Yesterday Trump set up a Hallway at the White House with plaques that say his opinion on each President. I tried to figure out what each plaque says, mostly using photos on Getty Images. Most articles only showed the later half of Presidents. I think the White House staff was trying to prevent Press from seeing the earlier Presidents.
47 Donald Trump 2
On January 20, 2025 Donald J. Trump became the first President in
132 years to be sworn into office for a second non-consecutive term,
following his Historic Victory in an Electoral College landslide,
312 to 226. Overcoming unprecedented Weaponization of
Law Enforcement against him, as well as two assassination attempts,
he won all battleground States by millions of votes, was the first
Republican in decades to win the Popular Vote, BIG, and won
86% of the Counties in America, 2,700 to 525. All 50 States shifted
toward the Republican Party for the first time ever. At his
Inauguration, President Trump announced the beginning of the
"Golden Age of America," and he delivered, ending eight wars in his
first eight months, securing the Border, deporting gang members
and migrant criminals, making our Cities safe, helping our Farmers,
defeating Inflation, reducing Energy costs, and drawing Trillions of
Dollars of new Investment, a RECORD, into the United States.
President Trump signed the Largest Tax Cuts in American History,
the Largest Spending Cuts in American History, and implemented
the Largest Ever Regulation Cuts. He obliterated Iran's nuclear
enrichment capacity with Operation Midnight Hammer, convinced
NATO Countries to agree to increase contributions from 2% to 5%
of GDP, reformed the Global Trading System, and made America
Rich with Historic Tariffs, removed Critical Race Theory and
transgender insanity from public schools, and banned men from
women's sports. He began the construction of the Golden Dome
missile defense shield, renamed the Gulf of Mexico as the
Gulf of America, and has built, right here at the White House, the
magnificent Trump Presidential Ballroom after 225 year wait
-- but THE BEST IS YET TO COME!
46 Joe Biden
Sleepy Joe Biden was, by far, the worst President in American
History. Taking office as a result of the most corrupt Election ever
seen in the United States, Biden oversaw a series of unprecedented
disasters that brought our Nation to the brink of destruction. His
policies cause the highest Inflation ever recorded, leading the U.S.
Dollar to Lose more than 20% of its value in 4 years. His Green New
Scam surrendered American Energy Dominance and, by abolishing
the Southern Border, Biden let 21 million people from all over the
World pour into the United States, including from prisons, jails,
mental institutions, and insane asylums. His Afghanistan Disaster
was among the most humiliating events in American History, and
resulted in the murder of 13 brave American Servicemembers, with
many other gravely wounded. Seeing Biden's devastation weakness,
Russia invaded Ukraine, and Hamas terrorist launched the heinous
October 7 attack on Israel.
Nicknamed both "Sleepy" and "Crooked," Joe Biden was dominated
by his Radical Left handlers. They and their allies in the Fake News
Media attempted to cover up his severe mental decline, and his
unprecedented use of the Autopen. Following his humiliating debate
loss to President Trump in the Big June 2024 debate, he was forced
to withdraw from his campaign for re-election in disgrace. Biden
weaponized Law Enforcement against his political opponent, while
also persecuting many other innocent people. He left office issuing
blanket pardons to Radical Democrat criminals and thus, as well as
members of the Biden Crime Family -- But despite it all, President
Trump would get Re-Elected in a Landslide, and SAVE AMERICA!
45 Donald Trump 1
In 2016, campaigning under the slogan, "Make America Great
Again," Donald J. Trump became the first person in American
History to become President without previously holding political
office, or serving as an Officer in the Military. After beating 16
other candidates in the Republican primary, he went on to defeat
former Secretary of State, Hillary Rodham Clinton, in an Electoral
College landslide of 304 to 227, representing an unprecedented
realignment that turned the so-called "blue wall" of Pennsylvania,
Michigan, and Wisconsin into future election "battlegrounds."
During his Historic First Term in Office, President Trump signed
the Largest Tax Cuts in History, built a booming Economy,
eliminated a record number of Federal Regulations, rebuilt the
United States Military, terminated the Iran Nuclear Deal and the
Paris Climate Accords, ended the NAFTA disaster, destroy the
ISIS Caliphate, signed the historic Abraham Accords, and created
the Greatest Economy in the History of the World. He also saved
millions of lives around the World with Operation Warp Speed,
and his response to the Coronavirus pandemic.
44 Barrack Obama
Barack Hussein Obama was the first Black President, a community
organizer, one term Senator from Illinois, and one of the most
divisive political figures in American History. As President, he
passed the highly ineffective "Unaffordable" Care Act, resulting in
his party losing control of both Houses of Congress, and the Election
of the largest House Republican majority since 1946. He presided
over a stagnant Economy, approved the terrible Iran Nuclear Deal,
and signed the one-sided Paris Climate Accords, both of which were
later terminated by President Donald J. Trump.
Under Obama, the ISIS Caliphate spread across the Middle East,
Libya collapsed into chaos, and Russia invaded and took Crimea,
in Ukraine, He crippled small businesses with crushing regulation
and environmental red tape, devastated American coal miners, and
weaponized the IRS and Federal bureaucracies against his political
opponents. Obama also spied on the 2016 Presidential Campaign of
Donald J. Trump, and presided over the creation of Russia,
Russia, Russia Hoax, the worst political scandal in American History.
His handpicked successor, Hillary Rodham Clinton, would then lose
the Presidency to Donald J. Trump.
43 George W Bush
The son of former President George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush
was the Governor of Texas when he won the hotly contested 2000
Election for President. His Administration was largely defined by
the events of September 11, 2001 -- The destruction of the World
Trade Center, after which he led the war on terror. President Bush
created the Department of Homeland Security, but started wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq, both of which should not have happened
He also enacted Tax Cuts, expanded Medicare, signed the
No Child Left Behind education bill, and launched the President's
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Shortly before the end
of his Administration, a Global Financial Crisis and major Recession
took place.
42 Bill Clinton
Bill Clinton served as Attorney General and Governor of Arkansas
before winning the Presidency in what was called a major upset over
President George H.W. Bush. As President, Clinton signed crime
and welfare legislation, which was passed with the leadership of
Republicans in Congress. He approved NAFTA, which President
Donald J. Trump would later terminate as being bad for the United
States, welcomed China into the World Trade Organization, and
oversaw NATO's Military intervention in Bosnia and Kosovo.
Despite the scandals that plagued his Presidency, the tech boom of
the late 1990s resulted in excellent Economic growth, which helped
him and Republicans in Congress delivered balanced budgets for the
first time in decades. In 2016, President Clinton's wife, Hillary,
lost the Presidency to President Donald J. Trump!
41 George H.W. Bush
George H.W. Bush was a decorated World War II Naval pilot before
becoming a Congressman, United Nations Ambassador, Chairman
of the Republican Party, Envoy to China, CIA Director, and Vice
President under Ronald Reagan. Elected to the White House in
1988, President Bush managed the successful end of the Cold War,
the reunification of German, and victory in the first Gulf War.
He signed the Americans with Disabilities Act, Clean Air Act
Amendments, and appointed Justice Clarence Thomas to the United
States Supreme Court. After losing re-election campaign in a
three-way race, President Bush devoted much of the rest of his life
to charitable endeavors.
40 Ronald Reagan
Ronald Reagan won the Cold War, and transformed American
politics and the Conservative Movement. Before entering the White
House, Reagan was a Hollywood actor, President of the Screen
Actors Guild, Governor of California and, for decades, a leading
voice in American Conservatism. As President, he enacted Tax Cuts,
presided over the a thriving Economy, and rebuilt the American Military.
He survived being shot by an assassin, and confronted the Soviet
Union with striking moral clarity, labeling it an "evil empire," and
putting unprecedented pressure on the Communist menace.
Known as "The Great Communicator," he was re-elected in a
landslide in 1984, and left office with high approval, having restored
National Confidence, Spirit, and Will. He was a fan of President
Donald J. Trump long before President Trump's Historic run for the
White House. Likewise, President Trump was a fan of his!
39 Jimmy Carter
Jimmy Carter served as an Officer in the U.S. Navy's nuclear
submarine program, and as Governor of Georgie, before being
elected President in 1976. His single term was marked by high
Inflation, high unemployment, and a rising "misery index." Carter
pardoned Vietnam draft dodgers, signed the Camp David Accords,
gave away the Panama Canal for $1, and created the Department of
Energy and the Department of Education. During his Presidency,
the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, Communism advanced
around the World, and 66 Americans were taken hostage by a new
fundamentalist regime in Iran. After leaving office, Carter dedicated
much of his life to humanitarian work, including Habitat for
Humanity. Many feel that President Carter was more successful after
his presidency than during it. He did wonderful things for Humanity!
38 Gerald Ford
Gerald Ford was a former college football star, Michigan
Congressman, and Republican Leader in the U.S. House of
Representatives, when he became Richard Nixon's Vice President
following the resignation of Spiro Agnew. He then ascended to the
Presidency when President Nixon resigned. President Ford
continued his predecessor's policy of detente with the Soviet Union,
survived multiple assassination attempts, grappled with rising
Inflation, and pardoned former President Nixon. After overcoming a
primary challenge from California Governor Ronald Reagan, Ford
narrowly lost re-election to Jimmy Carter, probably because of his
brave Pardon of Richard Nixon.
37 Richard Nixon
Richard Nixon rose from poverty to serve as Congressman,
Senator, and Vice President to Dwight D. Eisenhower. In Congress,
he earned a reputation as a passionate anti-Communist, and played
a key role in the Alger Hiss case. After losing the Presidency to
John F. Kennedy in 1960, he was elected president in 1968 in one of
the greatest political comebacks in American history. As President,
Nixon ended the Vietnam War, pursued detente with the Soviet
Union, created the Environment Protection Agency, and
masterminded the "Opening to China." In 1972, vowing to defend
Law and Order, he won the largest popular vote victory in American
History. Following the Watergate Scandal, Nixon became the only
President to resign from office in 1974.
36 Lyndon Baines Johnson
Lyndon Baines Johnson is widely regarded as the most effective
Senate Majority Leader in U.S. History, and served as John F.
Kennedy's Vice President. After President Kennedy's assassination,
Johnson rapidly enacted his predecessor's stalled legislative agenda,
including passive the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Voting
Rights Act of 1965. He won Election in a landslide, and launched
the "Great Society" and "War on Poverty." Later, discontent over
the Vietnam War led to National unrest, and greatly damaged his
Presidency. he declined to seek re-election in 1968
35 John F Kennedy
John F. Kennedy was a decorated World War II Naval Officer and
war hero, who served as a Congressman, and later, as U.S. Senator
from Massachusetts. At the age of 43, he became the youngest
person, and the first Catholic, ever to be elected to the Nation's
highest office. Using stirring rhetoric, Kennedy boldly declared
America's opposition to Communism in the Cold War, promoted
civil rights, championed Tax Cuts, and challenged Americans to land
astronauts on the moon. Kennedy suffered a painful setback during
the failed Bay of Pigs Invasion, and was President when the Soviet
Union built the Berlin Wall, but skillfully navigated the threat of
nuclear war during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Kennedy's Presidency ended
tragically with his assassination in Dallas, Texas on
November 22, 1963.
34 Dwight Eisenhower
Dwight D. Eisenhower rose from humble Kansas roots to become the
Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in Europe in World War II
where he famously oversaw and orchestrated the D-Day Invasion of
Normandy. As President, Eisenhower ended the Korean War,
admitted Alaska and Hawaii as States, and oversaw Cold War
containment of the Soviet Union. He launched the interstate
highway system, balanced the budget, and enforced desegregation
of American schools at Little Rock, Arkansas. During his Farewell
Address, Eisenhower warned the American people of the growing
threat of the "military-industrial complex." After two terms in office,
he retired to his farm in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
33 Harry Truman
"Give 'em Hell, Harry" was a former farmer from Missouri, World
War I veteran, former U.S. Senator, and the sitting Vice President
when Franklin Roosevelt died in office in 1945. As President,
Truman authorized the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
ending World War II. He led postwar recovery in Europe through
the Marshall Plan and Truman Doctrine, oversaw the creation of
NATO, and deployed the U.S. Military to Korea at the start of the
Korean War. Domestically, he championed a so-called "Fair Deal,"
expanded Social security, raised minimum wage, and initiated
the desegregation of the U.S. Military.
32 Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Franklin Delano Roosevelt served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy,
Democrat Vice Presidential Nominee, and Governor of New York
before being elected to the Presidency in 1932. President Roosevelt
took office in the midst of the Great Depression, and pursued a
sweeping domestic agenda known as the New Deal. He created Social
Security, enacted banking reforms, and presided over a massive
expansion of the Federal bureaucracy. President Roosevelt also led
the United States through the Second World War, mobilizing the
Nation after the attack on Pearl Harbor, and serving as
Commander-in-Chief throughout the Allied effort to defeat Nazism
and fascism. President Roosevelt also played a central role in creating
postwar institutions such as the United Nations. He died in 1945,
just weeks before the Allied Victory in Europe. He was the only
President elected to four terms.
31 Herbert Hoover
A self-made man who rose from humble beginnings, HerbertHoover
was a successful mining engineer who became known as the
"Great Humanitarian." He led the commission for the Relief in Belgium
during World War I, served as secretary of Commerce, and directed
the relief efforts in the aftermath of the Mississippi River Flood of
1927 . Hoover became President only months before the Wall Street
Crash of 1929. He backed large public works programs, and laid the
foundation for many of President Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal
programs. After his time in office, Hoover was a close adviser to
several President, chairing commissions on Government efficiency
30 Calvin Coolidge
Calvin Coolidge was a lawyer and Governor of Massachusetts, before
being selected as Warren Harding's Vice President. He became
President up Harding's death in office. Coolidge dramatically
lowered Taxes, slashed Federal spending, maintained high Tariffs,
cut the National Debt, vetoed large spending bills, and even ran a
Federal budget surplus. He signed the Dawes Plan to assist European
recovery after World War I, approved the Kellogg-Briand Act
of 1924, which restricted Immigration, and established the U.S.
Border Patrol.
29 Warren Harding
A former newspaper publisher, Lieutenant Governor of Ohio
and U.S. Senator, Warren Harding ran for President promising
to safeguard America first, to stabilize America first, to prosper
America first, to think of America first, to exalt America first, to
live for and revere America first. To return the Nation to normalcy
and prosperity in the midst of a post-World War I economic
recession. President Harding cut Taxes, raised Tariffs, and restricted
Immigration. His Administration also radically cut Federal spending,
created the Veterans' Bureau, and hosted the Washington Naval
Conference, which helped establish U.S. parity with the British
Navy for the first time. He died suddenly in 1923.
28 Woodrow Wilson
A former President of Princeton University and Governor of
New Jersey, Woodrow Wilson was an ardent Progressive. He vastly
expanded the role of the Federal Government, re-segregated parts of
the Federal workforce, created the Federal Reserve, implemented a
progressive Income Tax, and embraced liberal internationalism.
He led the Nation during World War I, promising to "make the
world safe for Democracy." After the War, Wilson promoted the
League of Nations, but failed to receive the necessary support from
the U.S. Senate. He suffered a massive stroke, which incapacitated
him in his final months of office.
27 William Howard Taft
William Howard Taft served as a Judge, Governor-General of the
Philippines, provisional Governor of Cuba, and Secretary of War.
As President, Taft proved to be a dedicated "trust-buster," initiating
80 antitrust cases. He supported high Tariffs, modernized the State
Department, and reformed the U.S. Postal System. President Taft's
foreign policy focused on so-called "Dollar Diplomacy," which
prioritized expanded market access in the Americas and Asia.
After losing re-election, he return to the public service as Chief
Justice of the United States Supreme Court, becoming the only
person in U.S. History to lead both the Executive and Judicial
Branches of Government.
26 Theodore Roosevelt
A scholar, soldier, reformer and statesman, Theodore Roosevelt
charged into the History Books with the legendary Rough Riders at
the Battle of San Juan Hill. He Became the Governor of New York,
and was then selected to serve as Vice President. He became
President of the United States following the assassination of
William McKinley. He expanded the National Park System,
pursued a "Square Deal" for American labor and business, and took
unprecendented actions to break up monopolistic trusts. In foreign
affairs, he began construction of the Panama Canal, prevented the
European invasion of Venezuela, and sen the "Great White Fleet"
around the World in a demonstration of American Naval might.
He won the Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating an end to the
Russo-Japanese War.
25 William McKinley
One of the chief architects of the American Protectionism, William
McKinley famous declared, "I am a Tariff man standing on a
Tariff platform." A former Officer in the Union Army, McKinley
championed the protective Tariff as an Ohio Congressman,
authoring the McKinley Tariff of 1890, which applied the highest
protective Tariff in American History. McKinley then served as
Governor of Ohio, before being elected President, running under
the slogan, "Patriotism, Protection, and Prosperity." As President,
McKinley raised Tariff, annexed Hawaii, and won the
Spanish-American War. The successful War with Spain gave the
U.S. control of the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Guam. In 1901,
McKinley was tragically assassinated while still in office.
24 Grover Cleveland 2
After his 1892 victory, Grover Cleveland made History as the first
President to server two non-consecutive terms. President
Donald J. Trump, 132 years later, would follow suit. In his second
term, Cleveland supported the gold stand, prevented the
annexation of Hawaii, and authorized the use of Federal troops to
end the Pullman Strike. He rigorously enforced the Monroe
Doctrine, even threatening Great Britain with war over its Border
dispute with Venezuela in 1895. Cleveland's second term was
dominated by an economic crisis, due to the Panic of 1893, along
with labor disputes.

Tagging some users I think might be interested.
@Coolkidbozzy@hexbear.net You made a thread about the plaques.
@the_robot_from_planet_danger@hexbear.net You wrote that you wished to see what all the plaques say.
@BanMeFromPosting@hexbear.net You wanted to see the Grover Cleveland Plaque.
@SorosFootSoldier@hexbear.net You made a thread about the plaques yesterday.
Thanks!