Donald Trump is no longer the shortest-serving US President in history

He crosses the benchmark set by ninth US President William Harry Harrison who died 31 days after taking office in 1841

Maya Oppenheim
Monday 20 February 2017 16:23 GMT
Comments
Professor Ronald L Feinman, a leading historian and author, recently predicted Mr Trump, who is 70, would stay in the job 'between the 31 days of William Henry Harrison in 1841' and the '199 days of James Garfield'
Professor Ronald L Feinman, a leading historian and author, recently predicted Mr Trump, who is 70, would stay in the job 'between the 31 days of William Henry Harrison in 1841' and the '199 days of James Garfield' (Getty)

Donald Trump has reached a landmark in his presidency. The property mogul, who is the first person to be elected as US President with zero government or military experience, is not going to be the shortest-serving President in US history.

Mr Trump has served 32 days as President of the United States as of February 20. Despite the fact Mr Trump’s first month has been plagued with controversy - his national security advisor Michael Flynn resigned, the President suffered multiple defeats in federal court over his immigration ban and numerous staff leaks – he has managed to hold on to power.

This means Mr Trump has crossed the benchmark set by William Harry Harrison, the ninth US President who died 31 days after taking office in 1841. Researchers initially thought he died as a direct consequence of getting pneumonia after delivering the longest inauguration address, 8,445 words, in US history in freezing temperatures. However, recent evidence suggests he died after contracting typhoid from the White House’s water supply.

If he lasts another six months, Mr Trump will survive James Garfield who died 200 days after he took office and became America’s second-shortest-serving President. Garfield was shot by an assassin in Washington in July of 1881 and died in September of that year.

Professor Ronald L Feinman, a leading historian and author, recently predicted Mr Trump, who is 70, would stay in the job "between the 31 days of William Henry Harrison in 1841" and the "199 days of James Garfield".

Even if his time in the corridors of power is "dragged out", Professor Feinman predicted the billionaire property developer is not likely to last the 16 months and five days of 12th President Zachary Taylor, who died of a digestive ailment in 1850.

The 20th-century American history professor, who recently wrote a book about the unfortunate destinies of American leaders, said he thought the “Pence Presidency” was inevitable. This is a reference to US Vice President, Mike Pence, who would take over if Mr Trump was to leave the White House.

“The fact that Vice President Mike Pence played a major role in pushing Flynn out is a sign that Pence is already asserting himself with Trump,” he said in a blog post.

He said he thought it was likely Mr Trump will be impeached or forced to resign in a matter of weeks.

No US president has ever been successfully impeached and removed from the White House. Despite the fact there were attempts to remove Bill Clinton and Andrew Johnson, both were acquitted by the Senate in the end. Richard Nixon stepped down before he could be impeached for serious wrongdoing in the Watergate scandal.

Mr Trump’s approval rating a month into his presidency is at a historical low compared to past presidents. According to a new poll by Gallup, Mr Trump currently has a 40 per cent job approval rating. New US leaders tend to enjoy a spike in their popularity rating after taking office but Mr Trump’s rating is 21 points lower than the average of 61 per cent.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in