George Washington did not have a slogan. He is the only president to receive 100 percent of the electoral votes. In fact, he received 100 percent twice.
In my opinion, a catchy slogan for the ratification of the constitution is, A change for the Good of mankind.
This was the campaign slogan used by Calvin Coolidge during his successful presidential campaign in 1924. The president and the press continued to use it, referring to Coolidge's steady but laid-back leadership style.
In Hitler's Germany, they were Kinder (children), Kirche (church) and Küche (cooking). It was a slogan directed to the women in Germany to work for the home and family and to focus on having children to create more Aryans.
Oh, dude, that's like William McKinley, you know, the 25th President of the United States. He was all about that "full dinner pail" vibe, like, keeping people fed and happy. So, yeah, he was all about that "four more years" slogan before it was cool.
came from the election in 1840, when William Henry Harrison (also known as "Old Tippecanoe") ran for president with John Tyler running as vice president. they used the slogan "Tippecanoe and Tyler too".
George Washington had no campaign slogan. For George Washington facts refer to the related links below.
Hang the blacks, and molest their children
Thousand points of light
turn the lights off
Kinder gentller nation
Thousand points of light
Come home America
Shoot first, ask questions later.
The Human Fund (money for people)
George W. Bush used multiple slogans with his campaign. One was "Compassionate conservatism." Economically the slogan was "whoever pays taxes gets a tax break." The overall theme was "Reformer with Results."
Alabama Governor George Wallace
You press the button. We do the rest.