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 PRESIDENT ANDREW JOHNSTON

Politics of the United States:Takes place in a framework of a presidential republic, whereby the President of the United States is head of state, head of government, and of a two-party legislative and electoral system. The federal government shares sovereignty with the state governments, with the Supreme Court balancing the rights of each. The executive branch is headed by a president and is independent of the legislature. Legislative power is vested in the two chambers of Congress, the Senate and the House of Representatives. Judicial power is exercised by the judicial branch (or judiciary), comprised of the Supreme Court and lower federal courts. The judiciary's function is to interpret the United States Constitution as well as the federal laws and regulations. This includes resolving disputes between the executive and legislative branches. The federal government of the United States was established by the Constitution. American politics has been dominated by two major parties, the Democratic Party and the Republican Party, ever since the American Civil War, though other minor parties of lesser political significance have also always existed. Major differences between the political system of the United States and that of most other developed democracies are the power of the Senate as the upper house of the legislature, the wide scope of power of the Supreme Court, the separation of powers between the legislature and the executive government, and the dominance of the two main parties - the United States being the only developed democracy without a major third party

The United States Of America Biographies All Presidents 

1

George Washington

1789-1797

2

John Adams

1797-1801

3

Thomas Jefferson

1801-1809

4

James Madison

1809-1817

5

James Monroe

1817-1825

6

John Quincy Adams

1825-1829

7

Andrew Jackson

1829-1837

8

Martin Van Buren

1837-1841

9

William Henry Harrison

1841-1841

10

John Tyler

1841-1845

11

James Knox Polk

1845-1849

12

Zachary Taylor

1849-1850

13

Millard Fillmore

1850-1853

14

Franklin Pierce

1853-1857

15

James Buchanan

1857-1861

16

Abraham Lincoln

1861-1865

17

Andrew Johnson

1865-1869

18

Ulysses Simpson Grant

1869-1877

19

Rutherford Birchard Hayes

1877-1881

20

James Abram Garfield

1881-1881

21

Chester Alan Arthur

1881-1885

22

Grover Cleveland

1885-1889

23

Benjamin Harrison

1889-1893

24

Grover Cleveland

1893-1897

25

William McKinley

1897-1901

26

Theodore Roosevelt

1901-1909

27

William Howard Taft

1909-1913

28

Woodrow Wilson

1913-1921

29

Warren Gamaliel Harding

1921-1923

30

Calvin Coolidge

1923-1929

31

Herbert Clark Hoover

1929-1933

32

Franklin Delano Roosevelt

1933-1945

33

Harry S. Truman

1945-1953

34

Dwight David Eisenhower

1953-1961

35

John Fitzgerald Kennedy

1961-1963

36

Lyndon Baines Johnson

1963-1969

37

Richard Milhous Nixon

1969-1974

38

Gerald Rudolph Ford

1974-1977

39

James Earl Carter, Jr

1977-1981

40

Ronald Wilson Reagan

1981-1989

41

George Herbert Walker Bush

1989-1993

42

William Jefferson Clinton

1993-2001

43

George Walker Bush

2001-2007

gov17

Andrew Johnson (December 29, 1808 – July 31, 1875) was the seventeenth President of the United States (1865–1869), succeeding to the Presidency upon the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.Johnson was a U.S. Senator from Greeneville, Tennessee at the time of the secession of the southern states. He was the only Southern Senator not to quit his post upon secession, and became the most prominent War Democrat from the South. In 1862 Lincoln appointed Johnson military governor of Tennessee, where he proved energetic and effective in fighting the rebellion. Johnson was nominated for the Vice President slot in 1864 on the National Union Party ticket. He was elected along with Abraham Lincoln in November 1864, and he became president upon Lincoln's assassination on April 15, 1865. As president he took charge of Presidential Reconstruction — the first phase of Reconstruction — which lasted until the Radical Republicans gained control of Congress in the 1866 elections. His conciliatory policies towards the South, his hurry to reincorporate the former Confederates back into the union, and his vetoes of civil rights bills embroiled him in a bitter dispute with the Radical Republicans. The Radicals in the House of Representatives impeached him in 1868, and he was acquitted by a single vote in the Senate, that of Edmund G. Ross. He was the first U.S. President to be impeached.Johnson was elected governor of Tennessee, serving from 1853 to 1857, and was elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate and served from October 8, 1857 to March 4, 1862. He was chairman of the Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expense (Thirty-sixth Congress). Before Tennessee voted on secession, Johnson toured the state speaking in opposition to the act, which he said was unconstitutional. Johnson was an aggressive stump speaker and often responded to hecklers, even if those hecklers were in the senate. At the time of secession of the Confederacy, Johnson was the only Senator from the seceded states to continue participation in Congress.In 1862 Lincoln appointed Johnson military governor of Tennessee, where he proved energetic and effective in fighting the rebellion. According to tradition and local lore, on Aug. 8, 1863, Johnson freed his personal slaves. He vigorously suppressed the Confederates and later spoke out for black suffrage, arguing, "The better class of them will go to work and sustain themselves, and that class ought to be allowed to vote, on the ground that a loyal negro is more worthy than a disloyal white man."

About United States Of America: The USA is home to several of the world's most exciting cities, some truly mind-blowing landscapes a strong sense of regionalism, a trenchant mythology, more history than the country gives itself credit for and, arguably, some of the most approachable natives in the world.The US was fashioned from an incredibly disparate population who, with little in common apart from a desire to choose their own paths to wealth or heaven, rallied around the ennobling ideals of the Declaration of Independence to forge the richest, most inventive and most powerful country on earth. Travel Guide