Cape Breton Post

Trump and the post-White House lives of his predecesso­rs

- RONALD W. PRUESSEN THECONVERS­ATION.COM Ronald W. Pruessen is a history professor at the University of Toronto.

Is former president Donald Trump feeling anything like the 19th century's Simon Bolivar in Gabriel Garcia Marquez's The General in His Labyrinth?

The ailing and failing South American “liberator” is described in the novel as a man “shaken by the overwhelmi­ng revelation that the headlong race between his misfortune­s and his dreams was at the moment reaching the finish line ... ‘Dammit,' he sighed. ‘How will I ever get out of this labyrinth?'”

Trump is certainly dealing with multiple misfortune­s, including the unique ordeal of a second impeachmen­t trial (despite his acquittal), the humiliatio­n of an election loss, hydra-headed lawsuits on the horizon and looming loan payments that may shake the Jenga towers of Trump's enterprise­s.

What's this former president to do?

HOW EARLY FORMER PRESIDENTS KEPT BUSY

How have other former presidents occupied their time?

Even though Trump's interest in history is limited (he has, after all, spoken as if Frederick Douglass is still alive and suggested that the Continenta­l Army captured airports during the American Revolution), the lessons and patterns of the past might nonetheles­s help him think productive­ly about the next chapter of his life.

Founding Father presidents — George Washington, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson — all retired productive­ly to private life after leaving office. Plantation and farm management filled many days; Trump's business interests might become a 21st century counterpar­t.

Adams and Jefferson also savoured the longer hours available for ongoing studies in philosophy, religion and history. Jefferson enjoyed applying his interest in science to crops at his Monticello plantation in Virginia — and founded the University of Virginia.

Adams and Jefferson also indulged in vast correspond­ence, including thoughtful exchanges with each other. The second president's letters could be eloquently cranky about his fellow men (“human reason and human conscience ... are not a match for human passion, human imaginatio­ns, and human enthusiasm”); he was also appealingl­y self-deprecatin­g (“I drop into myself, and acknowledg­e myself to be a fool.”).

The second president's son, John Quincy Adams, charted a different course after losing the bitterly fought 1828 election to Andrew Jackson.

Rejecting retirement to Massachuse­tts, he served nine terms in the House of Representa­tives. He even died there — in the speaker's room, after collapsing during a debate — ending a post-White House career in which he became one of the most prominent antislaver­y voices in the country.

Ulysses S. Grant also travelled his own road, literally.

He and his wife took two years to tour the globe, with the hero of the Civil War feted everywhere. There was tea at Windsor Castle (where Queen Victoria found Julia Grant “civil and compliment­ary in her funny American way”) and hours of talk with Otto von Bismarck after Grant simply knocked at his front door.

When crowds welcomed him home, the former president made a third run for the White House — but was outmaneuve­red at the 1880 Republican convention by James A. Garfield. Grant's last years were then spent battling financial difficulti­es and cancer, with Samuel Clemens — more commonly known as Mark Twain — coaxing him into writing the money-making volumes that remain a masterpiec­e among presidenti­al memoirs.

MODERN FORMER PRESIDENTS

The 20th century offers more models. Theodore Roosevelt's post-presidenti­al career stands out for drama. After William Howard Taft was inaugurate­d, Roosevelt led a big game hunting expedition to Africa for the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n and New York's Museum of Natural History. His safari party tallied 11,400 kills, including six white rhinos.

Like Grant before him, Roosevelt kept travelling, spending months in Europe meeting monarchs and government leaders. And like Grant, welcoming crowds at home rekindled political appetites. As with Grant, again, that did not go well.

Styling himself a progressiv­e “bull moose,” Roosevelt forged a third party when the 1912 Republican convention renominate­d Taft. A threeway electoral split then gave Woodrow Wilson the White House with 42 per cent of the popular vote.

Taft moved from the 1912 melee to a John Quincy Adams-like future. After taking up a Yale law professors­hip, he was appointed chief justice of the Supreme Court in 1921.

MEMOIRS, LIBRARIES

By the mid-20th century, postWhite House life had some common themes. Beginning with Harry Truman, each president — John F. Kennedy tragically excepted — opted to produce best-selling memoirs and to help build presidenti­al libraries, repressing impulses to resuscitat­e their political careers.

Some prioritize­d relaxation while writing. Dwight Eisenhower, for example, spent time golfing, fishing and playing bridge (which had already been a regular features of his time in the White House).

Some had limited options because of declining health (Lyndon Johnson's heart problems, Ronald Reagan's Alzheimer's). One — Richard Nixon — turned his traditiona­l hard work habits toward reputation rehabilita­tion, using expansive writing to gain elder statesman status.

Several have channelled energy and stature into creating new mechanisms for public service — for example, Jimmy Carter's Conflict Resolution Program and work for Habitat for Humanity and the Clinton Foundation founded by Bill Clinton.

In the end, of course, Trump will devise his own unique post-presidency career — likely as unconventi­onal and perhaps as troubling as his White House years. There is grumbling and fuming in his Mar-a-Lago labyrinth right now, but Trump is certainly seeking an escape that Bolivar could not find.

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