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Quiz on George W. Bush: Key Facts and Events

Test your knowledge about George W. Bush, his presidency, and significant events during his time in office with this engaging quiz.

1 Calls for Bush's ________ were made, though most polls showed a plurality of Americans did not support the president's impeachment.

2 He pleaded guilty, was fined $150 and had his ________ driver's license suspended until 1978.

3 What was George W. Bush's birth name?

4 Who was the successor of George W. Bush?

5 In 2006, Bush urged Congress to allow more than twelve million ________ to work in the United States with the creation of a "temporary guest-worker program".

6 How is George W. Bush described?

7 [184] On July 31, 2008, a ________ judge ruled that Bush's top advisers were not immune from Congressional subpoenas.

8 Georgian President ________ was seated nearby.

9 George W. Bush at the ________

10 Who of the following was a child of George W. Bush?

đź’ˇ Interesting Facts

  • students from Tualatin Valley Junior Academy's Ring of Fire handbell choir performed at both inaugurations of U.S. President George W. Bush in 2001 and 2005.
  • the United States Department of Justice attorney James A. Baker, who has defended Bush administration intelligence policy in Congressional testimony and court cases, is not related to former Secretary of State James A. Baker III.
  • author Mike Long has written speeches for national U.S. politicians, including President George W. Bush.
  • although Vic Gold co-wrote the first President Bush's autobiography and wrote a novel with Dick Cheney's wife, in 2007 he wrote a book attacking the second President Bush and Cheney.
  • after Saudi authorities listed alleged al-Qaeda member Zubayr Al-Rimi as a conspirator in the Riyadh compound bombings, he wrote a personal letter to George W. Bush insisting he was innocent.
  • the President's Surveillance Program, authorized by George W. Bush, included "unprecedented collection activities" that are still highly classified.
  • the Rumsfeld Commission is considered by some foreign policy analysts to be the basis for the term "axis of evil", used by President George W. Bush in his 2002 State of the Union Address.
  • when Vladimir Putin introduced George W. Bush to his dog Koni (pictured), Putin is reported to have said she is "Bigger, tougher, stronger, faster, meaner—than Barney".
  • the term "stay the course" was dropped by United States President George W. Bush two weeks before the 2006 U.S. midterm elections.
  • the Kröd Mändoon episode "Our Bounties Ourselves" included an almost verbatim parody of George W. Bush's famous "Fool me once" speech gaffe.
  • the Slovakia Summit 2005 between Presidents Bush and Putin will mark the first occasion when a sitting President of the United States visits Slovakia.
  • a digital time capsule "A Message From Earth" was transmitted to the planet Gliese 581c and included a message by actress Gillian Anderson consisting of images of George W. Bush and Barack Obama.
  • a Saudi businessman offered US$10 million to buy the shoes thrown by al-Baghdadia TV correspondent Muntadhar al-Zaidi at U.S. President George W. Bush during a recent press conference.
  • Karl Zinsmeister, a U.S. journalist and the new top domestic policy advisor to U.S. President George W. Bush, wrote a book-length Marvel comic book on the Iraq War.
  • Richard Honaker, Bush nominee for U.S. District Judge in Wyoming, washed dishes in a work-study program while studying at Harvard University with future comedian Al Franken.
  • Republican Monty Warner called on his Democratic rival Joe Manchin to endorse George Bush for re-election during the 2004 West Virginia gubernatorial election.
  • Pope Benedict XVI received George W. Bush this month in a medieval tower where Pope John Paul II resided temporarily while his papal apartments were being remodeled.
  • Oregon judge Marco A. Hernandez has been nominated to serve in the federal courts by both presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama.
  • The University of Texas Longhorn Band performed for inaugurations of Presidents Theodore Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush.
  • Lt. Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski was a policy analyst at the Pentagon for four and a half years before retiring and becoming a vocal critic of the Bush administration's policy in Iraq.
  • U.S. Army surgeon Ben L. Salomon was recommended for the Medal of Honor four times before it was posthumously awarded by George W. Bush in 2002.
  • U.S. President Bush has indicated he may use the third veto of his Presidency on the Matthew Shepard Act.
  • President George W. Bush appointed three Cabinet members who had been born outside of the United States, the most of any U.S. president.
  • Norwegian politician Harald T. Nesvik claimed to have nominated George W. Bush and Tony Blair for the Nobel Peace prize.
  • Jenna Bush's book Ana's Story, about a young woman with AIDS, has been criticized for not taking a stand on her father U.S. President George W. Bush's policies toward United Nations AIDS programs.