scandal. Nixon had to appoint the House Minority
Leader, Republican Gerald Ford, to be his new Vice President.
When
Nixon resigned Ford found himself the president without running for office.
Ford concluded the Vietnam War in 1975, which was a great relief to Americans,
but he made the mistake of pardoning Nixon while Americans wanted him to go to
jail. That decision would later cost him election in 1976.
Another
Democrat, Jimmy Carter, won election, entered office in January 1977 and like
Kennedy, he was a good friend of Africa especially when he sent an African
American, Andrew Young, his ambassador to the United Nations, to visit African
countries with the question: “What do you want America to do for you?”
Nyerere
visited the White House for the second time in August 1977 during the Carter
administration, but disappointed it after Carter sent the famous boxer,
Mohammed Ali, to plead with African countries to boycott the Moscow Olympics in
1980. Nyerere rejected the idea and Tanzanians won two medals. Other nations like
Kenya boycotted the games.
After
one term, Carter lost badly to Ronald Reagan, a Republican in the 1980 election
because of what Americans perceived as weakness in foreign and defence
policies, and a bad economy at home. Reagan would serve two terms leaving the
office to his Vice President, George H. W. Bush who lost to Clinton after
serving one term.
President
Clinton became one of the most popular presidents America has ever had despite
a publicized scandal. But unfortunately, his Vice President, Al Gore, lost a
disputed election to George W. Bush in 2000 after a protracted legal battle.
President
Bush served two terms from January 2001 to January 2009 and left office one of
the most unpopular US presidents around the world in recent history. Then Obama
won against Republican John McCain and became the first black man to occupy the
White House.
Obama’s Tuesday re-election is not an ordinary
victory in the history of American presidency. He is only the second Democrat,
after Clinton, to be re-elected since the Second World War. Compared to
Republicans, Democrats are loved around the world for being peace lovers and
respectful of other nations, and that is what makes world citizens happy about
Obama’s re-election.

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