President Bush Ranks Lowest IQ in 50 Years of US
Presidents. In a report published Monday, the
Lovenstein Institute of Scranton, Pennsylvania,
detailed its findings of a four-month study of the
intelligence quotient of President George W. Bush.
Since 1973, the Lovenstein Institute has published
its research to the educational community on each new
president, which includes the famous "IQ" report among
others. There have been twelve presidents over the
past 50 years, from F.D. Roosevelt to G.W. Bush, who
were rated based on scholarly achievements, writings
that they produced without aid of staff, their ability
to speak with clarity, and several other psychological
factors, which were then scored using the
Swanson/Crain system of intelligence ranking.
The study determined the following IQs of each
president as accurate to within five per! centage
points: In order by presidential term:
147 .. Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
132 .. Harry Truman (D)
122 .. Dwight D. Eisenhower (R)
174 .. John F. Kennedy (D)
126 .. Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
155.. Richard M. Nixon (R)
121 .. Gerald Ford (R)
175 .. James E. Carter (D)
105 .. Ronald Reagan (R)
098 .. George Bush (R)
182 .. William J. Clinton (D)
091 ... George W. Bush (R)
In IQ order:
182 .. William J. Clinton (D)
175 .. James E. Carter (D)
174 .. John F. Kennedy (D)
155 .. Richard M. Nixon (R)
147 .. Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
132 .. Harry Truman (D)
126 .. Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
122 ... Dwight D. Eisenhower (R)
121 .. Gerald Ford (R)
105 .. Ronald Reagan (R)
098 ..George Bush (R)
091 .. George W. Bush (R)
The six Republican presidents of the past 50 years
had an average IQ of 115.5, with President Nixon
having the highest at 155. President G.W. Bush rated
the lowest of all the Republicans with an IQ of 91.
The six Democrat presidents had IQs with an average
of 156, with President Clinton having the highest IQ,
at 182. President Lyndon B. Johnson was rated the
lowest of all the Democrats with an IQ of 126. No
president other than Carter (D) has released his
actual IQ, 176. Among comments made concerning the
specific testing of President GW Bush, his low ratings
are due to his apparently difficult command of the
English language in public statements, his limited use
of vocabulary (6,500 words for Bush versus an average
of 11,000 words for other presidents), his lack of
scholarly achievements other than a basic MBA, and an
absence of any body of work which could be studied on
an intellectual basis. The complete report documents
the methods and procedures used to arrive at these
ratings, including depth of sentence structure and
voice stress confidence analysis.
"All the Presidents prior to George W. Bush had a
least one book under their belt, and most had written
several white papers during their education or early
careers. Not so with President Bush," Dr. Lovenstein
said. "He has no published works or writings, which
made it more difficult to arrive at an assessment. We
relied more heavily on transcripts of his unscripted
public speaking." The Lovenstein Institute of Scranton
Pennsylvania think tank includes high caliber
historians, psychiatrists, sociologists, scientists
in human behavior, and psychologists. Among their
ranks are Dr. Werner R. Lovenstein, world-renowned
sociologist, and Professor Patricia F. Dilliams, a
world-respected psychiatrist.