President of Washingtonia

The President of the Kingdom of Washingtonia is the head of government and co-chief executive of Washingtonia alongside the King. The President used to be known as the President-in-Government, from the establishment of the office in 1828 by the Decree for a Royal Parliament up until the enactment of the 1913 Constitution, when it became the title "the President", within the organization known as "the Presidency" (Chap. 5 Sec. 1).

The President is directly elected through universal suffrage at the same time as the Grand Washingtonian Assembly, every five years. Since the Term Limits Act of 1960, the President is only allowed to serve two five year terms. He is responsible for executing the daily functions of government along with his appointed Presidential Cabinet. The Grand Assembly is able to impeach the President by a vote of 75% with a present and voting quorum of 85% if the Assembly thinks that he has overstepped the constitutional limits of his office (Chap. 4 Sec. 5). The incumbent is Travis O'Neill.

Presidents-in-Government (1828-1913)
Prior to the constitutional establishment of the Presidency, the Decree for a Royal Parliament of 1828 created the Office of the President-in-Government as the King's chief adviser and administrator of non-royal functions of government. The Decree allowed only members of the royal houses in Washingtonia to occupy this office.


 * Anthony Lexington (1828-1839)
 * Daniel du Montier (1839-1853)
 * Henry Concord (1853-1871)
 * Luke Concord (1871-1877)
 * Francis du Montier (1877-1892)
 * Steven Coleridge (1892-1899)
 * Abraham Quincy (1899-1913)

Quincy, as the then-Commanding General of the Washingtonian Army, assumed the Office of the President in a temporary war-capacity when Coleridge was killed at the beginning of the Civil War. He willfully relinquished the office upon the passing of the new Constitution.

Presidents

 * (1913-1933) - four terms
 * (1933-1943) - two terms
 * Berland Page (1943-1946) - served part of his term (see this page)
 * Martin Laut (1946-1961) - three terms (see this page)
 * (1961-1971) - two terms
 * (1971-1976) - one term
 * (1976-1986) - two terms
 * (1986-1991) - one term
 * (1991-1996) - one term
 * (1996-2006) - two terms
 * (2006-2011) - one term
 * Travis O'Neill (2011-present)