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The '''President of the [[United States of America]]''' was the political leader of that [[North America]]n nation, elected — according to [[American]] [[Peri Brown]] — by ordinary citizens once every four years. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Eye of the Scorpion (audio story)|The Eye of the Scorpion]]'') | |||
The president's traditional residence was the [[White House]] in [[Washington, DC]]. Arguably the most famous room in the White House was the [[Oval Office]], the president's symbolic seat of power. By at least [[1969]], the president was regarded as one of the most powerful people on [[Earth]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Day of the Moon (TV story)|Day of the Moon]]'') | |||
Indeed, it was plausible to infer the long-lasting impact of the office from the fact that the White House was the official residence for the [[President of Earth]] from the [[26th century]] ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Scorpius (audio story)|Scorpius]]'') until at least [[4041]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Return of the Klytode (comic story)|Return of the Klytode]]'') long after the United States had become part of a world government. | |||
In [[2011]], Dr [[Samantha Madigan]] told [[Clyde Langer]] that the famous [[Native American]] curse, the [[Curse of Tippecanoe]], was supposedly placed on the US Presidents. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Curse of Clyde Langer (TV story)|The Curse of Clyde Langer]]'') | |||
The front page story of an issue of the ''[[Daily Spotter]]'' claimed that the President of the United States had taken to bathing in [[cranberry sauce]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark (novel)|Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark]]'') | |||
}} | |||
The '''President of the [[United States of America]]''' was the political leader of that [[North America]]n nation, elected — according to [[American]] [[Peri Brown]] — by ordinary citizens once every four years. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Eye of the Scorpion (audio story)|The Eye of the Scorpion]]'') | == History == | ||
=== 18th century === | |||
[[File:Madame Tussauds.jpg|thumb|Wax replicas of many past U.S. Presidents, including [[George Washington]], [[John F. Kennedy]], [[Richard Nixon]], [[Lyndon Baines Johnson]], [[Abraham Lincoln]] and [[Herbert Hoover]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'')]] | |||
[[George Washington]] served as President of the [[United States of America]] after being a general in the [[American War of Independence]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Revolutionaries (short story)|The Revolutionaries]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'') | |||
[[John Adams]] was one of America's [[Founding Fathers]] who served as president. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Impossible Astronaut (TV story)|The Impossible Astronaut]]'') | |||
=== 19th century === | |||
Also regarded as a Founding Father, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Impossible Astronaut (TV story)|The Impossible Astronaut]]'') [[Thomas Jefferson]] was president in [[1804]] when he sent a search party to find [[Mammoth|woolly mammoths]] living in the American midwest. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Adventuress of Henrietta Street (novel)|The Adventuress of Henrietta Street]]'') | |||
During Jefferson's [[possession]] by the [[Loa of the Nine Angles]] in late [[1803]], his [[Vice President of the United States|Vice President]], [[Aaron Burr]], served as president for five months. The [[Loa]] was ultimately driven out of Jefferson by the sacrifice of the [[Great Houses]]' [[J (The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A)|Agent J]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A (short story)|The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A]]'') | |||
[[Andrew Jackson]] served as president prior to the [[1840]] election, when [[Martin Van Buren]] was in office. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[System Shock (novel)|System Shock]]'') In a weak diversification event during the [[War in Heaven]], the second term attributed to Van Buren was actually held by [[Jebadiah Whipple|Jebadiah Whipple MD]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A (short story)|The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A]]'') | |||
[[William Henry Harrison]] was elected president in the [[1840]]s. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Haunted Wagon Train (novel)|marker=75}}) However, he became the first to die in office when, not long after his [[inauguration]], he contracted viral [[pneumonia]]. Harrison was succeeded by [[John Tyler (president)|John Tyler]], his [[Vice President of the United States|Vice President]], who was nicknamed "His Accidency" because of the circumstances of his presidency. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Haunted Wagon Train (novel)|marker=37}}) | |||
[[James Buchanan]] was president in [[1860]] and was perceived as being friendlier to the Southern United States than [[Abraham Lincoln]]. Lincoln was elected that year and would serve during the [[American Civil War]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Blood and Hope (novel)|Blood and Hope]]'') [[Ulysses S. Grant]] was a [[Union Army]] general during the Civil War. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Blood and Hope (novel)|Blood and Hope]]'') In [[1863]], the [[Third Doctor]] provided Abraham Lincoln with a hand drawn map of the Confederate lines. Lincoln gave the map to General Grant and helped the Union Army win the [[Battle of Gettysburg]]. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Backtime (comic story)|Backtime]]'') President Lincoln was assassinated on [[14 April]] [[1865]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Assassin in the Limelight (audio story)|Assassin in the Limelight]]'') | |||
During the Civil War, [[Jefferson Davis]] served as the first and only President of the [[Confederate States of America]] that seceded from the United States of America. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Blood and Hope (novel)|Blood and Hope]]'') | |||
By [[1876]], [[Ulysses S. Grant]] was president. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Fugitive of the Daleks (audio story)}}) | |||
[[Chester A. Arthur]] was the twenty-first president of the United State and served in the [[19th century]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Sommerton Fetch (short story)|The Sommerton Fetch]]'') | |||
[[Grover Cleveland]] was president in the [[1880s]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Peacemaker (novel)|Peacemaker]]'') | |||
At one point, the [[First Doctor]] watched the assassination of President [[William McKinley]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Byzantium! (novel)|Byzantium!]]'') | |||
=== 20th century === | |||
[[Theodore Roosevelt]] was a President of the United States. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Turing Test (novel)|The Turing Test]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'') | |||
President [[Woodrow Wilson]] authorised the invasion of [[Haiti]] in [[1915]] to protect American citizens on the island, secure its natural resources, and to prevent the free black people of Haiti giving African Americans any "funny ideas". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[White Darkness (novel)|White Darkness]]'') | |||
== | [[Calvin Coolidge]] was president in the [[1920s]] and did not feel able to run for another term.<ref>The synopsis places this novel in 1929 but that is not stated in the text and would deviate from the real world regarding Coolidge.</ref> ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Blood Harvest (novel)|Blood Harvest]]'') | ||
There were a few people who were presidents in [[alternate timeline]]s, such as [[Benjamin Franklin]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Seasons of Fear]]'', ''[[Neverland]]'') | |||
The [[Tenth Doctor]] noted that [[Herbert Hoover]] was the thirty-first President of the United States. His term started in [[1929]] and oversaw the beginning of the [[stock market]] crash that led to the [[Great Depression]]. By [[1930]], homeless people moved into [[Hooverville]]s which were named after the president. ([[TV]]: ''[[Daleks in Manhattan (TV story)|Daleks in Manhattan]]'') | |||
In [[1940]], President [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] was keeping the United States out of [[World War II]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Illegal Alien (novel)|Illegal Alien]]'') He ultimately oversaw the United States entering the war until his death in [[1945]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Endgame (novel)|Endgame]]'') Roosevelt's Vice President [[Harry S. Truman]] succeeded him that year and oversaw the end of the war. Truman won the [[1948]] election against [[Thomas Dewey]] and served until at least [[1951]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Endgame (novel)|Endgame]]'') | |||
[[Dwight D. Eisenhower]] was president from at least [[1957]] to at least [[1958]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[First Frontier (novel)|First Frontier]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[Dreamland (TV story)|Dreamland]]'', [[PROSE]]: ''[[Loving the Alien (novel)|Loving the Alien]]'') | |||
[[John F. Kennedy]] was elected president in [[1960]], ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Who Killed Kennedy (novel)|Who Killed Kennedy]]'') the first [[Catholic]] to assume the position. He was [[inauguration|inaugurated]] on [[20 January]] [[1961]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Time Traveller's Diary (novel)|Time Traveller's Diary]]'') He oversaw the [[Cuban Missile Crisis]] in [[1962]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Heart of TARDIS (novel)|Heart of TARDIS]]'') By one account, he was the 37th President and died of a [[heart attack]] on [[19 January]] [[1976]], at the end of his second term. However, due to Kennedy's infection with [[life-spore]]s, [[A (The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A)|Agent A]] travelled back in time to [[assassination|assassinate]] him ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A (short story)|The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A]]'') in [[Dallas]], [[Texas]] on [[22 November]] [[1963]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]'', et al.) By other accounts, Kennedy was assassinated by either the [[Time Lord]] [[Berenyi]] manipulating [[Lee Harvey Oswald]] ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Untitled (DWM 171 short story)|Untitled]]'') or by [[James Stevens]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Who Killed Kennedy (novel)|Who Killed Kennedy]]'') The [[Ninth Doctor]] was present at the assassination. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]'') | |||
[[File:PresidentialSeal.jpg|thumb|left|The Presidential Seal. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Impossible Astronaut (TV story)|The Impossible Astronaut]]'')]] | |||
[[Lyndon B. Johnson]] became president following Kennedy's assassination. He set up the Warren Commission which concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in the assassination. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Who Killed Kennedy (novel)|Who Killed Kennedy]]'') In [[1965]], a spokesman for the [[Ku Klux Klan]] believed President Johnson would "besmirch the Klan’s name". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Salvation (novel)|Salvation]]'') On [[4 January]] [[1969]], the ''[[Washington Post]]'' reported that the symbol of the [[Revolution Man]] was carved into the blacktop at a US Air Force base in [[Tennessee]]. President Johnson called [[Soviet Premier]] [[Leonid Brezhnev]] who insisted they had no weapon that could have carried out this attack. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Revolution Man (novel)|Revolution Man]]'') | |||
[[Richard Nixon]]'s presidency began in [[1969]]; he publicly oversaw the first moon landing and privately oversaw the end of [[Silent]]s occupying the Earth. When he asked about his legacy, the [[Eleventh Doctor]] stated: "They're never going to forget you". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Impossible Astronaut (TV story)|The Impossible Astronaut]]''/''[[Day of the Moon (TV story)|Day of the Moon]]'') | |||
[[File:WhoForPresident.jpg|thumb|The [[Second Doctor]] was once encouraged to run for president. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Martha the Mechanical Housemaid (comic story)|Martha the Mechanical Housemaid]]'')]] | |||
Following the successful deterrence of a [[Quark]] invasion in [[1971]], the [[Second Doctor]] was advanced as a possible candidate for president in the upcoming election, even though he was not born an American citizen and would have been disqualified from the presidency. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Martha the Mechanical Housemaid (comic story)|Martha the Mechanical Housemaid]]'') | |||
In the [[1970s]], President Nixon was involved in the [[Watergate]] scandal. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dancing the Code (novel)|Dancing the Code]]'') In [[1974]], he authorised a nuclear strike on Great Britain to prevent the [[Remoraxian]]s from flooding the Earth. This order was called off when the Remoraxians fled. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[In With the Tide (comic story)|In With the Tide]]'') | |||
At the beginning of the [[Third Doctor]]'s exile on Earth, [[Madame Tussauds]]' wax museum depicted Presidents [[George Washington]], [[Abraham Lincoln]], [[Theodore Roosevelt]], [[Herbert Hoover]], [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]], [[John F. Kennedy]], [[Lyndon B. Johnson]], and [[Richard Nixon]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'') | |||
[[Gerald Ford]] was president in [[1974]], following Nixon's resignation. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Tricky Dicky (short story)}}). In [[1975]], he refused to [[bailout]] [[New York City]], prompting the ''[[Daily News (New York)|Daily News]]'' to run the headline 'FORD TO CITY: DROP DEAD'. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Presence (short story)}}) When President Ford was up for reelection, an [[Ronald Reagan|old actor]] almost received the [[Republican]] nomination instead of him. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Assassin's Story (short story)|The Assassin's Story]]'') | |||
Prior to becoming president, [[Jimmy Carter]] was a [[peanut]] farmer. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Assassin's Story (short story)|The Assassin's Story]]'') He'd pledged to reveal what was known about aliens, only to change his mind when he read the [[Axos]] file and visited Hanger 13. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Prelude No Future (short story)|Prelude No Future]]'') | |||
When the [[Eighth Doctor]] was recalling presidents from the 1970s onward, he listed Jimmy Carter, [[Ronald Reagan]], [[George H. W. Bush]], [[Bill Clinton]], [[Tom Dering]], [[Bruce Springsteen]], and [[Chuck Norris]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') | |||
An attempted assassination of President [[Ronald Reagan]] took place on [[30 March]] [[1981]] outside the [[Hilton Hotel]] in [[Washington DC]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Assassin's Story (short story)|The Assassin's Story]]'') [[Bernice Summerfield]] noted that even this would not make him budge. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Left-Handed Hummingbird (novel)|The Left-Handed Hummingbird]]'') | |||
President [[George H. W. Bush]] served between Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') | |||
According to one account, President [[Carrol]] was in office in [[1994]]. He promoted [[Joseph Rennigan]] to Commander in the [[White House]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Rennigan's Record (short story)|Rennigan's Record]]'') | |||
President [[Bill Clinton]] ran for reelection in [[1996]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Eternity Weeps (novel)|Eternity Weeps]]'') According to one account, President Clinton won reelection and was president in [[1997]] ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Placebo Effect (novel)|Placebo Effect]]'') and in [[June]] [[1999]], he awarded [[Rosa Parks]] the [[Congressional Medal]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Rosa (TV story)|Rosa]]'') | |||
According to conflicting accounts, [[Tom Dering]] followed [[Bill Clinton]] as president ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') and was in office in [[1998]] and [[1999]]. He was looking towards running for a second term as president. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Option Lock (novel)|Option Lock]]'', ''[[Millennium Shock (novel)|Millennium Shock]]'') | |||
=== 21st century === | |||
President [[George W. Bush]] was in office in [[2000]], ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Cyberon (novelisation)|Cyberon]]'') yet one account held that [[Bruce Springsteen]] was in office in [[2003]]. [[Bernice Summerfield]] noted that he was a rock-star before being elected president. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Eternity Weeps (novel)|Eternity Weeps]]'') | |||
President [[Norris]] served in the early [[21st century]] ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Cat's Cradle: Warhead (novel)|Cat's Cradle: Warhead]]'') following President Springsteen. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') | |||
In [[2006]], a president planned to address the nation from the White House after a [[Slitheen craft]] hit [[Big Ben]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Aliens of London (TV story)|Aliens of London]]'') On [[Christmas Eve]] that year, the President demanded that he should take control of the situation regarding the approaching [[Sycorax]] ship. [[Prime Minister]] [[Harriet Jones]] insisted that "he [was] not [her] boss, and he [was] certainly not turning this into a war". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Christmas Invasion (TV story)|The Christmas Invasion]]'') | |||
President [[Arthur Winters|Arthur C. Winters]] was in office in the [[2000s]].{{note|According to the episode ''[[The Sound of Drums (TV story)|The Sound of Drums]]'', [[Martha Jones]]' present day during [[Series 3 (Doctor Who 2005)|series 3]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' takes place over a six-day period, with {{Simm}} being elected three days after ''Smith and Jones'', and the [[Toclafane]] [[Toclafane invasion|invading Earth]] five days after ''Smith and Jones''. However, [[Aliens of London dating controversy|sources differ on which dates these stories are set]]. According to [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Paradox Moon (short story)|The Paradox Moon]]'', the Toclafane invasion happens on [[23 June]] [[2007]], placing the events of ''Smith and Jones'' on [[18 June]]. According to [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Hysteria (audio story)|Hysteria]]'', ''Smith and Jones'' takes place in [[2008]], with a [[UNIT]] mission log in [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Recruits (audio story)|Recruits]]'' referring to the recovery of moon rocks from [[Royal Hope Hospital]] in [[March]] 2008. A newspaper clipping in [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Secret Lives of Monsters (short story)|The Secret Lives of Monsters]]'' places ''Smith and Jones'' on a [[Sunday]] [[4 June]], thus placing the Toclafane invasion on [[Friday]] [[9 June]]. In the real world, these dates do not fall on a Sunday and Friday in either 2007 or 2008.}} He was the designated representative of the [[United Nations]] for [[First Contact]] with the [[Toclafane]]. He was killed by the Toclafane on live television under orders from {{Simm}}, who had become [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister of Great Britain]] under the guise of Harold Saxon. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Sound of Drums (TV story)|The Sound of Drums]]'') When [[the Year That Never Was]] reversed one year and one day, President Winters had just been assassinated. ([[TV]]: ''[[Last of the Time Lords (TV story)|Last of the Time Lords]]'') | |||
[[File:Ex-President.jpg|thumb|right|[[Faction Paradox]] rewrote the history of the early [[21st century]], making [[Barack Obama]] president instead of [[Felix Mather]]. ([[HOMEVID]]: ''[[Ex-President (home video)|Ex-President]]'')]] | |||
Originally, former astronaut [[Felix Mather]] served as president circa the [[2010s]]. He reencountered the [[Eighth Doctor]] decades after meeting him in [[1989]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Trading Futures (novel)|Trading Futures]]'') However, after refusing to make a deal with [[Faction Paradox]], Mather found his Presidency erased from the timeline. Instead, ([[HOMEVID]]: ''[[Ex-President (home video)|Ex-President]]'') the first African American president was elected in [[2008]] ([[TV]]: ''[[Rosa (TV story)|Rosa]]'') in the form of [[Barack Obama]], who was the active President by [[2009]]. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Ghosts of the Northern Line (comic story)|Ghosts of the Northern Line]]'') On one [[Christmas Day]], he proposed a radical solution to end the global recession and to enter a new era of prosperity. During this speech, {{Simm}} utilised the [[Immortality Gate]] to transform every person on Earth into the [[Master Race]], including President Obama. This was reversed by [[Rassilon]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]'') | |||
In [[2012]], the President conveyed his personal best wishes for [[Henry van Statten]]'s [[birthday]]. Van Statten, however, wanted the president replaced, noting that he was ten points down, firing his [[Polkowski|assistant]] when he disagreed. Though he offered [[Diana Goddard]] a choice of party for the next President, Van Statten was soon usurped by Goddard following the [[Metaltron]] [[Battle of Geocomtex|incident]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Dalek (TV story)|Dalek]]'') Obama remained as President and, in [[August]] [[2016]], he condemned [[Donald Trump]] as an unsuitable candidate for president. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Buccaneer (novel)|Buccaneer]]'') | |||
According to another account, [[Sampson (Head of State)|Sampson]] was [[Democratic Party|Democratic]] president for eight years in the early [[21st century]]. He was succeeded by President [[Matt Nelson]] of the newly formed [[Radical Party]]. He was assassinated at his inauguration and was succeeded by his Vice President "[[Lolita|Lola Denison]]", the alias of a [[humanoid]] [[timeship]] named [[Lolita]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Head of State (novel)|Head of State]]'') | |||
[[Donald Trump]] was a presidential candidate in [[2016]] ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Buccaneer (novel)|Buccaneer]]'') and British youth considered him to be unstoppable. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[What She Does Next Will Astound You (novel)|What She Does Next Will Astound You]]'') In [[2017]], [[Bill Potts]] remarked that she did not know the [[President (The Pyramid at the End of the World)|president]] and she would not have voted for him because he was "orange". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)|The Pyramid at the End of the World]]'') The [[Twelfth Doctor]] regarded Donald Trump as "inevitable". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Doctor Falls (TV story)|The Doctor Falls]]'') In [[2018]], businessman [[Jack Robertson]] claimed he had hated Trump for decades and planned to run for president against him in the [[2020]] election. ([[TV]]: ''[[Arachnids in the UK (TV story)|Arachnids in the UK]]'') In 2020, Trump was kidnapped by [[Sorb]] and [[Sarg (The Edge of Glory)|Sarg]] and stored on their ship. [[Lucy Wilson]] and [[Hobo Kostinen]] later freed him along with the rest of the human race. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Edge of Glory (short story)|Edge of Glory]]'') | |||
A toxic waste scandal had forced Robertson to abandon his political dreams but after he took credit for the thwarting the [[2021 Dalek civil war|Dalek invasion]], rumours circulated that he might make another attempt at the Presidency. ([[TV]]: ''[[Revolution of the Daleks (TV story)|Revolution of the Daleks]]'') | |||
By another account, the President in 2017 was the 45th, [[Daniel Strunk]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Enemy of My Enemy Is My Enemy (short story)|The Enemy of My Enemy Is My Enemy]]'') | |||
In [[2049]], the President of the United States was a woman. The [[Twelfth Doctor]] remarked that [[Courtney Woods]] "rather bizarrely" became the President of the United States in her future. ([[TV]]: ''[[Kill the Moon (TV story)|Kill the Moon]]'') | |||
=== Historical records in later centuries === | |||
In the [[26th century]], a [[synthespian]] was made of President [[Hillary Clinton]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Digging up the Past (short story)|Digging up the Past]]'') | |||
After discovering that fragmentary historical records available in the year [[4000]] erroneously stated that the television presenter [[Bruce Forsyth]] was the [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom]] in [[1977]], [[Charlotte Willis]] jokingly asked the [[Fourth Doctor]] if they thought that [[Gene Kelly]] was the U.S. President. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Foe from the Future (audio story)|The Foe from the Future]]'') | |||
In [[200100|200,100]], [[Trine-E]] described [[Jack Harkness]]' appearances as having a "tweak of President [[Arnold Schwarzenegger|Schwarzenegger]]". ([[TV]]: ''[[Bad Wolf (TV story)|Bad Wolf]]'') | |||
== Other realities == | |||
There were a few people who were presidents in [[alternate timeline]]s, such as [[Benjamin Franklin]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Seasons of Fear (audio story)|Seasons of Fear]]'', ''[[Neverland (audio story)|Neverland]]'') | |||
In an [[Alternate timeline (The Death of Captain Jack)|alternate timeline]] in which [[John Hart]] [[married]] [[Queen]] [[Victoria]] in the late [[19th century]], an American president was coerced to surrender the United States to the [[British Empire]] under the threat of a fictional [[death ray]] aimed at [[New York City]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Death of Captain Jack (audio story)|The Death of Captain Jack]]'') | |||
On a [[Shadow World|Shadow Earth]] in [[2017]], created by the [[Monk (species)|Monks]], the American president was sent a translation of the [[Veritas (text)|Veritas]] document. Upon reading the document and learning that he was part of a fake Earth, [[President (Shadow World)|the President]] committed [[suicide]] in the [[Oval Office]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Extremis (TV story)|Extremis]]'') | |||
In a [[Parallel universe (The Flood)|parallel universe]], the United States had a female [[President (The Flood)|president]]. Her conversation with [[United Kingdom|British]] [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]] [[Margo Kinnear (The Flood)|Margo Kinnear]] led to the truth about that world's [[climate change]] crisis being revealed to the public. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Flood (RTDC audio story)|The Flood]]'') | |||
In [[2046]] in a [[Timeline (73 Yards)|timeline]] where the [[fairy circle]] holding [[Mad Jack]] was broken by the [[Fifteenth Doctor]] and [[Ruby Sunday]], President [[Matarazzo]] made a statement from [[Washington DC|Washington]] in which he expressed his "joy and delight" at the fact that [[Roger ap Gwilliam]] had resigned as Prime Minister. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|73 Yards (novelisation)|page=143}}) | |||
== Behind the scenes == | == Behind the scenes == | ||
=== Limiting term length === | === Limiting term length === | ||
Exact term length of individual presidents is pretty fuzzy, perhaps because it is irrelevant to most narratives where presidents appear. | Exact term length of individual presidents is pretty fuzzy, perhaps because it is irrelevant to most narratives where presidents appear. However, Peri does nail down the ''generic'' term to four years when [[Erimem]] asks her how the Americans' leaders are chosen in {{cs|The Eye of the Scorpion (audio story)}}. This was consistent as known elections years were [[1840]], [[1860]], [[1928]], [[1960]], [[1964]], [[1968]], [[1972]], [[1980]], [[1996]], [[2000]], [[2012]], and [[2020]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|System Shock (novel)}}, {{cs|Blood and Hope (novel)}}, [[GAME]]: {{cs|The Lonely Assassins (video game)}}, [[PROSE]]: {{cs|Who Killed Kennedy (novel)}}, {{cs|Tricky Dicky (short story)}}, [[COMIC]]: {{cs|Martha the Mechanical Housemaid (comic story)}}, [[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Assassin's Story (short story)}}, {{cs|Eternity Weeps (novel)}}, {{cs|Head of State (novel)}}, [[TV]]: {{cs|Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Arachnids in the UK (TV story)}}) There is an inconsistency present in the novel {{cs|Blood Harvest (novel)}}, however, which suggested a presidential election occurred in [[1929]] or [[1930]]. This was in reference to [[Calvin Coolidge]]'s announcement that he would not run for another term, which is mentioned during the events of the novel in 1929, with further dialogue stating that an election is "on the horizon" and that the Republican Party is in the process of nominating a candidate. In actuality, {{w|I do not choose to run|the announcement was made in 1927}}, ahead of the 1928 election. This also contradicts the video game {{cs|The Lonely Assassins (video game)}} and the books {{cs|The Time Traveller's Almanac (reference book)}} and {{cs|A History of Humankind (novel)}}, which mention Coolidge's successor, [[Herbert Hoover]], being elected in 1928 and his term beginning in 1929. | ||
=== The wilderness years === | |||
One major problem area for presidential terms is in the novels which appeared during the 1990s and early 2000s. Here, a variety of not-particularly-reconcilable problems ensue. Not only did some of these "prose presidents" never serve in real life, but they do pretty massively conflict with each other. Most novels seem to agree that presidential order conforms to real history through [[Bill Clinton]]'s first term, but thereafter, there are a variety of other people — and rather too many of them to all be serving four-year terms. It is completely impossible to fit all the presidents from Clinton to [[Barack Obama]] (the latter being confirmed in ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]'', the last TV story of the first [[Russell T Davies]] era) into any kind of sensible timeline. Later, in the [[Chris Chibnall]] era episode ''[[Rosa (TV story)|Rosa]]'', Clinton is established as being president in 1999 (in the real world, his second term ran from 1997 to 2001), which further limits the room for presidential terms in the novels between Clinton and Obama. | |||
=== The Winters problem === | === The Winters problem === | ||
One of the more famous presidential conundrums is that caused by [[Russell T Davies]] calling [[Arthur | One of the more famous presidential conundrums is that caused by [[Russell T Davies]] calling [[Arthur Winters]] the "President-elect" during ''[[The Sound of Drums (TV story)|The Sound of Drums]]''. | ||
While there are many differences between the real world and the [[DWU]], such a statement is particularly difficult to understand, just within the context of DWU narratives alone. It's hard to see how he could, in the spring/summer in which ''Drums'' appears to occur, be the President-elect, when ''[[Day of the Moon (TV story)|Day of the Moon]]'' | While there are many differences between the real world and the [[DWU]], such a statement is particularly difficult to understand, just within the context of DWU narratives alone. It's hard to see how he could, in the spring/summer in which ''Drums'' appears to occur, be the President-elect, when ''[[Day of the Moon (TV story)|Day of the Moon]]'' gives a very clear indication that [[Richard Nixon]]'s presidency began about six months prior to the [[Moon]] landing, which is positively dated to [[July]] [[1969]]. He also seems to have been elected after another president mentioned in ''[[The Christmas Invasion (TV story)|The Christmas Invasion]]'', but before [[Barack Obama]], who is actually seen and heard in ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]''. The timing of all this is simply impossible to figure out — not to mention the fact that [[Trinity Wells]] says in ''Drums'' that Winters arrived in the [[UK]] on [[Air Force One]] — which wouldn't be the case if he were merely the President-''Elect''. Eventually, in a commentary, {{which}} Davies admitted that he had simply been wrong to call Winters the "President-elect" — which makes that an ignorable production error. | ||
=== | === Donald Trump === | ||
{{main|Donald Trump}} | |||
In the real world, [[Donald Trump]] won the 2016 presidential election, and was inaugurated in 2017. Prior to the election, he was established as a [[DWU]] politician in the year [[2016]] in the novel ''[[What She Does Next Will Astound You (novel)|What She Does Next Will Astound You]]''. However, an [[President (Shadow World)|unnamed president]] in [[Shadow World|a simulation]] created by the [[Monk (species)|Monks]] in the 2017 episode ''[[Extremis (TV story)|Extremis]]'' was a dark haired individual who did not have much physical resemblance to Trump. According to [[Steven Moffat]], the then-showrunner of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' and the writer of ''Extremis'', ''Extremis'' was written before but filmed after the 2016 election.<ref>[http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2017-05-20/doctor-who-exclusive-steven-moffat-reveals-the-secrets-of-extremis Doctor Who exclusive: Steven Moffat reveals the secrets of Extremis]</ref> | |||
</ | |||
{{ | Trump is later stated to have become president in the DWU in [[2018]] in the episode ''[[Arachnids in the UK (TV story)|Arachnids in the UK]]'', written by Moffat's successor as showrunner, [[Chris Chibnall]]. | ||
[[ | |||
[[Category: | === Other matters === | ||
According to early plans for the [[2015 (releases)|2015]] television story {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, a female US President character would have featured in a prominent role. The President would have first appeared in a scene with her chief of staff in the Oval Office, where they discuss their lack of communication with the United Kingdom. Britain would be declared a rogue state by the UN Security Council and would be quarantined. Later, [[Kate Stewart]] would be taken to the Oval Office after escaping [[Truth or Consequences (town)|Truth or Consequences]]. There, she would be questioned by the President on what had happened in Britain. Because of the [[Operation Double|Zygon settlement]], the President would accuse Kate of "high treason against Earth" and send a peacekeeping force to liberate the UK, which she calls "Zygonistan". After the bombing of [[London]] began, the [[Twelfth Doctor]] then travels to the UN Security Council with [[Bonnie (The Zygon Invasion)|Bonnie]], and takes the delegates and US President in the TARDIS to a desert island, where he instructs them to remain until a peace had been negotiated. Two years later, the delegates would have reached a compromise, and were now living peacefully on the island. It would then be revealed that the President was [[pregnancy|pregnant]] with the Russian delegate's baby.<ref>{{Cite book|title=[[TCH 82|Doctor Who: The Complete History - 82]]|date=25 July 2018|pages=72-76|publisher=[[Hachette Partworks]], [[Panini UK]]}}</ref> | |||
By the second draft of the story, the President's role was significantly reduced, merely appearing in a single scene in the Oval Office discussing the events in Britain. Later drafts would remove her character completely.<ref>{{Cite book|title=[[TCH 82|Doctor Who: The Complete History - 82]]|date=25 July 2018|page=78|publisher=[[Hachette Partworks]], [[Panini UK]]}}</ref> Notably, had this character been included, it would have been the first fictional US President to appear in televised ''Doctor Who'' since Arthur Coleman Winters in {{cs|The Sound of Drums (TV story)}}. The real world president at the time of the story's writing, Barack Obama, had already been established as a US President in the DWU. Due to [[The Power of Three dating controversy|narrative confusion surrounding the date of the story's setting]], this fictional female President could have possibly been placed as having served in Obama's second term or the next presidential term that would be served by Donald Trump. | |||
== Footnotes == | |||
=== Notes === | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
=== Citations === | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
{{US Presidency}} | |||
[[Category:US presidents| *]] | |||
[[Category:Titles and offices from the real world]] | [[Category:Titles and offices from the real world]] | ||
[[Category:Government occupations]] |
Latest revision as of 14:02, 11 December 2024
The President of the United States of America was the political leader of that North American nation, elected — according to American Peri Brown — by ordinary citizens once every four years. (AUDIO: The Eye of the Scorpion)
The president's traditional residence was the White House in Washington, DC. Arguably the most famous room in the White House was the Oval Office, the president's symbolic seat of power. By at least 1969, the president was regarded as one of the most powerful people on Earth. (TV: Day of the Moon)
Indeed, it was plausible to infer the long-lasting impact of the office from the fact that the White House was the official residence for the President of Earth from the 26th century (AUDIO: Scorpius) until at least 4041, (COMIC: Return of the Klytode) long after the United States had become part of a world government.
In 2011, Dr Samantha Madigan told Clyde Langer that the famous Native American curse, the Curse of Tippecanoe, was supposedly placed on the US Presidents. (TV: The Curse of Clyde Langer)
The front page story of an issue of the Daily Spotter claimed that the President of the United States had taken to bathing in cranberry sauce. (PROSE: Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark)
History[[edit] | [edit source]]
18th century[[edit] | [edit source]]
George Washington served as President of the United States of America after being a general in the American War of Independence. (PROSE: The Revolutionaries, TV: Spearhead from Space)
John Adams was one of America's Founding Fathers who served as president. (TV: The Impossible Astronaut)
19th century[[edit] | [edit source]]
Also regarded as a Founding Father, (TV: The Impossible Astronaut) Thomas Jefferson was president in 1804 when he sent a search party to find woolly mammoths living in the American midwest. (PROSE: The Adventuress of Henrietta Street)
During Jefferson's possession by the Loa of the Nine Angles in late 1803, his Vice President, Aaron Burr, served as president for five months. The Loa was ultimately driven out of Jefferson by the sacrifice of the Great Houses' Agent J. (PROSE: The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A)
Andrew Jackson served as president prior to the 1840 election, when Martin Van Buren was in office. (PROSE: System Shock) In a weak diversification event during the War in Heaven, the second term attributed to Van Buren was actually held by Jebadiah Whipple MD. (PROSE: The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A)
William Henry Harrison was elected president in the 1840s. (PROSE: The Haunted Wagon Train: Marker 75 [+]Loading...{"marker":"75","1":"The Haunted Wagon Train (novel)"}) However, he became the first to die in office when, not long after his inauguration, he contracted viral pneumonia. Harrison was succeeded by John Tyler, his Vice President, who was nicknamed "His Accidency" because of the circumstances of his presidency. (PROSE: The Haunted Wagon Train: Marker 37 [+]Loading...{"marker":"37","1":"The Haunted Wagon Train (novel)"})
James Buchanan was president in 1860 and was perceived as being friendlier to the Southern United States than Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln was elected that year and would serve during the American Civil War. (PROSE: Blood and Hope) Ulysses S. Grant was a Union Army general during the Civil War. (PROSE: Blood and Hope) In 1863, the Third Doctor provided Abraham Lincoln with a hand drawn map of the Confederate lines. Lincoln gave the map to General Grant and helped the Union Army win the Battle of Gettysburg. (COMIC: Backtime) President Lincoln was assassinated on 14 April 1865. (AUDIO: Assassin in the Limelight)
During the Civil War, Jefferson Davis served as the first and only President of the Confederate States of America that seceded from the United States of America. (PROSE: Blood and Hope)
By 1876, Ulysses S. Grant was president. (AUDIO: Fugitive of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Fugitive of the Daleks (audio story)"])
Chester A. Arthur was the twenty-first president of the United State and served in the 19th century. (PROSE: The Sommerton Fetch)
Grover Cleveland was president in the 1880s. (PROSE: Peacemaker)
At one point, the First Doctor watched the assassination of President William McKinley. (PROSE: Byzantium!)
20th century[[edit] | [edit source]]
Theodore Roosevelt was a President of the United States. (PROSE: The Turing Test, TV: Spearhead from Space)
President Woodrow Wilson authorised the invasion of Haiti in 1915 to protect American citizens on the island, secure its natural resources, and to prevent the free black people of Haiti giving African Americans any "funny ideas". (PROSE: White Darkness)
Calvin Coolidge was president in the 1920s and did not feel able to run for another term.[1] (PROSE: Blood Harvest)
The Tenth Doctor noted that Herbert Hoover was the thirty-first President of the United States. His term started in 1929 and oversaw the beginning of the stock market crash that led to the Great Depression. By 1930, homeless people moved into Hoovervilles which were named after the president. (TV: Daleks in Manhattan)
In 1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt was keeping the United States out of World War II. (PROSE: Illegal Alien) He ultimately oversaw the United States entering the war until his death in 1945. (PROSE: Endgame) Roosevelt's Vice President Harry S. Truman succeeded him that year and oversaw the end of the war. Truman won the 1948 election against Thomas Dewey and served until at least 1951. (PROSE: Endgame)
Dwight D. Eisenhower was president from at least 1957 to at least 1958. (PROSE: First Frontier, TV: Dreamland, PROSE: Loving the Alien)
John F. Kennedy was elected president in 1960, (PROSE: Who Killed Kennedy) the first Catholic to assume the position. He was inaugurated on 20 January 1961. (PROSE: Time Traveller's Diary) He oversaw the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. (PROSE: Heart of TARDIS) By one account, he was the 37th President and died of a heart attack on 19 January 1976, at the end of his second term. However, due to Kennedy's infection with life-spores, Agent A travelled back in time to assassinate him (PROSE: The Annotated Autopsy of Agent A) in Dallas, Texas on 22 November 1963. (TV: Rose, et al.) By other accounts, Kennedy was assassinated by either the Time Lord Berenyi manipulating Lee Harvey Oswald (PROSE: Untitled) or by James Stevens. (PROSE: Who Killed Kennedy) The Ninth Doctor was present at the assassination. (PROSE: Rose)
Lyndon B. Johnson became president following Kennedy's assassination. He set up the Warren Commission which concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in the assassination. (PROSE: Who Killed Kennedy) In 1965, a spokesman for the Ku Klux Klan believed President Johnson would "besmirch the Klan’s name". (PROSE: Salvation) On 4 January 1969, the Washington Post reported that the symbol of the Revolution Man was carved into the blacktop at a US Air Force base in Tennessee. President Johnson called Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev who insisted they had no weapon that could have carried out this attack. (PROSE: Revolution Man)
Richard Nixon's presidency began in 1969; he publicly oversaw the first moon landing and privately oversaw the end of Silents occupying the Earth. When he asked about his legacy, the Eleventh Doctor stated: "They're never going to forget you". (TV: The Impossible Astronaut/Day of the Moon)
Following the successful deterrence of a Quark invasion in 1971, the Second Doctor was advanced as a possible candidate for president in the upcoming election, even though he was not born an American citizen and would have been disqualified from the presidency. (COMIC: Martha the Mechanical Housemaid)
In the 1970s, President Nixon was involved in the Watergate scandal. (PROSE: Dancing the Code) In 1974, he authorised a nuclear strike on Great Britain to prevent the Remoraxians from flooding the Earth. This order was called off when the Remoraxians fled. (COMIC: In With the Tide)
At the beginning of the Third Doctor's exile on Earth, Madame Tussauds' wax museum depicted Presidents George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Herbert Hoover, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Richard Nixon. (TV: Spearhead from Space)
Gerald Ford was president in 1974, following Nixon's resignation. (PROSE: Tricky Dicky [+]Loading...["Tricky Dicky (short story)"]). In 1975, he refused to bailout New York City, prompting the Daily News to run the headline 'FORD TO CITY: DROP DEAD'. (PROSE: Presence [+]Loading...["Presence (short story)"]) When President Ford was up for reelection, an old actor almost received the Republican nomination instead of him. (PROSE: The Assassin's Story)
Prior to becoming president, Jimmy Carter was a peanut farmer. (PROSE: The Assassin's Story) He'd pledged to reveal what was known about aliens, only to change his mind when he read the Axos file and visited Hanger 13. (PROSE: Prelude No Future)
When the Eighth Doctor was recalling presidents from the 1970s onward, he listed Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, Tom Dering, Bruce Springsteen, and Chuck Norris. (PROSE: Interference - Book One)
An attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan took place on 30 March 1981 outside the Hilton Hotel in Washington DC. (PROSE: The Assassin's Story) Bernice Summerfield noted that even this would not make him budge. (PROSE: The Left-Handed Hummingbird)
President George H. W. Bush served between Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton. (PROSE: Interference - Book One)
According to one account, President Carrol was in office in 1994. He promoted Joseph Rennigan to Commander in the White House. (PROSE: Rennigan's Record)
President Bill Clinton ran for reelection in 1996. (PROSE: Eternity Weeps) According to one account, President Clinton won reelection and was president in 1997 (PROSE: Placebo Effect) and in June 1999, he awarded Rosa Parks the Congressional Medal. (TV: Rosa)
According to conflicting accounts, Tom Dering followed Bill Clinton as president (PROSE: Interference - Book One) and was in office in 1998 and 1999. He was looking towards running for a second term as president. (PROSE: Option Lock, Millennium Shock)
21st century[[edit] | [edit source]]
President George W. Bush was in office in 2000, (PROSE: Cyberon) yet one account held that Bruce Springsteen was in office in 2003. Bernice Summerfield noted that he was a rock-star before being elected president. (PROSE: Eternity Weeps)
President Norris served in the early 21st century (PROSE: Cat's Cradle: Warhead) following President Springsteen. (PROSE: Interference - Book One)
In 2006, a president planned to address the nation from the White House after a Slitheen craft hit Big Ben. (TV: Aliens of London) On Christmas Eve that year, the President demanded that he should take control of the situation regarding the approaching Sycorax ship. Prime Minister Harriet Jones insisted that "he [was] not [her] boss, and he [was] certainly not turning this into a war". (TV: The Christmas Invasion)
President Arthur C. Winters was in office in the 2000s.[nb 1] He was the designated representative of the United Nations for First Contact with the Toclafane. He was killed by the Toclafane on live television under orders from the Saxon Master, who had become Prime Minister of Great Britain under the guise of Harold Saxon. (TV: The Sound of Drums) When the Year That Never Was reversed one year and one day, President Winters had just been assassinated. (TV: Last of the Time Lords)
Originally, former astronaut Felix Mather served as president circa the 2010s. He reencountered the Eighth Doctor decades after meeting him in 1989. (PROSE: Trading Futures) However, after refusing to make a deal with Faction Paradox, Mather found his Presidency erased from the timeline. Instead, (HOMEVID: Ex-President) the first African American president was elected in 2008 (TV: Rosa) in the form of Barack Obama, who was the active President by 2009. (COMIC: Ghosts of the Northern Line) On one Christmas Day, he proposed a radical solution to end the global recession and to enter a new era of prosperity. During this speech, the Saxon Master utilised the Immortality Gate to transform every person on Earth into the Master Race, including President Obama. This was reversed by Rassilon. (TV: The End of Time)
In 2012, the President conveyed his personal best wishes for Henry van Statten's birthday. Van Statten, however, wanted the president replaced, noting that he was ten points down, firing his assistant when he disagreed. Though he offered Diana Goddard a choice of party for the next President, Van Statten was soon usurped by Goddard following the Metaltron incident. (TV: Dalek) Obama remained as President and, in August 2016, he condemned Donald Trump as an unsuitable candidate for president. (PROSE: Buccaneer)
According to another account, Sampson was Democratic president for eight years in the early 21st century. He was succeeded by President Matt Nelson of the newly formed Radical Party. He was assassinated at his inauguration and was succeeded by his Vice President "Lola Denison", the alias of a humanoid timeship named Lolita. (PROSE: Head of State)
Donald Trump was a presidential candidate in 2016 (PROSE: Buccaneer) and British youth considered him to be unstoppable. (PROSE: What She Does Next Will Astound You) In 2017, Bill Potts remarked that she did not know the president and she would not have voted for him because he was "orange". (TV: The Pyramid at the End of the World) The Twelfth Doctor regarded Donald Trump as "inevitable". (TV: The Doctor Falls) In 2018, businessman Jack Robertson claimed he had hated Trump for decades and planned to run for president against him in the 2020 election. (TV: Arachnids in the UK) In 2020, Trump was kidnapped by Sorb and Sarg and stored on their ship. Lucy Wilson and Hobo Kostinen later freed him along with the rest of the human race. (PROSE: Edge of Glory)
A toxic waste scandal had forced Robertson to abandon his political dreams but after he took credit for the thwarting the Dalek invasion, rumours circulated that he might make another attempt at the Presidency. (TV: Revolution of the Daleks)
By another account, the President in 2017 was the 45th, Daniel Strunk. (PROSE: The Enemy of My Enemy Is My Enemy)
In 2049, the President of the United States was a woman. The Twelfth Doctor remarked that Courtney Woods "rather bizarrely" became the President of the United States in her future. (TV: Kill the Moon)
Historical records in later centuries[[edit] | [edit source]]
In the 26th century, a synthespian was made of President Hillary Clinton. (PROSE: Digging up the Past)
After discovering that fragmentary historical records available in the year 4000 erroneously stated that the television presenter Bruce Forsyth was the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in 1977, Charlotte Willis jokingly asked the Fourth Doctor if they thought that Gene Kelly was the U.S. President. (AUDIO: The Foe from the Future)
In 200,100, Trine-E described Jack Harkness' appearances as having a "tweak of President Schwarzenegger". (TV: Bad Wolf)
Other realities[[edit] | [edit source]]
There were a few people who were presidents in alternate timelines, such as Benjamin Franklin. (AUDIO: Seasons of Fear, Neverland)
In an alternate timeline in which John Hart married Queen Victoria in the late 19th century, an American president was coerced to surrender the United States to the British Empire under the threat of a fictional death ray aimed at New York City. (AUDIO: The Death of Captain Jack)
On a Shadow Earth in 2017, created by the Monks, the American president was sent a translation of the Veritas document. Upon reading the document and learning that he was part of a fake Earth, the President committed suicide in the Oval Office. (TV: Extremis)
In a parallel universe, the United States had a female president. Her conversation with British Prime Minister Margo Kinnear led to the truth about that world's climate change crisis being revealed to the public. (AUDIO: The Flood)
In 2046 in a timeline where the fairy circle holding Mad Jack was broken by the Fifteenth Doctor and Ruby Sunday, President Matarazzo made a statement from Washington in which he expressed his "joy and delight" at the fact that Roger ap Gwilliam had resigned as Prime Minister. (PROSE: 73 Yards [+]Loading...{"page":"143","1":"73 Yards (novelisation)"})
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Limiting term length[[edit] | [edit source]]
Exact term length of individual presidents is pretty fuzzy, perhaps because it is irrelevant to most narratives where presidents appear. However, Peri does nail down the generic term to four years when Erimem asks her how the Americans' leaders are chosen in The Eye of the Scorpion [+]Loading...["The Eye of the Scorpion (audio story)"]. This was consistent as known elections years were 1840, 1860, 1928, 1960, 1964, 1968, 1972, 1980, 1996, 2000, 2012, and 2020. (PROSE: System Shock [+]Loading...["System Shock (novel)"], Blood and Hope [+]Loading...["Blood and Hope (novel)"], GAME: The Lonely Assassins [+]Loading...["The Lonely Assassins (video game)"], PROSE: Who Killed Kennedy [+]Loading...["Who Killed Kennedy (novel)"], Tricky Dicky [+]Loading...["Tricky Dicky (short story)"], COMIC: Martha the Mechanical Housemaid [+]Loading...["Martha the Mechanical Housemaid (comic story)"], PROSE: The Assassin's Story [+]Loading...["The Assassin's Story (short story)"], Eternity Weeps [+]Loading...["Eternity Weeps (novel)"], Head of State [+]Loading...["Head of State (novel)"], TV: Dalek [+]Loading...["Dalek (TV story)"], Arachnids in the UK [+]Loading...["Arachnids in the UK (TV story)"]) There is an inconsistency present in the novel Blood Harvest [+]Loading...["Blood Harvest (novel)"], however, which suggested a presidential election occurred in 1929 or 1930. This was in reference to Calvin Coolidge's announcement that he would not run for another term, which is mentioned during the events of the novel in 1929, with further dialogue stating that an election is "on the horizon" and that the Republican Party is in the process of nominating a candidate. In actuality, the announcement was made in 1927, ahead of the 1928 election. This also contradicts the video game The Lonely Assassins [+]Loading...["The Lonely Assassins (video game)"] and the books The Time Traveller's Almanac [+]Loading...["The Time Traveller's Almanac (reference book)"] and A History of Humankind [+]Loading...["A History of Humankind (novel)"], which mention Coolidge's successor, Herbert Hoover, being elected in 1928 and his term beginning in 1929.
The wilderness years[[edit] | [edit source]]
One major problem area for presidential terms is in the novels which appeared during the 1990s and early 2000s. Here, a variety of not-particularly-reconcilable problems ensue. Not only did some of these "prose presidents" never serve in real life, but they do pretty massively conflict with each other. Most novels seem to agree that presidential order conforms to real history through Bill Clinton's first term, but thereafter, there are a variety of other people — and rather too many of them to all be serving four-year terms. It is completely impossible to fit all the presidents from Clinton to Barack Obama (the latter being confirmed in The End of Time, the last TV story of the first Russell T Davies era) into any kind of sensible timeline. Later, in the Chris Chibnall era episode Rosa, Clinton is established as being president in 1999 (in the real world, his second term ran from 1997 to 2001), which further limits the room for presidential terms in the novels between Clinton and Obama.
The Winters problem[[edit] | [edit source]]
One of the more famous presidential conundrums is that caused by Russell T Davies calling Arthur Winters the "President-elect" during The Sound of Drums.
While there are many differences between the real world and the DWU, such a statement is particularly difficult to understand, just within the context of DWU narratives alone. It's hard to see how he could, in the spring/summer in which Drums appears to occur, be the President-elect, when Day of the Moon gives a very clear indication that Richard Nixon's presidency began about six months prior to the Moon landing, which is positively dated to July 1969. He also seems to have been elected after another president mentioned in The Christmas Invasion, but before Barack Obama, who is actually seen and heard in The End of Time. The timing of all this is simply impossible to figure out — not to mention the fact that Trinity Wells says in Drums that Winters arrived in the UK on Air Force One — which wouldn't be the case if he were merely the President-Elect. Eventually, in a commentary, [which?] Davies admitted that he had simply been wrong to call Winters the "President-elect" — which makes that an ignorable production error.
Donald Trump[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Main article: Donald Trump
In the real world, Donald Trump won the 2016 presidential election, and was inaugurated in 2017. Prior to the election, he was established as a DWU politician in the year 2016 in the novel What She Does Next Will Astound You. However, an unnamed president in a simulation created by the Monks in the 2017 episode Extremis was a dark haired individual who did not have much physical resemblance to Trump. According to Steven Moffat, the then-showrunner of Doctor Who and the writer of Extremis, Extremis was written before but filmed after the 2016 election.[2]
Trump is later stated to have become president in the DWU in 2018 in the episode Arachnids in the UK, written by Moffat's successor as showrunner, Chris Chibnall.
Other matters[[edit] | [edit source]]
According to early plans for the 2015 television story The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], a female US President character would have featured in a prominent role. The President would have first appeared in a scene with her chief of staff in the Oval Office, where they discuss their lack of communication with the United Kingdom. Britain would be declared a rogue state by the UN Security Council and would be quarantined. Later, Kate Stewart would be taken to the Oval Office after escaping Truth or Consequences. There, she would be questioned by the President on what had happened in Britain. Because of the Zygon settlement, the President would accuse Kate of "high treason against Earth" and send a peacekeeping force to liberate the UK, which she calls "Zygonistan". After the bombing of London began, the Twelfth Doctor then travels to the UN Security Council with Bonnie, and takes the delegates and US President in the TARDIS to a desert island, where he instructs them to remain until a peace had been negotiated. Two years later, the delegates would have reached a compromise, and were now living peacefully on the island. It would then be revealed that the President was pregnant with the Russian delegate's baby.[3]
By the second draft of the story, the President's role was significantly reduced, merely appearing in a single scene in the Oval Office discussing the events in Britain. Later drafts would remove her character completely.[4] Notably, had this character been included, it would have been the first fictional US President to appear in televised Doctor Who since Arthur Coleman Winters in The Sound of Drums [+]Loading...["The Sound of Drums (TV story)"]. The real world president at the time of the story's writing, Barack Obama, had already been established as a US President in the DWU. Due to narrative confusion surrounding the date of the story's setting, this fictional female President could have possibly been placed as having served in Obama's second term or the next presidential term that would be served by Donald Trump.
Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- ↑ According to the episode The Sound of Drums, Martha Jones' present day during series 3 of Doctor Who takes place over a six-day period, with the Saxon Master being elected three days after Smith and Jones, and the Toclafane invading Earth five days after Smith and Jones. However, sources differ on which dates these stories are set. According to PROSE: The Paradox Moon, the Toclafane invasion happens on 23 June 2007, placing the events of Smith and Jones on 18 June. According to AUDIO: Hysteria, Smith and Jones takes place in 2008, with a UNIT mission log in AUDIO: Recruits referring to the recovery of moon rocks from Royal Hope Hospital in March 2008. A newspaper clipping in PROSE: The Secret Lives of Monsters places Smith and Jones on a Sunday 4 June, thus placing the Toclafane invasion on Friday 9 June. In the real world, these dates do not fall on a Sunday and Friday in either 2007 or 2008.
Citations[[edit] | [edit source]]
- ↑ The synopsis places this novel in 1929 but that is not stated in the text and would deviate from the real world regarding Coolidge.
- ↑ Doctor Who exclusive: Steven Moffat reveals the secrets of Extremis
- ↑ Doctor Who: The Complete History - 82 pp. 72-76. Hachette Partworks, Panini UK (25 July 2018).
- ↑ Doctor Who: The Complete History - 82 p. 78. Hachette Partworks, Panini UK (25 July 2018).
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