Good point. Andrew Jackson wasn’t all that. I don’t especially approve of Alexander Hamilton, he may have been in cahoots with the British at one point and he supported a centralized government and bank.
http://www.ushistory.org/valleyforge/served/hamilton.html
Replace Ulysses Grant on the bill, he was one of the few Presidents who is even worse than Barack Obama.
Uh, whut ?
Jackson (D), if they were gonna shaft someone Im glad it was him. Kind of a cool guy, but I wouldnt have voted for him. The democrats were NEVER the good guys but I think hed be disgusted with the current state of his party.
Can you say with a straight face that Harriet Tubman was a more important historical figure and contributed more to the development of our nation than Andrew Jackson, whatever you think of his specific policies? There may be Presidents and other historical figures who are more worthy of being on the $20 than Jackson (I'd have no complaints if Jackson was replaced with James Madison or John Adams), but you know perfectly well that Harriet Tubman got to the front of the line because she's female and black. Helping free a few dozen slaves (mostly family and friends) is all well and good, but it's nowhere near the historical importance of about 100 other American historical figures that most people can list right off the top of their head. The problem isn't so much that Jackson is being removed, it's that he's being replaced by someone of much lesser significance for the sake of political correctness. It's sad to see so many people here taking the same side of this issue as Jack Lew and Obama.
As for the Democratic Party in the time of Jackson, there are some people on this thread who seem to think that Jackson deserves to be dishonored because he's a Democrat (I guess this means that Jefferson needs to be replaced by some token minority too, since his Democratic-Republican Party was the Democratic Party). Only the historically ignorant think that there is anything in common ideologically between 19th Century Democrats and the Democratic Party of today. What does Grover Cleveland have in common with Barack Obama? The Democratic Party of the 19th Century was the party of decentralism, states' rights, and free trade/free markets, more so than the Federalists/Whigs/Republicans. The Bourbon Democrats in particular were basically the libertarians of their day. On the trade issue, I'm actually closer to the 19th Century Republicans than I am to the Democrats, but that doesn't mean that I'm stupid enough to see Jefferson, Jackson or Cleveland as some kind of precursor to Obama or Hillary Clinton. Both parties have gone through dozens of ideological realignments and re-alliances over the past 150 years, and that retrojecting today's Democrat vs. Republican lines into the debates of 150 years ago is pointless.