| George H.W. Bush served in the House of Representatives from Texas in the 1960's, and he was President after Ford. Clinton smoked cigars, although perhaps not regularly, as attested by a notorious Monica Lewinsky story. There was a John F. Kennedy half-dollar coin. And I have no idea what TR being the last President to be protected full-time by the Secret Service means. Warren Harding had biological children but not legitimate ones. (Not having biological children means that you only have adopted ones.) James Monroe ran essentially unopposed for reelection in 1820; a single token electoral vote for J.Q. Adams was cast just to preserve the uniqueness of Washington's unanimity.
¶ Two questions (at least) are ambiguous, though the answers aren't wrong: Millard Fillmore was never elected President, although he was elected Vice President representing the Whig Party. Abraham Lincoln (who came after Fillmore) was elected to Congress as a Whig, so one could argue that if the question means "elected President as a Whig", the answer is Taylor, and if the question means "elected to any office as a Whig", the answer is Lincoln (unless one of his successors was elected at some point to some office as a Whig). Similarly, but less forcefully, one could argue semantics about "not to seek reelection". LBJ was only elected President once, but some call that a "reelection" since he was already President in 1964. On the other hand, he didn't seek reelection in 1968, so one can defend the wording since he's the last we're sure of. Nixon toyed with changing the Constitution to seek a third term. |