The Presidential Scoring Framework
Category 9 · Democratic health
9.4

Polarization contribution

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
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Republican · 1953 – 1961
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Consensus-era politics. Quiet anti-McCarthy strategy reduced polarization. 'Modern Republicanism' framing accepted New Deal consensus.

View 1 source
  • good·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

    Eisenhower won 41 of 48 states in 1956 with substantial Democratic crossover support; era of low partisan polarization.

    Eisenhower 1956 reelection landslide; broad bipartisan support patterns 1953-1961
+7/2
+5
02
John F. Kennedy
Democrat · 1961 – 1963
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Generally consensus-era politics. Catholic vote integration. Kennedy's youth and rhetoric unifying.

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

    Kennedy averaged ~70% Gallup approval through term; generally unifying figure despite civil rights tensions.

    news.gallup.com
+6/2
+4
03
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democrat · 1933 – 1945
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Built broad New Deal coalition (urban North, South, labor, Catholics, Jews, Black voters). Some class antagonism in rhetoric ('I welcome their hatred'). But broadly coalition-building.

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

    FDR's 1936 'I welcome their hatred' speech against organized money was polarizing rhetorically but his governing coalition was the broadest in 20th-century US politics.

    Madison Square Garden speech, October 31, 1936; New Deal coalition political analysis
+7/3
+4
04
Jimmy Carter
Democrat · 1977 – 1981
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Kennedy challenge in 1980 primary exposed Democratic divide. Religious Right emerged opposing Carter despite his being evangelical.

View 1 source
  • harm·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

    Religious Right (Moral Majority) emerged during Carter term opposing his policies despite Carter's own evangelical faith — initiating subsequent four decades of religion-politics realignment.

    1980 Democratic primary; Moral Majority founding 1979
+6/3
+3
05
Gerald Ford
Republican · 1974 – 1977
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Generally restorative. Pardon decision polarizing but specific. Lost narrowly 1976 — competitive election.

View 1 source
  • good·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

    Ford lost 1976 election narrowly (50.1% to 48.0%); election was competitive across both ideological spectrum and regions, suggesting modest polarization.

    1976 election results; Ford-Carter debates
+6/3
+3
06
George H.W. Bush
Republican · 1989 – 1993
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Willie Horton ads (1988) legacy. Lee Atwater Southern Strategy. Bush personally restrained but political strategy polarizing.

View 1 source
  • harm·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

    Bush 1988 campaign Willie Horton advertising became defining example of racially charged political messaging; Bush's personal civility contrasted with campaign strategy.

    1988 Willie Horton campaign ads; Lee Atwater retrospective
+5/4
+1
07
Joe Biden
Democrat · 2021 – 2025
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

'Soul of the nation' framing. 'MAGA Republicans' rhetoric (Sept 2022 Philadelphia speech). Attempted bipartisanship on infrastructure, CHIPS. Polarization continued.

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

    Biden 'Soul of the Nation' framing was substantively pro-democracy but contributed to partisan polarization; achieved some bipartisan legislation (Infrastructure, CHIPS, Respect for Marriage, ECA reform).

    whitehouse.gov
+4/5
-1
08
Harry S. Truman
Democrat · 1945 – 1953
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

McCarthyism took off under Truman (1950 onward). Loyalty program created climate. Truman publicly opposed McCarthy but era of anti-communist persecution began under his watch.

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

    Truman publicly denounced McCarthy by name from 1950 onward but his own loyalty program had legitimized the political category of 'communist sympathizer' as basis for federal action.

    trumanlibrary.gov
+4/5
-1
09
Ronald Reagan
Republican · 1981 – 1989
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Reagan Democrats realignment continued Southern Strategy. Fairness Doctrine repeal (1987) seeded talk radio era. Cultural-political polarization intensified. Welfare Queen and similar rhetoric polarizing.

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

    Reagan-era political realignment and the simultaneous Fairness Doctrine repeal seeded the late-20th-century polarized media-political environment.

    Fairness Doctrine repeal 1987; Reagan Democrats voter-realignment analysis
+4/5
-1
10
Lyndon B. Johnson
Democrat · 1963 – 1969
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Vietnam-era polarization built. Southern Democratic break with national party (Wallace 1968). Beginning of post-New-Deal-coalition collapse.

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

    Wallace's 1968 third-party candidacy won 13% of vote, signaling Southern Democratic break from national party that accelerated under Nixon's Southern Strategy.

    1968 election analysis; George Wallace third-party candidacy
+4/6
-2
11
Bill Clinton
Democrat · 1993 – 2001
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Gingrich Revolution (1994 midterm) intensified partisan polarization. Talk-radio era. Lewinsky-impeachment polarized further. 'Vast right-wing conspiracy' framing.

View 1 source
  • harm·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

    1994 Republican Revolution under Gingrich shifted Congress to highly polarized confrontation with Clinton administration; era of intensified partisan polarization.

    1994 midterm election ('Contract with America'); Newt Gingrich speakership
+3/7
-4
12
Barack Obama
Democrat · 2009 – 2017
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Tea Party rise (2009). Birtherism (Trump-led). Government shutdowns (2013). Garland blockade. Republican obstruction continuous. Polarization rose substantially.

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

    Partisan polarization measured by Pew reached then-record highs during Obama term; Tea Party movement and Trump-driven birtherism contributed to subsequent Republican Party transformation.

    pewresearch.org
+3/7
-4
13
Richard Nixon
Republican · 1969 – 1974
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Southern Strategy political realignment. 'Silent Majority' rhetoric framed political opponents as illegitimate. Agnew's 'nattering nabobs' rhetoric. Watergate-era polarization continues today.

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

    Nixon's Southern Strategy and Silent Majority framing systematically realigned US partisan politics around racial and cultural lines, with long-lasting polarization effects.

    Phillips, 'The Emerging Republican Majority' (1969); Phillips memoranda on Southern Strategy
+2/7
-5
14
George W. Bush
Republican · 2001 – 2009
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Iraq War polarization. 'With us or against us' rhetoric. Fox News dominance. Talk radio polarization. Tea Party precursor anti-bailout backlash.

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

    Partisan polarization measured by Pew increased substantially during GW Bush term; Iraq War assessments split along partisan lines unprecedented in foreign-policy polling history.

    pewresearch.org
+2/7
-5
15
Donald Trump (T2)
Republican · 2025 – —
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Continuing maximally polarizing pattern from T1. 'Enemy from within' rhetoric. Anti-judiciary rhetoric. Continued partisan polarization peaks.

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

    Trump T2 continuing peak-polarization rhetoric from T1; 'enemy from within' framing, judiciary attacks pattern.

    Trump T2 rhetoric pattern 2025
+1/9
-8
16
Donald Trump (T1)
Republican · 2017 – 2021
0 agree · 0 disagreeSign in to react

Most polarizing presidency in modern polling. Big Lie split Republicans from democracy. 'They're not sending their best' rhetoric. Caravan rhetoric. Squad attacks. Anti-Muslim, anti-Hispanic, anti-Black rhetoric. Most polarizing modern presidency.

E9.4 — era-defining 10-harm
View 1 source
  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Partisan polarization measured by Pew reached historic highs during Trump T1; partisan-feeling-thermometer gap widest measured to that point.

    pewresearch.org
+1/10
-9