The Presidential Scoring Framework
Category 10 · Long-tail consequences
10.3

Generational & demographic impact

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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GI Bill enabled the post-WWII white middle class. Social Security made retirement a universal life stage rather than a privilege. New Deal arguably defined modern American identity.

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  • good·Tier 1·Academic·Unverified

    GI Bill college funding doubled US higher-education attainment within 15 years and was the largest single contributor to post-WWII middle-class formation.

    Mettler, 'Soldiers to Citizens: The G.I. Bill and the Making of the Greatest Generation' (2005)
+10/1
+9
02
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Republican · 1953 – 1961
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Suburban America and Interstate-Highway-enabled lifestyle defined a generation. Cold War consensus framework. Baby Boom continued strongly through Eisenhower years.

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  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Suburban share of US population rose from ~23% (1950) to ~30% (1960) during the Eisenhower years, enabled by Highway Act and FHA continuation.

    census.gov
+8/3
+5
03
Harry S. Truman
Democrat · 1945 – 1953
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Postwar boom enabled the Baby Boom and white middle class formation. Cold War defined a generation's foreign-policy framework. Suburbanization enabled by Truman-era housing/highway investment.

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  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    The 1946-1964 Baby Boom occurred substantially within an economic and housing infrastructure built under Truman; postwar US suburban expansion peaked in 1950s on FHA terms set in 1940s.

    census.gov
+8/3
+5
04
John F. Kennedy
Democrat · 1961 – 1963
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Camelot-era symbolism shaped generational political memory. Assassination defined cultural moment. Catholic integration.

low confidencePartial term limits scoring confidence per v1.1 §9.4
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  • good·Tier 2·Academic·Unverified

    Kennedy assassination defined a generational political moment with lasting cultural impact disproportionate to his actual policy enactment.

    Kennedy assassination cultural impact analysis; generational political memory studies
+7/2
+5
05
Barack Obama
Democrat · 2009 – 2017
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First Black president symbolically transformative. LGBTQ rights advances generationally formative. Millennial political alignment shaped. Obamacare generation experiencing first universal-ish coverage.

low confidence
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  • good·Tier 1·Academic·Unverified

    Obama presidency had substantial generational and demographic impact via symbolic representation of racial barrier-breaking, LGBTQ rights advances, and ACA coverage expansion.

    Generational political-science scholarship on Obama era
+7/3
+4
06
Bill Clinton
Democrat · 1993 – 2001
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1990s economic boom defined Gen X economic memory. Internet age launched. Mass-incarceration generational impact on Black families. Clinton presidency politically formative for Millennials.

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  • good·Tier 2·Academic·Unverified

    Clinton era spanned the dot-com boom defining Gen X economic experience and the mass-incarceration era affecting generations of Black families disproportionately.

    Standard generational political-science analysis
+6/4
+2
07
George H.W. Bush
Republican · 1989 – 1993
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Cold War end shaped generational US identity. ADA opened public spaces and employment for disabled Americans. Gulf War as defining military moment for early Gen X.

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  • good·Tier 1·Academic·Unverified

    Bush 41 term spanned Cold War end (defining geopolitical moment), Gulf War, and ADA implementation — substantial generational and demographic impact.

    Generational political-science scholarship on Cold War end; ADA demographic impact
+6/4
+2
08
Gerald Ford
Republican · 1974 – 1977
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Modest. Boomers came of age. Vietnam ended ('Vietnam Syndrome' began). Stagflation generational economic experience.

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  • harm·Tier 2·Academic·Unverified

    Vietnam War end under Ford initiated 'Vietnam Syndrome' affecting US foreign-policy decisions for 25+ years.

    Generational political-science scholarship on Vietnam Syndrome
+4/3
+1
09
Jimmy Carter
Democrat · 1977 – 1981
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Stagflation generational economic experience. Hostage crisis defining geopolitical moment for Gen X coming of age. Reagan realignment followed.

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  • harm·Tier 2·Academic·Unverified

    Carter era stagflation and Iran Hostage Crisis defined a generational economic and foreign-policy experience that shaped subsequent political alignment.

    Generational political-science scholarship
+5/4
+1
10
Lyndon B. Johnson
Democrat · 1963 – 1969
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Civil rights legacy transformed US demographics and politics. Boomer generation defined by Vietnam draft and protest. Polarization Boomer-era inflection.

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  • good·Tier 1·Academic·Unverified

    LBJ era simultaneously created the modern multiracial democratic framework and the polarization patterns that defined Baby Boom political identity.

    Standard generational political-science scholarship
+7/7
0
11
Ronald Reagan
Republican · 1981 – 1989
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Inequality rise begins (top 1% share doubled 1980-2020). Reagan Democrats realignment shapes US politics. Greed-is-good 1980s defined a generation's cultural moment.

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  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    US income inequality, top-1% share roughly doubled from ~10% (1980) to ~20% (2020) — the Reagan-era inflection initiated this 40-year trend that has continued under both parties.

    Top 1% income share trajectory 1980-2020 (Saez/Piketty); inequality long-trend data
+4/6
-2
12
George W. Bush
Republican · 2001 – 2009
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9/11 generation defined by War on Terror. Millennials came of age during Iraq War + Great Recession — economic-political-formative experience. Mass-incarceration continued.

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  • harm·Tier 1·Academic·Unverified

    Millennial political and economic identity heavily shaped by GW Bush-era experiences: 9/11, Iraq War opposition, Great Recession entering job market; left-leaning political alignment partly attributed.

    Millennial generation political-economic analysis
+3/7
-4
13
Donald Trump (T1)
Republican · 2017 – 2021
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Realigned Republican Party around populist-nationalist framework. Polarization politically formative for Gen Z. COVID-era educational and developmental disruption.

low confidence
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  • harm·Tier 1·Academic·Unverified

    Trump T1 era fundamentally realigned Republican Party around populist-nationalist framework; COVID-era education disruption affected Gen Z developmental and educational outcomes substantially.

    Generational political-alignment analysis 2017-2024; COVID-era education disruption studies
+3/7
-4
14
Richard Nixon
Republican · 1969 – 1974
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Watergate generation distrust of government. End of New Deal consensus politics. Southern Strategy realignment shapes US partisan politics through present.

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  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Generational trust-in-government decline began under Vietnam and crystallized under Watergate; effects persistent across multiple subsequent generations.

    electionstudies.org
+3/7
-4
Not scored on this sub-criterion
  • Joe Biden2021 – 2025 · insufficient time elapsed
  • Donald Trump (T2)2025 – — · insufficient time elapsed