Carter ~145. Clinton ~155. Obama ~130. Trump ~101. One of these punched harder than his IQ score suggests. A dead-average American—a normie 101—cut a swatch through world history. That might be the most democratic story ever told.
Carter: estimated IQ around 145. Nuclear physics at Annapolis, one of the sharpest technical minds ever to occupy the Oval Office. Clinton: around 155—Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, Yale Law, a political mind so quick it bordered on unfair. Obama: around 130, President of the Harvard Law Review, the most credentialed editorial job in American legal academia.
Trump: approximately 101.
Dead average. Textbook normie. The kind of IQ score that gets you through life without anyone calling you gifted.
I had my IQ tested in the high 130s. I grew up in Honolulu at St. Louis School—ILH, not Punahou, so I carry that particular chip knowing Obama walked those manicured grounds across the island while we were busy proving something from Kaimuki. I know what the high-IQ credentialed world looks like from the inside. I know how much we quietly rely on those numbers to tell us who matters.
And then there’s Trump at 101, and I have to just sit with that for a second.
Because in 79 years, a dead-average American—no photographic memory, no Rhodes Scholarship, no law review—cut a swatch through world history that none of the geniuses managed. Two presidential wins. Reshaped both political parties. Survived legal, media, and institutional onslaughts that would have vaporized anyone without his particular brand of teflon. Became the most polarizing and consequential figure of his era.
A 101 IQ didn’t hold him back. It might have been load-bearing. He was legible to normal people because he essentially is one—he thinks at the speed of a bumper sticker, which turns out to be exactly the speed most people actually process politics.
The genius presidents had their moments. But none of them pulled off what the normie did. If the IQ estimates are even roughly right, that’s not an insult to Trump—it’s the most democratic, most American story in the history of the presidency. You don’t need to be exceptional to be historic. You just need to want it more than everyone else in the room, and refuse to stop.
The elephant identifier wins again.