From Deseret News archives:

Today's v.p. hopeful tomorrow's trivia question

Published: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 7:10 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
WASHINGTON — Quick, who was James Monroe's vice president?

Daniel D. Tompkins, of course. (I know that because of the movie "Miracle on 42nd Street," where the Santa Claus-like Kris Kringle says psychiatrists will ask him to prove his sanity by naming the first president — and he adds as extra proof that he even knows Monroe's veep was Thompkins).

The truth is, Americans forget about their vice presidents quickly — even though those often colorful characters were a heartbeat away from the presidency. Americans forget even more quickly about the vice presidential candidates who lost.

So Dick Cheney and John Edwards, while now hot topics in the press, are likely headed toward becoming mere trivia question answers in the future — unless they become president themselves someday.

For those who doubt that, try this quiz:

1. Name the vice presidents in order who served in the past half century, since 1956.

Answer: Richard Nixon, Lyndon B. Johnson, Hubert H. Humphrey, Spiro Agnew, Gerald Ford, Nelson Rockefeller, Walter Mondale, George Bush, Dan Quayle, Al Gore and Cheney. (If you answered correctly, you are likely a political or news junkie.)

Story continues below
2. Name the major parties' losing vice presidential nominees in the same period.

Answer: Estes Kefauver, Henry Cabot Lodge, William E. Miller, Edmund Muskie, Thomas Eagleton (who withdrew from the 1972 Democratic nomination after disclosures he had electric shock treatment for depression), Sargent Shriver (who replaced Eagleton), Nelson Rockefeller, Walter Mondale, Geraldine Ferraro, Lloyd Bentsen, Dan Quayle, Jack Kemp and Joseph Lieberman. (If you answered that correctly, you probably have a Ph.D. in political science.)

3. What incumbent vice president shot and killed a former treasury secretary?

Answer: Aaron Burr. That should have been easy because of stories this week about the 200th anniversary of their July 11, 1804, duel. More trivia: Burr actually tied with Thomas Jefferson in the electoral college presidential vote in 1800 (before separate ballots were cast for president and vice president beginning in 1804), and the House of Representatives elected Jefferson and made second-place Burr his veep.

4. Which vice president was so unpopular that his Democratic Party refused to renominate him to run again with incumbent President Martin Van Buren in 1840 — and even chose not to have any vice presidential candidate at all that year (figuring even nobody was better than him)?

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

The last thing the conference needs is to have TCU lose a game. Utah should...

all this talk of gay's right to marry is not based in any legal precedent or...

AWWWW what a cute horse Korky!!

go get em san juan, as for last saturday yeah we lost, alot of the guys came...

Gay advocates trek to LDS office

The church doesn't give the green light to to commit other sexual sins,...

Matheson may face Dem challenger

I'm surprised this counts as the news instead of gossip. The article doesn't...

4A football: Dixie loses QB, wins

Go back and read what I wrote: "No one has the Sharp incident on video ... at...

USA Today poll: U. 14th, Y. 22nd

I will give credit when it is due. Virginia is ranked #66 in the nation while...

TCU showdown has big implications

Ute fans are so delusional to think that just because the beat Alabama in the...

Please, Please, Please donate!!!! This is an amazing cause and we really have...

Advertisements
Advertisement