After Mueller delivered the long-anticipated report on his investigation to the Department of Justice in March, Attorney General Barr issued a four-page summary in which he reported that Mueller had found no evidence that Trump or his associates had colluded with the Russian government. Barr also indicated that Mueller had chosen not to offer a determination on whether Trump had obstructed justice, leaving that task to Barr. According to Barr, there was insufficient evidence to establish that Trump had committed a crime. Trump pronounced that the report had completely exonerated him, but Democrats were quick to demand the release of the entire report, nearly 400 pages, in order to draw their own conclusions. Those demands intensified after The New York Times reported that some members of Mueller’s team had indicated that Barr’s summary “failed to adequately portray the findings of their inquiry” and that those findings “were more troubling for President Trump than Mr. Barr indicated.” The Department of Justice responded by defending Barr’s approach. In the meantime, several House committees, now chaired by Democrats, continued to investigate related matters, and a number of criminal cases that were outgrowths of the Mueller investigation continued to be pursued independently by public prosecutors in the New York and Virginia jurisdictions.
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Presidents of the United States
The table provides a list of the presidents of the United States.
Presidents of the United States
no.
president
birthplace
political party
term
*Died in office.
**Resigned from office.
1
George Washington
Va.
Federalist
1789–97
2
John Adams
Mass.
Federalist
1797–1801
3
Thomas Jefferson
Va.
Democratic-Republican
1801–09
4
James Madison
Va.
Democratic-Republican
1809–17
5
James Monroe
Va.
Democratic-Republican
1817–25
6
John Quincy Adams
Mass.
National Republican
1825–29
7
Andrew Jackson
S.C.
Democratic
1829–37
8
Martin Van Buren
N.Y.
Democratic
1837–41
9
William Henry Harrison
Va.
Whig
1841*
10
John Tyler
Va.
Whig
1841–45
11
James K. Polk
N.C.
Democratic
1845–49
12
Zachary Taylor
Va.
Whig
1849–50*
13
Millard Fillmore
N.Y.
Whig
1850–53
14
Franklin Pierce
N.H.
Democratic
1853–57
15
James Buchanan
Pa.
Democratic
1857–61
16
Abraham Lincoln
Ky.
Republican
1861–65*
17
Andrew Johnson
N.C.
Democratic (Union)
1865–69
18
Ulysses S. Grant
Ohio
Republican
1869–77
19
Rutherford B. Hayes
Ohio
Republican
1877–81
20
James A. Garfield
Ohio
Republican
1881*
21
Chester A. Arthur
Vt.
Republican
1881–85
22
Grover Cleveland
N.J.
Democratic
1885–89
23
Benjamin Harrison
Ohio
Republican
1889–93
24
Grover Cleveland
N.J.
Democratic
1893–97
25
William McKinley
Ohio
Republican
1897–1901*
26
Theodore Roosevelt
N.Y.
Republican
1901–09
27
William Howard Taft
Ohio
Republican
1909–13
28
Woodrow Wilson
Va.
Democratic
1913–21
29
Warren G. Harding
Ohio
Republican
1921–23*
30
Calvin Coolidge
Vt.
Republican
1923–29
31
Herbert Hoover
Iowa
Republican
1929–33
32
Franklin D. Roosevelt
N.Y.
Democratic
1933–45*
33
Harry S. Truman
Mo.
Democratic
1945–53
34
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Texas
Republican
1953–61
35
John F. Kennedy
Mass.
Democratic
1961–63*
36
Lyndon B. Johnson
Texas
Democratic
1963–69
37
Richard M. Nixon
Calif.
Republican
1969–74**
38
Gerald R. Ford
Neb.
Republican
1974–77
39
Jimmy Carter
Ga.
Democratic
1977–81
40
Ronald Reagan
Ill.
Republican
1981–89
41
George Bush
Mass.
Republican
1989–93
42
Bill Clinton
Ark.
Democratic
1993–2001
43
George W. Bush
Conn.
Republican
2001–09
44
Barack Obama
Hawaii
Democratic
2009–17
45
Donald Trump
N.Y.
Republican
2017–
Vice presidents of the United States
The table provides a list of the vice presidents of the United States.
Vice presidents of the United States
no.
vice president
birthplace
term
presidential administration served under
*Died in office.
**Resigned from office.
1
John Adams
Mass.
1789–97
George Washington
2
Thomas Jefferson
Va.
1797–1801
John Adams