Citizen-in-Chief
The Second Lives of the American Presidents
Chapter One
Getting Solvent
The Financial Journey of Past Presidents
It is a national disgrace that our Presidents . . . should be cast adrift, and perhaps be compelled to keep a corner grocery for subsistence. . . . We elect a man to the Presidency, expect him to be honest, to give up a lucrative profession, perhaps, and after we [are] done with him we let him go into seclusion and perhaps poverty.
Millard Fillmore
I never had a nickel to my name until I got out of the White House, and now I'm a millionaire, the most favored person for the Washington Republicans. I get a tax cut every year, no matter what our needs are.
Bill Clinton
[Gerald Ford] has become the presidential equivalent of Joe Louis, who ended his days as a greeter for a Las Vegas hotel.
Richard Cohen, The Washington Post
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Returning by train on his own dime and moving into his mother-in-law's house, Harry Truman found his January 1953 exit from the ... read full excerpt from: Citizen-in-Chief ebook