10 first most influential ladies in modern times

Every first lady moving in the White House brings their unique personalities in the role.


Every first lady moving in the White House brings their unique personalities in the role. For some, they draw attention to a cause they believe strongly to make the country a better place. Most are considered a stabilization force when providing emotional support to their husbands because they address one of the most difficult and stressful jobs imaginable. Whatever the case, every first lady leaves behind a particular legacy. Here is a look at first 10 ladies who have used their role to make a difference.

10. Rosalynn Carter

The wife of the 39th President Jimmy Carter, Rosalynn was both a dedicated mother (his youngest Amy child was 9 years old when his father was elected president) and his wife. But it has not been limited to the role of the hostess. She was very politically involved in the crankcase administration. In fact, she was the nearest advisor to her husband, even sitting in cabinet meetings. She was a defender of women's rights and civil rights. She also supported initiatives related to mental health.

9. Laura Bush

Unlike these first ladies that Carter and Hillary Clinton, Laura Bush preferred to stay away from his political affairs of her husband George W. Bush and rather worn over most of a traditional first lady. She was a librarian by exchange, so it is logical to advocate literacy. She is responsible for the creation of the National Book Festival in 2001. Two decades later, it's always strong.

8. Lady Bird Johnson

Very educated for a woman of her time, Johnson was a high infringement that allowed voluntarily to slip his high school notes so that she would not have to give a speech by Valedicorian. She had an experience as a manager and investor, even in banning her husband, the first race of Lyndon B. Johnson's congress. The first lady, she advocated to improve cities and highways. She was also the second first lady to insist on her own press secretary. For his efforts, President Carter awarded her the presidential medal of freedom in 1977.

7. Nancy Reagan

While Nancy Reagan has generated a controversy to be out of contact at the beginning of Ronald's Terme's husband (she accepted free gifts from expensive creative clothes and spent more than $ 200,000 on China's fine at the same time, the country Cross a recession) There is no question and the 40th president had a strong bond. She played a major role in some of her diplomatic and staff decisions. She was considered pragmatic in her recent years, accepting the Michreel Obama's First Lady invites to a white house lunch and did not want to do anything with Donald Trump.

6. Michelle Obama

Michelle Obama grew up in a lower class neighborhood of South Chicago, but had a stable and loving education. She and her older brother ended up skipping the 2nd year because of their academic abilities. She received her undergraduate degree from Princeton and Harvard's legislation. As the first lady, her initiatives focused on the fight against poverty and the encouragement of fitness and healthy diet. Just like the 44th President, Michelle is a talented speaker and a writer. In 2020, she was called the most admired woman of Gallup in America for the third consecutive year.

5. Betty Ford

Although her husband Gerald - the accidental president who was resigned by Richard Nixon - only served 2 years, the first lady managed to do a lot in this brief period. A survivor of breast cancer, she sensitized to this disease. It has also been crossed on a variety of problems, including equal pay, abortion, sex, drugs and firearms control. She was the first first lady to publicly announce her battle of alcohol and substance abuse. She created the Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage, California to help others overcome their dependencies.

4. Barbara Bush

The wife of a president and the mother on the other, Barbara Bush is only the second first lady to hold this distinction (the other being abigail adams). She has held many liberal positions, including gay rights, civil rights and access to abortion. Literacy was its major initiative. She established the Barbara Bush Foundation for family literacy and even "Ghost wrote" a books best selling in the name of his beloved spaniel spaniel spaniel spaniel.

3. Hillary Clinton

Although it is certainly a euphemism to say that Clinton was a polarizing figure, whoever insists to deny his achievements is to drink Kool-Aid. A partner of a prestigious law firm while her husband was Governor of Arkansas, the graduate of Yale's law had always been ambitious. The first lady, she advocates a better health care system as well as gender equality. After the office of the 42nd President, Hillary made history by becoming the first former first lady to be elected in the Senate. She subsequently been Secretary of State for the administration of Obama and became the first woman to designate as President of a great political party.

2. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis

Kennedy was best known for restoring the White House and create the beautiful property gardens. She was also elegant and fashionable, and she was the first first lady to have her own press secretary. At the time, her husband served as president, she raised two young children. It took priority to keep them out of light and give them normal education as possible considering the circumstances.

1. Eleanor Roosevelt

The Wife of FDR was far from his time. It is considered the first most influential lady. In fact, there were even suggestions that she operated the country when her husband started to have failed health. Eleanor was the NAACP Board of Directors, contributed to the creation of the United Nations after the Second World War and was the first president of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights at a time when most women were in the kitchen kitchen.


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