Donald Trump is only the second U.S. president elected to two non-consecutive terms. The first was Grover Cleveland, who bore many similarities to the president-elect during his 19th-century political career,
Mark Franke is an adjunct scholar of the Indiana Policy Review and its book reviewer, is formerly an associate vice-chancellor at Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne. Send comments to
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George Cleveland never knew his grandfather, who died in 1908. But with Donald Trump's return, Grover Cleveland is a big deal again.
Politics is replete with comebacks – Richard Nixon, Winston Churchill and Vladimir Lenin make the cut. And so does President Donald Trump.
His second inaugural address promised a “golden age,” but the ideas in it evoked the late 1800s more than any recent presidency.
How do we count presidents? Here’s why Donald Trump is the 47th president, despite already serving as the 45th.
Only in the groupthink of The Washington Post newsroom could one regard the Biden presidency as having been anything but an execrable failure.
Like Donald Trump, former President Grover Cleveland secured the White House for a second time after losing a previous election, presidential historian Alexis Coe notes in a Sunday, MSNBC op-ed. However,
When Donald Trump is sworn in for a second time on Jan. 20, he will become just the second president to serve non-consecutive terms.
January 20, Donald Trump was sworn in as the 47th president of the US. Eight years ago, on January 20, 2017, Trump was inaugurated as America’s 45th president. His remarkable comeback, after a four-year interregnum,
Donald Trump was sworn in Monday as the 47th president of the United States in one of the most remarkable political comebacks in U.S. history.
Watch live as Donald Trump is inaugurated as the 47th US president in a ceremony at Washington DC on Monday (20 January). Trump will promise a “thrilling new era” for America in his inaugural address at the US Capitol today,