Affirmative action president

Affirmative Action President (AAP) is a term that implies that the President of the United States was elected largely because of "affirmative action" -- meaning that they were chosen because of their nonwhite race, nonmale gender, etc.

Conservapedia claims to have coined on 25 January 2008 regarding Barack Obama running for the office of President of the United States of America. Of course, they didn't; it was coined in 2001 regarding George W. Bush.

Definition
Andrew Schlafly defines AAP in Conservapedia:

Original usage
The term actually appeared in newspaper print approximately 7 years earlier. A Chicago Tribune op-ed published on February 7, 2001, titled, "The Affirmative Action President's Dilemma," shows that in recent history, Daniel Wilkins, at that time a law professor and director of the legal profession program at Harvard Law School, is the one who coined the term while referring to president George W. Bush, and referring to his entrance into Yale through his father's alumnus status.

Subsequent usage
Conservapedia incorrectly boasts it was the first to coin the phrase, which was picked up by Michael Savage ten days later and Worldnetdaily the month after that. Please refer to above section for first usage of the term, which occurred approximately 7 years earlier, in an op-ed referring to George W. Bush.

On Feb. 4, 2008, Savage said on his radio program:

Even better, WND said: