Premium
This is an archive article published on July 10, 2008

Next US President will be a lefty, whatever his party

The man who takes up residency in the White House will be a lefty.

.

Regardless of whether Americans elect Republican John McCain or Democrat Barack Obama President in November, the man who takes up residency in the White House will be a lefty — at least in terms of the hand he favours.

He will follow in the footsteps of a slew of presidents, from Ronald Reagan to Bill Clinton, who were left-handed.

The United States has had four left-handed presidents since 1974: Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford, George H W Bush and Bill Clinton, the New York Sun noted recently.

Story continues below this ad

Even the ranks of vice presidents or unsuccessful contenders for the White House are heavy with left-handers: Al Gore, Bob Dole, John Edwards and Ross Perot were all lefties, in hand terms if not all politically so.

The high ratio of left-handers who climb to the top of the political ladder is all the more baffling when one considers that only 10-12 per cent of Americans write with their left hands.

“Six of the 12 chief executives since the end of World War II will have been left-handed: Harry Truman, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, the elder Bush, Clinton and either Obama or McCain,” wrote two right-handed scientists, Sam Wang and Sandra Aamodt, in the Washington Post on Sunday.

“That’s a disproportionate number, considering that only one in 10 people in the general population is left-handed,” they wrote.

Story continues below this ad

The reason might be that left-handed people use the right side of the brain more, and that’s the side that visualises the whole of a problem, is more capable of multi-tasking and even shows greater creativity, wrote the New York Daily News.

“Many artists and great political thinkers were lefties — Pablo Picasso and Benjamin Franklin, for example,” wrote Wang and Aamodt.

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement