The Presidential Scoring Framework
Category 1 · Economic outcomes
1.4

Worker conditions & wages

All 16 modern US presidents ranked by their net score on this single sub-criterion. Good and harm are scored 0–10 independently; net is good minus harm. Click a name for the full scorecard.

01
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democrat · 1933 – 1945
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Wagner Act (1935) legalized union organizing; Fair Labor Standards Act (1938) established minimum wage and 40-hour week; union density rose from ~11% (1932) to ~35% (1945).

View 1 source
  • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

    Two landmark laws structurally reset US labor relations and wage floor, with union density tripling across the FDR years.

    congress.gov
+9/1
+8
02
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Republican · 1953 – 1961
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Peak union density (~33%). Real wages grew steadily. Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (1959) added some union accountability.

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  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    US union density peaked at ~33% during Eisenhower years; real median wages grew ~25% across the term.

    bls.gov
+7/2
+5
03
Lyndon B. Johnson
Democrat · 1963 – 1969
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Strong union era continued. Minimum wage increased. Real wages rose strongly. Federal contracting affirmative action.

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  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Real median wages grew strongly during LBJ term; minimum wage rose from $1.25 to $1.60/hour.

    bls.gov
+6/2
+4
04
John F. Kennedy
Democrat · 1961 – 1963
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Steel price confrontation (April 1962) — pressured US Steel to roll back price hikes. Equal Pay Act 1963. Minimum wage increased.

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  • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

    Equal Pay Act 1963 prohibited gender-based wage discrimination, the first federal anti-discrimination law of the modern civil-rights era.

    congress.gov
+6/2
+4
05
Joe Biden
Democrat · 2021 – 2025
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Real wage growth strongest in bottom quartile in decades. NLRB strengthened. Strong union support ('most pro-union president'). Walked UAW picket line (Sept 2023) — first sitting president to do so.

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  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Biden era saw strongest bottom-quartile real-wage growth in decades; first sitting president to walk a picket line (UAW September 2023); strengthened federal labor enforcement.

    bls.gov
+7/3
+4
06
Richard Nixon
Republican · 1969 – 1974
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OSHA created (1970) — major worker-safety federal expansion. Wage-price controls had mixed labor effects. Real wages flat to declining.

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  • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

    OSHA Act created federal workplace-safety regulation, the major worker-protection federal expansion of the era; ~50% reduction in workplace fatalities over subsequent decades attributed to OSHA.

    congress.gov
+6/3
+3
07
Bill Clinton
Democrat · 1993 – 2001
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Real wages rose substantially during late-1990s tightening labor market. Minimum wage raised 1996. NAFTA labor displacement contested.

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  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Real median wages rose ~15% during Clinton term, the strongest sustained real-wage growth since 1970s; NAFTA produced manufacturing job displacement that emerged as political issue subsequently.

    bls.gov
+6/3
+3
08
Harry S. Truman
Democrat · 1945 – 1953
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Taft-Hartley Act (1947) passed over Truman's veto, rolling back Wagner Act protections. Truman opposed but lacked votes. Wage growth strong during boom.

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  • harm·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

    Truman vetoed Taft-Hartley as 'dangerous to the freedom of speech and to our democratic society'; Congress overrode by 68-25 in the Senate.

    congress.gov
+5/4
+1
09
Barack Obama
Democrat · 2009 – 2017
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Real wage growth modest until late-term acceleration. Manufacturing partial recovery via auto bailout. Union density continued declining. Overtime rule expanded (blocked by courts).

View 1 source
  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Auto industry bailout saved estimated 1-1.5 million jobs (GM, Chrysler restructuring); real median household income growth resumed late-term.

    bls.gov
+5/4
+1
10
George H.W. Bush
Republican · 1989 – 1993
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Real wages stagnant. Union density continued declining. NAFTA negotiated (signed by Clinton).

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  • harm·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

    NAFTA negotiations completed under GHW Bush; framework set for subsequent labor-market dislocation.

    history.state.gov
+4/4
0
11
Gerald Ford
Republican · 1974 – 1977
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Real wages stagnant. Unemployment-era labor weakness. ERISA (1974) enacted — major pension protection law.

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  • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

    ERISA established federal pension and benefit protection framework that became foundational for US employer-sponsored retirement system.

    congress.gov
+4/4
0
12
Donald Trump (T1)
Republican · 2017 – 2021
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Real wage growth modest pre-pandemic. Workforce participation rate flat. Overtime rule weakened. Joint employer rule weakened. Manufacturing employment essentially flat.

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  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Real median household income rose modestly pre-pandemic before pandemic-era collapse; manufacturing employment essentially flat across the term contrary to campaign rhetoric.

    bls.gov
+4/5
-1
13
Jimmy Carter
Democrat · 1977 – 1981
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Real wages fell substantially due to inflation. Deregulation (airlines, trucking) shifted labor patterns. Minimum wage increased.

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  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Real wages fell ~10% during Carter term due to inflation; deregulation reduced unionized employment in airlines and trucking sectors.

    bls.gov
+4/5
-1
14
Donald Trump (T2)
Republican · 2025 – —
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Federal workforce mass terminations. NLRB weakened. Federal contractor diversity programs eliminated. Manufacturing returns rhetoric vs. tariff disruption.

low confidence
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  • harm·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

    Approximately 100,000+ federal workers terminated or accepting deferred resignation during early Trump T2; substantial federal labor enforcement reduction.

    Federal workforce reduction reports 2025; NLRB changes
+3/5
-2
15
George W. Bush
Republican · 2001 – 2009
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Real wages flat. Union density continued declining. Manufacturing jobs lost. Late-term Great Recession devastated working-class employment.

View 1 source
  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Manufacturing employment fell by approximately 4.5 million during GW Bush term; real median household income fell ~5% from 2001 to 2009.

    bls.gov
+3/6
-3
16
Ronald Reagan
Republican · 1981 – 1989
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PATCO firing (August 1981) broke air traffic controllers' strike, fired 11,345 employees, decertified union. Set precedent for aggressive private-sector union breaking. Union density fell from 23% (1981) to 17% (1989). Real wages flat for non-supervisory workers.

View 1 source
  • harm·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

    Reagan fired 11,345 air traffic controllers and decertified their union; this action is widely cited as the inflection point for declining US union density across all sectors.

    bls.gov
+3/6
-3