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Micah Brickner

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Number One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleNo. 49 | Kamala HarrisAlthough it might not be a perfect parallel to liken Vice President-Elect Kamala Harris to Harry Truman, I have wondered if President-Elect Biden and Democratic leaders chose her as a potential successor to Biden in a way similar to how the party chose Truman to run with Roosevelt for his last term. Should Ms. Harris need to step in and take over the reins of the White House, what might her leadership style look like? Get the answer to this question and many others in this episode featuring an interview with Dr. Kathleen Staudt, professor emerita of political science...2021-01-0453 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleNo. 48 | Mike PenceMichael Richard Pence: the vice president who has at so many times been so close to the presidency, yet still so far away. In a singular presidential term marked with so much uncertainty and instability, Pence has often straddled a blurred line between loyalty and preparedness. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/numberone/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/numberone/support2020-12-1029 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleNumber 47 | BidenBarack Obama has often been compared to Abraham Lincoln. So, was Joe Biden more like Lincoln’s first vice president, Hannibal Hamlin, or his second, Andrew Johnson? Find out in this special episode of the podcast featuring an interview with Dr. Thomas J. Balcerski, who is an American history professor and the author of Bosom Friends: The Intimate World of James Buchanan and William Rufus King. Purchase Dr. Balcerski’s book: https://www.amazon.com/Bosom-Friends-Intimate-Buchanan-William/dp/0190914599 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send...2020-10-3000 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleNumber 46 | CheneyThere was a turning point in Cheney’s career, in which his view of executive power was altered. While some people look at September 11, 2001, as a defining and transitional moment in Cheney’s understanding of the presidential powers, I think it all began around September 8, 1974. As a young man, his worldview was substantially changed when President Ford pardoned Nixon. Over the next several decades, Cheney’s understanding of executive power changed. In this episode, we will look at three presidential pardoning cases in which Cheney was involved. Each case will give us a glimpse into the mind of a rather...2020-10-2500 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleBonus | Lieberman's FaithReligion is way more intertwined with politics than we realize. This is one of the reasons why Trump chose the devoutly evangelical Pence as his running mate, or why Biden alludes so much to his own Roman Catholic faith. In this episode, we look at the groundbreaking place in American history that Senator Joseph I. Lieberman holds: he was the first Jewish candidate on a major American presidential ticket. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app · Charity Promotion: Democracy Works: This advertisement is part of a charitable in...2020-09-2626 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleNumber Five | GoreMany Americans are aware of how interconnected the words “Electoral College” are with the legacy of Vice President Al Gore. He was part of an elite club of only a few incumbent vice presidents who successfully ran for president. I say “successful” because he technically won the popular vote and very likely stood a significant chance of winning the electoral vote had the Supreme Court allowed a statewide recount to take place in Florida. Joining me to talk about the legacy of Vice President Gore is author and political analyst Rich Rubino. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: T...2020-09-0819 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleNumber Four | Quayle1992 was a bizarre election in American history. Going into this election cycle, President George H. W. Bush and his vice president, J. Danforth Quayle were generally doing well. They had achieved decently strong favorability regarding their swift action in the Persian Gulf War. But suddenly, the economy began turning, and while initially, Democrats didn’t expect to have a real chance against an incumbent Republican administration, things began changing significantly. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/numberone/mes...2020-08-2819 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleBonus | Dukakis' Running MateIn 1988 Democratic candidate Michael Dukakis chose Texas Senator Lloyd Bentsen as his running mate. One of the most critical reasons for choosing Bentsen was his home state: Texas. While Texas had been historically Democratic, the Republican Southern Strategy had been changing that reality. The benefit of Bentsen was that he was a conservative long-term senator from Texas. I’m not sure that Dukakis could have picked a more qualified vice presidential candidate to run with him. In fact, they really played up the fact that they were like John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson — a Massachusetts man on the top...2020-08-1321 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleNumber Three | BushTecumseh’s Curse is an unproven hypothesis trying to explain how presidents elected every 20 years have ended up dying in office. But in 1981, Ronald Reagan was shot by John Hinckley, and despite his hospitalization and injuries, Reagan miraculously survived the assassination attempt. Some people claim that Reagan broke Tecumseh’s curse when he survived this gunshot. I can’t say that I personally believe in Tecumseh’s curse, but I do believe in the vice-presidential curse, which Reagan’s vice president, George Herber Walker Bush appears to have also overcome. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way...2020-08-0428 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleBonus | Reagan’s Almost-Co-PresidentThis month, July, forty years ago, the Motor City, that is Detroit, Michigan, was afire with wild speculation on who Ronald Reagan would pick as his running mate. The Reagan campaign knew that they needed a vice president who was conservative enough for their die-hard supporters but moderate enough to appeal to a broad swath of voters throughout the country. As Reagan moved ahead in the primaries, defeating other Republicans, including George H. W. Bush, something bizarre came about. There was chatter about Gerald Ford joining Reagan’s ticket as the vice president. --- This episode is sponsored by...2020-07-2315 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleNumber Two | MondaleIn 1976, the Democratic Governor from Georgia, Jimmy Carter, chose Walter Mondale as his running mate, and he would serve in that office for one term from 1977 until 1981. He was the first vice president to have an office in the White House and was treated like a real partner in the administration. Carter was focused on reforming the federal government and trying to make it more effective. Both he and Mondale had realized that the office of the vice president was underutilized up until this point.  --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a...2020-07-1719 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleBonus | Truman's HomeAlmost exactly one year ago, I was in Kansas City, Missouri, for a work conference. In between responsibilities that I had at a convention, I took some of my free time to explore local history. I decided to hop on a Kansas City bus and travel a few miles east to Independence, Missouri. When I got off the bus and began walking through quaint smalltown sidewalks, I approached a relatively modest, but still beautiful white house sitting back from the road. It was the home of former President Harry Truman, who had also served as vice president. --- ...2020-07-1005 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One | RockefellerIn 1974, the country was still sorting through the aftermath of Nixon’s resignation and now had a president, Gerald Ford, who had never been elected as president nor even as vice president. The nation was in crisis, and the prospect of the vice president assuming the office of the president was no longer a hypothetical, it was a reality. So Ford chose a nominee who carried the clout he needed to get congressional approval, New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Sen...2020-07-0427 minNumber One Observatory CircleNumber One Observatory CircleNumber Zero | TrailerAt more than two miles northwest of the White House, the vice president’s residence feels strangely distant from the president. In some ways, it feels like the name of the street, Observatory Circle, is incredibly fitting because of how the role of the vice president often feels like observing the actions of the president. The role of vice president has changed, shifted, and evolved into what it is today. In this podcast, I’m going to be exploring the stories of the country’s second-in-command.  --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https...2020-06-3002 min