LONG READS Issue 1086 · November 12, 2025

Downshifting in Office 

History is filled with influential figures who willingly accepted demotions in status

Downshifting in Office 
Photos: AP Images
While the world of politics is filled with ambitious climbers constantly angling for higher office, what happens when there’s nowhere to go but down? What does a former president do when his term has expired or if he’s been voted out, yet he still wants to stay in the game?
Some reverse course: John Quincy Adams, for example, found his calling as an idealistic junior senator; William Howard Taft fulfilled his dream of becoming chief justice of the Supreme Court; John Carney began knocking on doors in his bid for town mayor after losing a governorship; and then there are those like Senator John Walsh, who went from Congress to selling real estate.
Even Andrew Cuomo, forced out of Albany in disgrace, began maneuvering for a return to political life in his bid for mayor of New York. Although he was routed by Zohran Mamdani, his candidacy was a last grasp at staying relevant rather than admitting his time was up. And he wouldn’t be the first — history is filled with influential figures who willingly accepted demotions in status, when the gravitational pull of public life is just too strong to escape

From The White House to Congress — John Quincy Adams
Year: 1830
Appointment: US Representative for the 11th district of Massachusetts

“The sun of my political life ends in the deepest gloom.”

(John Quincy Adams, writing in his diary after his bid for reelection as president ended in defeat to Andrew Jackson)

When John Quincy Adams entered the House chamber and took his assigned seat — at number 203, considered one of the worst in Congress — he was asked how he felt “upon turning boy again in the House of Representatives.” History doesn’t record Adams’s reply, but presumably it was a difficult question for the former president to field.

Background

There are few people who have a résumé featuring the titles held by John Quincy Adams, the only president ever to become a congressman after his presidency.

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