5 Things You Don’t Know About Jimmy Carter

There were many reasons why Dan Aykroyd played him on Saturday Night Live as super competent and impossibly hip.
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Jimmy Carter was many things: a person of great compassion and integrity, keen intelligence, and a sweeping decency. He was also deeply suspicious of politics and, despite the popular perception that arose during the Iran hostage crisis, exceedingly tough-minded. Carter’s triumphs with the Camp David Accords and the Panama Canal Treaty, his prescience regarding the environment, and the struggles with a troubled economy and the hostage crisis that kept him from a second term are well known chapters in his presidency.

But did you know he was cool? (Well, at least for a president in the 1970s.) He wore a blue jean jacket (when he wasn’t wearing a cardigan to encourage people to turn down their thermostats). In the early days of Saturday Night Live, Dan Aykroyd portrayed him as super competent and impossibly hip. Here are a few other things that may surprise you about Jimmy Carter.

Se habla español

Carter put great stock in his ability to speak Spanish. Even though he never achieved true fluency, Carter’s use of Spanish went a long way toward earning him credibility when dealing with Latin America. He studied Spanish as a midshipman at the Naval Academy and practiced it on trips as a Christian missionary and during visits to Spain, a favorite family vacation spot. During a roughly three-month recovery from knee replacement surgery, Carter hired a professor from Georgia Southwestern University to provide refresher Spanish lessons for Rosalynn and himself.

After the passage of the Panama Canal treaties by Congress, Carter delivered a speech in Spanish in Panama, the first full address in that language by a U.S. president. Perhaps even more impressive was the live uncensored televised speech he made in Spanish in Havana in 2002 to the Cuban people. In it, Carter criticized aspects of Cuba’s socialist system but also called on Congress to end the U.S. embargo of Cuba.

President and keeper of the tennis court schedule?

Carter was often praised for his command of detailed aspects of policy but also sometimes was criticized for being overly involved in the minutiae of his administration. Case in point: the White House tennis court. When Carter was asked by journalist Bill Moyers whether it was true that Carter personally handled the scheduling for play on the court, the president said no. Later, after onetime Carter speechwriter James Fallows revealed that he had scraps of paper signed by Carter authorizing his use of the court, Carter walked back his answer, explaining that his secretary, Susan Clough, received requests for the court’s use, a qualification that massaged Carter’s earlier answer while gently masking his role. The motivation for Carter’s hands-on oversight is unclear. Was he indeed an unrepentant micromanager or was his involvement an attempt not to privilege his own use of the court over that of his staff?

Jimmy jammed

Carter loves music. All kinds of music—jazz, gospel, folk, soul, pop, and rock. Among the artists who performed at or visited the White House on Carter’s watch were Loretta Lynn, Sarah Vaughan, Linda Ronstadt, Tom T. Hall, the Staple Singers, and Cher. ln June 1978 the South Lawn was the site of a jazz festival that featured a mind-blowing lineup of jazz greats including Charles Mingus, Ornette Coleman, Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach, Herbie Hancock, Lionel Hampton, Cecil Taylor, George Benson, and Eubie Blake.

But, as chronicled in the documentary film Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President (2020), Carter is most prominently linked to rock. Back in Georgia he had developed a relationship with Southern Rock icons the Allman Brothers (especially vocalist Gregg Allman), who recorded for Macon’s Capricorn Records. They performed benefit concerts for Carter’s political campaigns, but before that Carter had knowledgeably discussed their lyrics with them. Even more impressive, Carter numbered Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson among his close friends. When asked if his father played an instrument, Carter’s son Chip did not hesitate a moment. “The stereo,” he said.

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The politician poet

If ever a Renaissance man occupied the White House, it was Jimmy Carter. In addition to being a politician, an engineer, a naval officer, a businessman, a furniture maker, a mountain climber, and a runner, he wrote many books on a wide variety of subjects. He was also a poet. Carter was first exposed to poetry by his eighth-grade English teacher in Plains, and he wrote poetry during periods of solitude while performing submarine service in the navy. During the 1980s he was guided in his serious study of the art form by Arkansas poets James Whitehead and Miller Williams. Williams, in particular, was Carter’s mentor.

Carter was a great fan of Dylan Thomas, and, like so much of Thomas’s work, Carter’s poetry often came directly from his own life. He wrote poems about his mother (“Miss Lilian Sees Leprosy for the First Time”), the Black woman who helped rear him (“Rachel”), his father (“I Wanted to Share My Father’s World”), and his wife (“Rosalynn”). He also wrote about his time aboard a nuclear submarine (“Life on a Killer Submarine”), homelessness (“It Can Fool the Sun”), and the universe and fear of the unknown (“Considering the Void”). Always a Reckoning, and Other Poems (1995) collects more than 40 of Carter’s poems.

“For the Bible tells me so”

Carter was famously a person of faith, a pious born-again Southern Baptist. His piety was even reflected in his Secret Service code name: Deacon. Many people may not know that at age 18 Carter began teaching Sunday school. Just as the hamlet of Plains, Georgia, remained his home for most of his life, so too for decades did the Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains provide the pulpit from which Carter shared his Sunday school lesson.

When Carter was out of town, attendance at Maranatha was generally limited to the roughly 30 members of the congregation. When Carter was scheduled to teach, it was a different matter. People traveled from across the country and around the globe to line up for hours (sometimes after sleeping in their cars in the church’s parking lot) in the hope of gaining entrance to the church. More than 400 people could crowd into the church’s main chapel, and another 50 or so could watch the lesson on television in overflow rooms. Illness and travel sometimes temporarily prevented Carter from offering his spiritual guidance, but, until very late in his life, he returned again and again to share his faith.

Jeff Wallenfeldt

The power of the veto held by the president of the United States has served as an important check on the legislative actions of Congress and has been utilized to varying degrees throughout history. Some presidents have chosen to use it in only a handful of instances, whereas others have completely ignored its existence. Still, some presidents have wielded their power over Congress to enormous lengths (for better or worse), thus allowing us here at EB to catalogue those who have done so the most, starting with…

Calvin Coolidge (50)

In his six-year term (1923–29), which began after the in-office death of Warren Harding, “Silent Cal” helped to restore legitimacy to the presidency in the wake of the scandal-soused administration of his predecessor. Employing his veto power a total of 50 times (30 pocket vetoes and 20 regular, 4 of which were overturned by Congress), Coolidge also proved to be tough on his Congress, as he advocated government noninterference in American business, leading to two vetoes for a bill that would have allowed the government to buy the farmers’ surplus crops, thus adding to the woes of the American farmer that helped precipitate the Great Depression. Another notable veto of his was of a bill, eventually overturned by Congress and passed in 1924, to award bonuses to World War I veterans. Although he successfully gained the trust of the American people, his strict adherence to laissez-faire economics has been believed to be a significant contributing factor to the Great Depression.

Gerald Ford (66)

Gerald Ford, being the only U.S. president to date to not be elected to either the vice-presidential or presidential office, demonstrated his executive power through the use of his vetoes, issuing 66 total (48 regular vetoes and 18 pocket), 12 of which were overturned. As a Republican, his heavy-handed use of his vetoes stymied the Democratic-controlled Congress at a time when the country suffered from a recession accompanied by a soaring unemployment rate, though his intention to reduce inflation leftover from his predecessor did in fact succeed. He fought ardently to limit government spending and to reduce the budgetary deficit. However, his full pardon of Nixon for his involvement in the Watergate scandal along with his blundering instances of misspeaking and physically clumsy moments earned him a reputation of ineptitude, resulting in his failure to be reelected after his first and only term (1974–77).

Ronald Reagan (78)

Celebrated as a champion of small government and conservative social policies, Reagan in his eight-year term (1981–89) proved to be a decisive and authoritative leader in an age of growing domestic and international woes. Through his 78 vetoes (39 regular and 39 pocket; 9 overridden) he sought to curb attempts by Congress to expand the rights of the federal government, which in some instances resulted in the hindrance of spending for environmental causes as well as for discriminated groups such as Native Americans. A notable veto overridden by Congress resulted in the Civil Rights Restoration Act of 1987, which closed gaps in former civil rights legislation by clarifying that all recipients of federal funds must abide by civil rights laws. Despite Reagan’s insistence that the bill empowered the federal government to intervene too much in private enterprises, both sides of Congress joined forces to pass the legislation.

Theodore Roosevelt (82)

From Rough Rider to noted trust buster, Theodore Roosevelt, as the 26th president of the U.S. (1901–09), simultaneously expanded the power of the executive branch further than it had ever been, continually combatted big business in favor of the working class, and asserted the country’s superiority internationally, leading to it being perceived as one of the most dominant forces of the world. Although most of his 82 vetoes (42 regular, 40 pocket; 1 overridden) had little to do with this unprecedented growth, some demonstrated his fervent adoration for the environment and his charged support for its preservation, making him perhaps the first emboldened conservationist to hold the presidency. However, this was just one of many components of his time in office that led to Teddy being immortalized in the Mount Rushmore sculpture of South Dakota.

Ulysses S. Grant (93)

Although corruptions committed by those around him have cast a dark shadow over his eight-year term (1869–77) as president, the celebrated general of the Union army during the Civil War did in fact have some brighter moments in the Oval Office, one of which can be found in his unprecedented (up to that time) 93 vetoes (45 regular, 48 pocket; 4 overridden). In the face of a devastating economic depression that started in 1873, Congress sought to add more greenbacks to the American circulation, thus increasing the amount of legal tender available to the suffering American population. However, Grant, who was arguably influenced by some of his advisors as well as by his wife, struck down the so-called Inflation Bill, an action that many historians have claimed to diminish the severity of the ensuing currency crisis of the following quarter century.

Dwight D. Eisenhower (181)

After winning over Americans’ hearts with his successes in World War II, Eisenhower retired from the military after 37 years of experience and sought election to the White House, where he was elected to two terms of service (1953–61). Being the first president to have to deal with three Congresses controlled by the opposite party, Eisenhower learned quickly the importance of the veto, namely in the final years of his presidency when Congress began to spend what he saw as excessively on domestic issues. Of his 181 vetoes (73 regular, 108 pocket; 2 overridden), one significant veto denied an extension to the Federal Pollution Control Act (a bill he previously signed into law), which would have allotted more funds to wastewater treatment. He claimed that water pollution was “a uniquely local blight,” leaving the burden to the states as he favored a smaller federal government. A similar piece of legislation was later passed under the Kennedy administration.

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Harry S. Truman (250)

Thrust into the presidency (1945–53) during the Second World War after only an 82-day term as vice president, during which he had only met with President Roosevelt twice, Harry Truman did “his damnedest” to retain American superiority in the embers of the war-torn world as the emerging Soviet superpower challenged with its spread of communism. During his first elected term, Truman was forced to combat an anti-New Deal, Republican-led Congress with a total of 250 vetoes (180 regular, 70 pocket; 12 overridden). He continually vetoed proposed tax cuts that he believed heavily favored the wealthy while the nation was on the brink of an inflation crisis. However, he did not always win against Congress. Notably, in 1947 Congress overturned one of his vetoes in order to pass the Taft-Hartley Act, which severely restricted organized labor in a number of ways, and in 1950 Congress, in response to the growing fear of communism’s spreading, passed the McCarran Act over Truman’s veto, enabling the federal government to arrest any suspiciously subversive citizens as well as forcing all communist organizations to register with the federal government. Although the majority of the country favored the latter bill, Truman saw its potential for abuse, which was eventually realized in the aftermath of McCarthyism.

Grover Cleveland (584)

Although Cleveland has been the only person to serve two discontinuous terms (1885–89 and 1893–97) as president of the United States, his spirited championing of honest politicking and small government endured through both terms in the face of the notorious corruption of Gilded Age politics. He habitually vetoed (584 total; 346 regular, 238 pocket; 7 overridden) Congress’s attempts to abuse the pension system enacted during Lincoln’s tenure in office, thus saving taxpayers’ dollars from being squandered on false claims of wartime injuries. Also, in his most famous veto, he denied a $10,000 subsidy for Texas famers suffering from a severe drought to avoid, in his eyes, making the American people reliant upon the federal government. Although his adherence to small-government policies won him favor in his first term, the raid on the federal treasury (that he had built up during his time) by his first successor led to an unprecedented economic collapse, which the American people called on him to mend with government intervention. He refused to do so and was eventually disowned by his own party following his second term.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt (635)

Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the 32nd president of the United States (1933–45), broke records and defied conventions in what has remained one of the most controversial presidencies in U.S. history. He was the first (and only) president to be elected four times to the office, ignoring the normative two terms instilled by George Washington, and he expanded the powers of the executive branch to unheard-of lengths, namely through his astounding use of the veto power, issuing vetoes a total of 635 times (372 regular, 263 pocket; 9 overridden). In 1944 he blatantly rebelled against the unwritten tradition of never vetoing a revenue measure when he turned down a tax bill that he felt only profited the greedy. He also expressed his volition on an array of issues such as homing pigeons, alien deportation, national defense, parking meters, and credits for beer wholesalers, whereas other “veto giants” like Cleveland focused their veto efforts to one specific arena. Last, FDR became the first president to personally read a veto message aloud to a joint session of Congress, thus demonstrating his desire to let his vigilance over Congress’s actions be known to its members.

Mic Anderson