President For Life

President for life is a title assumed by or granted to some presidents to extend their tenure up until their death.

The title sometimes confers on the holder the right to nominate or appoint a successor. The usage of the title of "president for life" rather than a traditionally autocratic title, such as that of a monarch, implies the subversion of liberal democracy by the titleholder (although republics need not be democratic per se). Indeed, sometimes a president for life can proceed to establish a self-proclaimed monarchy, such as Jean-Jacques Dessalines and Henry Christophe in Haiti.

President For Life
Mansu Hill Grand Monument in Pyongyang, depicting "eternal leaders" of North Korea, President Kim Il Sung and General Secretary Kim Jong Il.

Similarity to a monarch

A president for life may be regarded as a de facto monarch. In fact, other than the title, political scientists often face difficulties in differentiating a state ruled by a president for life (especially one who inherits the job from a family dictatorship) and a monarchy – indeed, Samoa's long-serving President for life, Malietoa Tanumafili II, was frequently and mistakenly referred to as King. In his proposed plan for government at the United States Constitutional Convention Alexander Hamilton proposed that the chief executive be a governor elected to serve for good behavior, acknowledging that such an arrangement might be seen as an elective monarchy. It was for that very reason that the proposal was rejected. A notable difference between a monarch and a president-for-life is that the successor of the president does not necessarily possess a life-long term, like in Turkmenistan and Samoa.[citation needed]

Most leaders who have proclaimed themselves president for life have not in fact successfully gone on to serve a life term. Most have been deposed long before their death while others achieve a lifetime presidency by being assassinated while in office. However, some have managed to rule until their (natural) deaths, including José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia of Paraguay, Alexandre Pétion of Haiti, Rafael Carrera of Guatemala, François Duvalier of Haiti, Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia, and Saparmurat Niyazov of Turkmenistan. Others made unsuccessful attempts to have themselves named president for life, such as Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire in 1972.

Some long-serving authoritarian presidents are mistakenly described as presidents for life. They were never officially granted life terms and, in fact, stood periodically for reelection. However, in most cases, these were sham elections.

In the film Escape from L.A., the President played by Cliff Robertson is given a life term by a constitutional amendment after an earthquake ravages Los Angeles and leads to the President's shocking electoral victory. At the end of the film, Snake played by Kurt Russell puts an end to his regime when he uses an EMP aiming device remote ending all governments including that of his dictatorship.[citation needed]

List of leaders who became president for life

Note: The first date listed in each entry is the date of proclamation of the status as President for Life.

Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Country Title Took office Left office Notes
President For Life  Toussaint Louverture
(1743–1803)
President For Life  French Saint-Domingue Governor for Life of Saint-Domingue 1801 1802 Deposed 1802, died in exile in France 1803.
President For Life  Henri Christophe
(1767–1820)
President For Life  Haiti President for Life of Haiti (Northern) 1807 1811 Became King 1811, committed suicide while reigning 1820.
President For Life  José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia
(1766–1840)
President For Life  Paraguay Perpetual Supreme Dictator of Paraguay 1816 1840 Died in office 1840.
President For Life  Alexandre Pétion
(1770–1818)
President For Life  Haiti President for Life of Haiti (Southern) 1816 1818 Died in office 1818.
President For Life  Jean-Pierre Boyer
(1776–1850)
President for Life of Haiti 1818 1843 Became President for Life immediately upon assuming the office because Alexandre Pétion's constitution provided for a life presidency for all his successors, deposed 1843, died 1850.
President For Life  Antonio López de Santa Anna
(1794–1876)
President For Life  Mexico (Second Federal Republic) President for Life of Mexico 1853 1855 Resigned 1855, died 1876.
President For Life  Rafael Carrera
(1814–1865)
President For Life  Guatemala President for Life of Guatemala 1854 1865 Died in office 1865.
President For Life  Adolf Hitler
(1889–1945)
President For Life  Germany (Third Reich) Chancellor and Führer for life 1934 1945 Committed suicide in office 1945.
President For Life  Tupua Tamasese Meaʻole
(1905–1963)
President For Life  Samoa O le Ao o le Malo for Life of Samoa 1962 1963 Died in office 1963, elected to serve alongside Tanumafili II (see below). The position of O le Ao o le Malo (head of state) is ceremonial; executive power is exercised by the Prime Minister, and Samoa is a parliamentary democracy.
President For Life  Malietoa Tanumafili II
(1913–2007)
2007 Died in office 2007, elected to serve alongside Meaʻole (see above).
President For Life  Sukarno
(1901–1970)
President For Life  Indonesia (Guided Democracy era) Supreme Commander, Great Leader of Revolution, Mandate Holder of the Provisional People's Consultative Assembly, and President for Life of Indonesia 1963 1966 Designated as President for Life according to the Ketetapan MPRS No. III/MPRS/1963, life term removed 1966, deposed 1967, died under house arrest 1970.
President For Life  Kwame Nkrumah
(1909–1972)
President For Life  Ghana President for Life of Ghana 1964 1966 Ousted in 1966, died in exile in Romania 1972.
President For Life  François "Papa Doc" Duvalier
(1907–1971)
President For Life  Haiti President for Life of Haiti 1964 1971 Died in office 1971, named his son as his successor (see below).
President For Life  Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier
(1951–2014)
1971 1986 Named by his father as successor (see above), deposed 1986, died 2014.
President For Life  Hastings Banda
(1898–1997)
President For Life  Malawi President for Life of Malawi 1971 1993 Life term removed 1993, voted out of office 1994, died 1997.
President For Life  Jean-Bédel Bokassa
(1921–1996)
President For Life  Central African Republic President for Life of the Central African Republic 1972 1976 Became Emperor 1976 (crowned 1977), deposed 1979, died 1996.
President For Life  Francisco Macías Nguema
(1924–1979)
President For Life  Equatorial Guinea President for Life of Equatorial Guinea 1972 1979 Deposed and executed 1979.
President For Life  Ferdinand Marcos
(1917–1989)
President For Life  Philippines (Martial law regime) President for Life of the Philippines 1973 1981 Life term removed in 1981, Deposed in 1986, replaced by Corazon Aquino, died in exile in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States in 1989.
President For Life  Josip Broz Tito
(1892–1980)
President For Life  Yugoslavia President for Life of Yugoslavia 1974 1980 Appointed as President for Life according to the 1974 Constitution, died in office 1980.
President For Life  Habib Bourguiba
(1903–2000)
President For Life  Tunisia President for Life of Tunisia 1975 1987 Deposed 1987, died under house arrest 2000.
President For Life  Idi Amin
(1925–2003)
President For Life  Uganda (Second Republic) President for Life of Uganda 1976 1979 Deposed 1979, died in exile in Saudi Arabia 2003.
President For Life  Lennox Sebe
(1926–1994)
President For Life  South Africa
(President For Life  Ciskei)
President for Life of Ciskei 1983 1990 Deposed 1990, died 1994.
President For Life  Saparmurat Niyazov
(1940–2006)
President For Life  Turkmenistan President for Life of Turkmenistan 1999 2006 Died in office 2006.

Notes

References

Further reading

  • Mngomezulu, Bhekithemba Richard (2013). The President for Life Pandemic: Kenya, Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Zambia and Malawi. Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd. ISBN 9781909112315.

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