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View Full Version : List of US Presidents, 1960 to 2020


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Zacoftheaxes
August 15th, 2011, 12:06 AM
Clay wins in 1844
1844: Henry Clay / Theodore Frelinghuysen (Whig)
1848: Lewis Cass / John A. Quitman (D)
1852: Martin Van Buren /Abraham Lincoln (Free Soil)
1856: Martin Van Buren /Abraham Lincoln (Free Soil)
1857: Abraham Lincoln (Free Soil) [1]
1860: Abraham Lincoln / Montgomery Blair (Free Soil)
1864: Abraham Lincoln / Montgomery Blair (Free Soil)
1868: Montgomery Blair/Hannibal Hamlin (Free Soil)
1872: Andrew Carnegie/John Fiske (Nationalist)
1876: John Fiske/Samuel Tilden (Nationalist)
1880: John Fiske/Samuel Tilden (Nationalist)
1884: James G. Blaine / John Sherman (Free Soil)
1888: James G. Blaine / John Sherman (Free Soil)
1892: Grover Cleveland/Isaac Gray (Nationalist)
1895: Isaac Gray (Nationalist) [2]
1896: Isaac Gray/Jesse Root Grant (Nationalist)
1900: Robert T. Lincoln / Hiram Johnson (Free Soil)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / L. M. Shaw (National) [3]
1905: Thedore Roosevelt (National) [4]
1919: Franklin Deleano Roosevelt (National) [5]
1945: Harry S. Truman (National) [6]
1952: Alvin Baker/Earl Long (Libertarian)
1956: Alvin Barker Earl Long (Libertarian)
1960:Richard Nixon/ Nelson Rockefeller (National)
1964: Barry Goldwater/Ayn Rand (Libertarian) [7]
1968: Barry Goldwater/Ayn Rand (Libertarian)
1972: George McGovern/Linda Jenness (Revolutionary Socialist Party)
1976: Linda Jeness/Walter Mondale (Revolutionary Socialist Party) [8]
1982: Milton Friedman / Ron Paul (Libertarian)
1988: Jesse Jackson / Gary Hart (Revolutionary Socialist Party)
1994: Ron Paul / Gary Johnson (Libertarian)
2000: William Weld / Sam Steiger (Libertarian)
2006: Howard Dean/Brian Schweitzer (Rev. Socialist Party)
2012: Dennis Kucinich / Bernie Sanders (Rev. Socialist Party)
2018: Gary Johnson/Rand Paul (Libertarian)
[1] President Van Buren dies.
[2] Cleveland is assassinated by a former Free Soil party of Pennsylvania official, Isaac Gray becomes President and garners large amounts of national sympathy.
[3] After losing the election of 1900 by a slim margin due to third party influence, The National Party nominates Theodore Roosevelt, who quickly becomes the favorite to win. After a massive scandal within the Free Soil Party catapults Roosevelt to victory, many Nationals in Congress suggest that the party be banned due to the severity of the scandal. This goes forward after support from President Roosevelt. Elections are postponed until 1906.
[4] A constitutional convention is held in 1905, Roosevelt becomes Glorious Leader of the United States for life.
[5] After Roosevelt dies unexpectedly, the National Party scrambles to find a relative of Roosevelt with enough political experience. They put in a young National Party secretary - Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a close (enough) relative.
[6] Unable to reach a consensus regarding the successor of FDR, Harry S. Truman, a moderate was chosen as the new President. Truman, however, pushed forward complete integration and political reforms. After defeating a internal party coup, Truman announced free elections in 1952, and that he himself would not run.
[7] Foreign born citizens eligible due to law passed under FDR.
[8] McGovern didn't run for a second term, supporting his party's platform to having a single term of six years, implemented by his former VP, Linda Geness, after ascending to the Presidency.


I honestly don't know enough about British government to start on the other one yet.

Nazi Space Spy
August 15th, 2011, 01:56 AM
I dont mean to skip the other list, but I dont know if I could start with it.. Heres another, real short quick list to go along with that.

Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes

Odysseus
August 15th, 2011, 02:22 AM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes

Prime Ministers of the United Dominions of North America (British puppet)
1817: Nicholas Jennings (Appointed)

Presidents of the United States of America (government-in-exile)
1816: Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Self-created)
1820: Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Independent)

Nazi Space Spy
August 15th, 2011, 02:28 AM
[QUOTE=Odysseus;4897990]Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)

Prime Ministers of the United Dominions of North America (British puppet)
1817: Nicholas Jennings (Appointed)
1820: Nicholas Jennings (Appointed)


Presidents of the United States of America (government-in-exile)
1816: Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Self-created)
1820: Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Independent)
1824: Andrew Jackson/John Calhoun (American)

Zacoftheaxes
August 16th, 2011, 04:49 AM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)

Badshah
August 16th, 2011, 04:54 AM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980:John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)

Nazi Space Spy
August 16th, 2011, 04:57 AM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld/Robert Dole (R)

Badshah
August 16th, 2011, 04:58 AM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld/Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld/ Orrin Hatch (R) [1]

[1] Bob Dole is embroiled in a scandal, and resigns as VP.

Tony
August 16th, 2011, 05:08 AM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld /Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Orrin Hatch (R) [1]
1992: Robert Kasten / Colin Powell (R)
[1] Bob Dole is embroiled in a scandal, and resigns as VP.

King Nazar
August 16th, 2011, 05:08 AM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld/Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld/ Orrin Hatch (R) [1]
1992: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)

[1] Bob Dole is embroiled in a scandal, and resigns as VP.

Tony
August 16th, 2011, 05:09 AM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld/Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld/ Orrin Hatch (R) [1]
1992: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)

[1] Bob Dole is embroiled in a scandal, and resigns as VP.

Ninja'd:D:D:D

Badshah
August 16th, 2011, 05:10 AM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld /Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Orrin Hatch (R) [1]
1992: Robert Kasten / Colin Powell (R)
1996: Mario Cuomo/ Bill Clinton (D)
[1] Bob Dole is embroiled in a scandal, and resigns as VP.

Megaman03
August 16th, 2011, 05:16 AM
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld /Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Orrin Hatch (R) [1]
1992: Robert Kasten / Colin Powell (R)
1996: Mario Cuomo/ Bill Clinton (D)
2000 : Howard Dean/ John Kerry (D)

[1] Bob Dole is embroiled in a scandal, and resigns as VP.

Badshah
August 16th, 2011, 05:17 AM
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld /Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Orrin Hatch (R) [1]
1992: Robert Kasten / Colin Powell (R)
1996: Mario Cuomo/ Bill Clinton (D)
2000 : Howard Dean/ John Kerry (D)
2004: Howard Dean/ Warren Buffett (D)

King Nazar
August 16th, 2011, 06:50 AM
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld /Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Orrin Hatch (R) [1]
1992: Robert Kasten / Colin Powell (R)
1996: Mario Cuomo/ Bill Clinton (D)
2000 : Howard Dean/ John Kerry (D)
2004: Howard Dean/ Warren Buffett (D)
2008: Barack Obama/ Joe Biden (D)

Tony
August 16th, 2011, 07:02 AM
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld /Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Orrin Hatch (R) [1]
1992: Robert Kasten / Colin Powell (R)
1996: Mario Cuomo/ Bill Clinton (D)
2000 : Howard Dean/ John Kerry (D)
2004: Howard Dean/ Warren Buffett (D)
2008: Barack Obama/ Joe Biden (D)
2012: Tom Tancredo / Chuck Baldwin (R)

Shadowlord
August 16th, 2011, 09:55 AM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld /Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Orrin Hatch (R) [1]
1992: Robert Kasten / Colin Powell (R)
1996: Mario Cuomo/ Bill Clinton (D)
2000 : Howard Dean/ John Kerry (D)
2004: Howard Dean/ Warren Buffett (D)
2008: Barack Obama/ Joe Biden (D)
2012: Tom Tancredo / Chuck Baldwin (R)
2016: Sherrod Brown / Chelsea Clinton (D)
[1] Bob Dole is embroiled in a scandal, and resigns as VP.

Tony
August 16th, 2011, 03:40 PM
Kennedy Lives and Nixon gets his revenge.
1964: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1968: Richard Nixon/James Rhodes (R)
1972: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1976: Robert Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1980: John F. Kennedy/Robert Byrd (D)
1984: Donald Rumsfeld /Robert Dole (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Orrin Hatch (R) [1]
1992: Robert Kasten / Colin Powell (R)
1996: Mario Cuomo/ Bill Clinton (D)
2000 : Howard Dean/ John Kerry (D)
2004: Howard Dean/ Warren Buffett (D)
2008: Barack Obama/ Joe Biden (D)
2012: Tom Tancredo / Chuck Baldwin (R)
2016: Sherrod Brown / Chelsea Clinton (D)
2020: Alan Keyes / Jim DeMint (R)
[1] Bob Dole is embroiled in a scandal, and resigns as VP.

theReturner
August 16th, 2011, 05:40 PM
New List!

Ike Runs as a Democrat

1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adlai Stevenson II(D)

JoeMulk
August 16th, 2011, 05:42 PM
New List!

Ike Runs as a Democrat

1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalia Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Adlai Stevenson (D)

Turquoise Blue
August 16th, 2011, 05:45 PM
What if...?

Prime Ministers of the United Dominions of North America (British puppet)
1817: Nicholas Jennings (Appointed) [1]

[1] The terms is placed at 5 years.

Presidents of the United States of America (government-in-exile)
1816: Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Self-created)


Repost.

Zacoftheaxes
August 16th, 2011, 05:45 PM
Ike Runs as a Democrat

1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)


The Boring Election of '92
1992: George H.W. Bush/Dan Quayle (R)

Zacoftheaxes
August 16th, 2011, 05:46 PM
What if...?

Prime Ministers of the United Dominions of North America (British puppet)
1817: Nicholas Jennings (Appointed)



Presidents of the United States of America (government-in-exile)
1816: Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Self-created)


Repost.


An explanation of how long the NA Prime ministers terms should last would be helpful.

Turquoise Blue
August 16th, 2011, 06:12 PM
An explanation of how long the NA Prime ministers terms should last would be helpful.
Placed a footnote.

JoeMulk
August 16th, 2011, 06:17 PM
Ike Runs as a Democrat

1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960:Nelson Rockefeller/William Knowland (R)[/COLOR]


The Boring Election of '92
1992: George H.W. Bush/Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Tom Harkin/Zell Miller (D)

Tony
August 16th, 2011, 06:25 PM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.

The Boring Election of '92
1992: George H.W. Bush / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Tom Harkin / Zell Miller (D)
2000: Colin Powell / Jack Kemp (R)

Shadowlord
August 16th, 2011, 06:43 PM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President

The Boring Election of '92
1992: George H.W. Bush / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Tom Harkin / Zell Miller (D)
2000: Colin Powell / Jack Kemp (R) [1]
2004: Paul Wellstone / Wesley Clark (D) [2]
[1] First African American President
[2] First Jewish President

Tony
August 17th, 2011, 03:33 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy / John Wayne (D)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President

The Boring Election of '92
1992: George H.W. Bush / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Tom Harkin / Zell Miller (D)
2000: Colin Powell / Jack Kemp (R) [1]
2004: Paul Wellstone / Wesley Clark (D) [2]
2008: Matt Fong / Bobby Jindal (R) [3]
[1] First African American President
[2] First Jewish President
[3] First Chinese American President

Badshah
August 17th, 2011, 03:43 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President

The Boring Election of '92
1992: George H.W. Bush / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Tom Harkin / Zell Miller (D)
2000: Colin Powell / Jack Kemp (R) [1]
2004: Paul Wellstone / Wesley Clark (D) [2]
2008: Matt Fong / Bobby Jindal (R) [3]
2012: Wesley Clark/ Howard Dean (D)
[1] First African American President
[2] First Jewish President
[3] First Chinese American President
__________________

Tony
August 17th, 2011, 03:49 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President

The Boring Election of '92
1992: George H.W. Bush / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Tom Harkin / Zell Miller (D)
2000: Colin Powell / Jack Kemp (R) [1]
2004: Paul Wellstone / Wesley Clark (D) [2]
2008: Matt Fong / Bobby Jindal (R) [3]
2012: Wesley Clark/ Howard Dean (D)
2016: Bobby Jindal / Marco Rubio (R) [4]
[1] First African American President
[2] First Jewish President
[3] First Chinese American President
[4] First Indian American President

OOC: Great, the boring election of 1992 creates an interesting universe that every president loses reelection:D

Badshah
August 17th, 2011, 04:36 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne/Edmund Muskie (D)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President

The Boring Election of '92
1992: George H.W. Bush / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Tom Harkin / Zell Miller (D)
2000: Colin Powell / Jack Kemp (R) [1]
2004: Paul Wellstone / Wesley Clark (D) [2]
2008: Matt Fong / Bobby Jindal (R) [3]
2012: Wesley Clark/ Howard Dean (D)
2016: Bobby Jindal / Marco Rubio (R) [4]
2020: Russ Feingold/Bill Gates (D)
[1] First African American President
[2] First Jewish President
[3] First Chinese American President
[4] First Indian American President

OOC: Great, the boring election of 1992 creates an interesting universe that every president loses reelection:DOOC: Yep.

Tony
August 17th, 2011, 04:41 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.

Badshah
August 17th, 2011, 04:47 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld/ Dick Cheney (R)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.

Tony
August 17th, 2011, 04:56 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld/ Dick Cheney (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld/ Dick Cheney (R)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.

Badshah
August 17th, 2011, 05:01 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld/ Dick Cheney (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld/ Dick Cheney (R)
1992: Warren Buffett/ Jerry Brown (D)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.

Tony
August 17th, 2011, 05:24 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1992: Warren Buffett / Jerry Brown (D)
1996: Warren Buffett / Steve Jobs (D) [4]
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.
[4] Vice President Brown announces that he would run for Governor of California again in 1998.

Nazi Space Spy
August 17th, 2011, 07:27 PM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1992: Warren Buffett / Jerry Brown (D)
1996: Warren Buffett / Steve Jobs (D) [4]
2000: Dick Cheney/Elizabeth Dole
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.
[4] Vice President Brown announces that he would run for Governor of California again in 1998.

Unholy Mistress
August 17th, 2011, 08:04 PM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1992: Warren Buffett / Jerry Brown (D)
1996: Warren Buffett / Steve Jobs (D) [4]
2000: Dick Cheney / Elizabeth Dole (R)
2001: Elizabeth Dole / Martha Stewart (R) [5][6]
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.
[4] Vice President Brown announces that he would run for Governor of California again in 1998.
[5] President Cheney dies of a unexpected stroke on June 1st, 2001.
[6] First Female President

Shadowlord
August 17th, 2011, 08:38 PM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1992: Warren Buffett / Jerry Brown (D)
1996: Warren Buffett / Steve Jobs (D) [4]
2000: Dick Cheney / Elizabeth Dole (R)
2001: Elizabeth Dole / Martha Stewart (R) [5][6]
2004: Al Gore / Joe Biden (D)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.
[4] Vice President Brown announces that he would run for Governor of California again in 1998.
[5] President Cheney dies of a unexpected stroke on June 1st, 2001.
[6] First Female President

Perot in '92
1992: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)

Badshah
August 18th, 2011, 01:11 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1992: Warren Buffett / Jerry Brown (D)
1996: Warren Buffett / Steve Jobs (D) [4]
2000: Dick Cheney / Elizabeth Dole (R)
2001: Elizabeth Dole / Martha Stewart (R) [5][6]
2004: Al Gore / Joe Biden (D)
2008: Al Gore/ Joe Biden (D)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.
[4] Vice President Brown announces that he would run for Governor of California again in 1998.
[5] President Cheney dies of a unexpected stroke on June 1st, 2001.
[6] First Female President

Perot in '92
1992: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
1996: Ross Perot/ James Stockdale (I)

Tony
August 18th, 2011, 02:00 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1992: Warren Buffett / Jerry Brown (D)
1996: Warren Buffett / Steve Jobs (D) [4]
2000: Dick Cheney / Elizabeth Dole (R)
2001: Elizabeth Dole / Martha Stewart (R) [5][6]
2004: Al Gore / Joe Biden (D)
2008: Al Gore / Joe Biden (D)
2012: Scott Brown / Marco Rubio (R)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.
[4] Vice President Brown announces that he would run for Governor of California again in 1998.
[5] President Cheney dies of a unexpected stroke on June 1st, 2001.
[6] First Female President

Perot in '92
1992: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
1996: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
2000: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)

Zacoftheaxes
August 18th, 2011, 03:02 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1992: Warren Buffett / Jerry Brown (D)
1996: Warren Buffett / Steve Jobs (D) [4]
2000: Dick Cheney / Elizabeth Dole (R)
2001: Elizabeth Dole / Martha Stewart (R) [5][6]
2004: Al Gore / Joe Biden (D)
2008: Al Gore / Joe Biden (D)
2012: Scott Brown / Marco Rubio (R)
2016: Scott Brown / Marco Rubio (R)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.
[4] Vice President Brown announces that he would run for Governor of California again in 1998.
[5] President Cheney dies of a unexpected stroke on June 1st, 2001.
[6] First Female President

Perot in '92
1992: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
1996: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
2000: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)
2004: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)

Tony
August 18th, 2011, 04:36 AM
Ike Runs as a Democrat
1952: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower / Adalai Stevenson (D)
1960: Nelson Rockefeller / William Knowland (R)
1963: William Knowland / vacant (R) [1]
1964: William Knowland / Margaret Chase Smith (R) [2]
1968: Robert F. Kennedy /John Wayne (D)
1972: Robert F. Kennedy/ John Wayne (D)
1976: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1980: John Wayne / Edmund Muskie (D)
1982: Edmund Muskie / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [3]
1984: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1988: Donald Rumsfeld / Dick Cheney (R)
1992: Warren Buffett / Jerry Brown (D)
1996: Warren Buffett / Steve Jobs (D) [4]
2000: Dick Cheney / Elizabeth Dole (R)
2001: Elizabeth Dole / Martha Stewart (R) [5][6]
2004: Al Gore / Joe Biden (D)
2008: Al Gore / Joe Biden (D)
2012: Scott Brown / Marco Rubio (R)
2016: Scott Brown / Marco Rubio (R)
2020: Bobby Jindal / Rand Paul (R)
[1] President Rockefeller assassinated in San Francisco.
[2] First Female Vice President
[3] John Wayne died of stomach cancer on June 11, 1982.
[4] Vice President Brown announces that he would run for Governor of California again in 1998.
[5] President Cheney dies of a unexpected stroke on June 1st, 2001.
[6] First Female President

Perot in '92
1992: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
1996: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
2000: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)
2004: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)
2008: Angus King / Tim Penny (A) [1]
[1] Ross Perot and his supporters formed the American Party, which replaced the Democrats as the second largest party in the House of Representatives in 2006.

Constantinople
August 18th, 2011, 06:09 AM
Kennedy not shot

1964: Barry Goldwater/William E. Miller (R) [1]

[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.

Charles James Fox
August 18th, 2011, 06:13 AM
Kennedy not shot

1964: Barry Goldwater/William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey/George Smathers (D)

[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.

Perot in '92
1992: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
1996: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
2000: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)
2004: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)
2008: Angus King / Tim Penny (A) [1]
2012: Angus King / Tim Penny (A)
[1] Ross Perot and his supporters formed the American Party, which replaced the Democrats as the second largest party in the House of Representatives in 2006.

Tony
August 18th, 2011, 06:48 AM
Kennedy not shot

1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.

Perot in '92
1992: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
1996: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
2000: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)
2004: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)
2008: Angus King / Tim Penny (A) [1]
2012: Angus King / Tim Penny (A)
2016: Dean Barkley / Jim Trafficant (A)
[1] Ross Perot and his supporters formed the American Party, which replaced the Democrats as the second largest party in the House of Representatives in 2006.

achilles483
August 18th, 2011, 12:22 PM
Kennedy not shot

1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)

[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.

Perot in '92
1992: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
1996: Ross Perot / James Stockdale (I)
2000: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)
2004: John McCain / George Voinovich (R)
2008: Angus King / Tim Penny (A) [1]
2012: Angus King / Tim Penny (A)
2016: Dean Barkley / Jim Trafficant (A)
2020: Marco Rubio / Paul Ryan (R)
[1] Ross Perot and his supporters formed the American Party, which replaced the Democrats as the second largest party in the House of Representatives in 2006.

Tony
August 18th, 2011, 12:28 PM
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.

Shadowlord
August 18th, 2011, 02:59 PM
Kennedy not shot
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
1984: Lloyd Bentsen / Michael Dukakis (D)
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.

Cuomo in '88
1988: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)

Tony
August 18th, 2011, 03:28 PM
Kennedy not shot
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
1984: Lloyd Bentsen / Michael Dukakis (D)
1988: Robert Kasten / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.

Cuomo in '88
1988: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)
1992: Jack Kemp / Pierre S. du Pont IV (R)

Badshah
August 18th, 2011, 11:17 PM
Kennedy not shot
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
1984: Lloyd Bentsen / Michael Dukakis (D)
1988: Robert Kasten / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen/ Michael Dukakis (D)
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.

Cuomo in '88
1988: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)
1992: Jack Kemp / Pierre S. du Pont IV (R)
1996: Bill Clinton/ Jesse Jackson (D)

Tony
August 19th, 2011, 12:57 AM
Kennedy not shot
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
1984: Lloyd Bentsen / Michael Dukakis (D)
1988: Robert Kasten / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen/ Michael Dukakis (D)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.

Cuomo in '88
1988: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)
1992: Jack Kemp / Pierre S. du Pont IV (R)
1996: Bill Clinton/ Jesse Jackson (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (R)

Zacoftheaxes
August 19th, 2011, 03:41 AM
Kennedy not shot
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
1984: Lloyd Bentsen / Michael Dukakis (D)
1988: Robert Kasten / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen/ Michael Dukakis (D)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2000: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.

Cuomo in '88
1988: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)
1992: Jack Kemp / Pierre S. du Pont IV (R)
1996: Bill Clinton/ Jesse Jackson (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (R)
2001: John Ashcroft/Karl Rove (R) [1]

[1] Buchanan killed in a terrorist attack on White House, Ashcroft becomes President and appoints Secretary of State Karl Rove as VP

Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.

Badshah
August 19th, 2011, 03:57 AM
Kennedy not shot
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
1984: Lloyd Bentsen / Michael Dukakis (D)
1988: Robert Kasten / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen/ Michael Dukakis (D)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2000: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2004: Hillary Rodham/Colin Powell (D)
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.

Cuomo in '88
1988: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)
1992: Jack Kemp / Pierre S. du Pont IV (R)
1996: Bill Clinton/ Jesse Jackson (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (R)
2001: John Ashcroft/Karl Rove (R) [1]
2004: Jesse Jackson/ Ted Kennedy (D)

[1] Buchanan killed in a terrorist attack on White House, Ashcroft becomes President and appoints Secretary of State Karl Rove as VP

Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)
[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.

Constantinople
August 19th, 2011, 04:38 AM
Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition]




[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.

Tony
August 19th, 2011, 04:50 AM
Kennedy not shot
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
1984: Lloyd Bentsen / Michael Dukakis (D)
1988: Robert Kasten / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen/ Michael Dukakis (D)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2000: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2004: Hillary Rodham / Colin Powell (D)
2008: Hillary Rodham / Colin Powell (D)
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.

Cuomo in '88
1988: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)
1992: Jack Kemp / Pierre S. du Pont IV (R)
1996: Bill Clinton/ Jesse Jackson (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (R)
2001: John Ashcroft / Karl Rove (R) [1]
2004: Jesse Jackson/ Ted Kennedy (D)
2008: Oliver North / Mike Huckabee (R)
[1] Buchanan killed in a terrorist attack on White House, Ashcroft becomes President and appoints Secretary of State Karl Rove as VP.

Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.

Constantinople
August 19th, 2011, 05:03 AM
Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]


[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.

Tony
August 19th, 2011, 06:41 AM
Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]
1988: Richard Nixon / William J. Clinton (RD)
[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.

Megaman03
August 19th, 2011, 06:56 AM
Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]
1988: Richard Nixon / William J. Clinton (RD)
1992: Richard Walton / Eric chester (United Socialist Party)

[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.

Tony
August 19th, 2011, 06:57 AM
Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]
1988: Richard Nixon / William J. Clinton (RD)
1992: Richard Walton / Eric Chester (United Socialist Party)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (Conservative) [5]
[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.
[5] Though Walton managed to win the election of 1992 as a third party candidate against Clinton (RD) and Haig (Con); lacking support from the Congress, Walton was unable to push forwards his socialist agenda. Pat Buchanan defeats the Republican Democratic ticket of Chuck Robb and Richard Lugar; and the USP ticket of Walton and Chester. The United States has now entered an era of even darker days.

Shadowlord
August 19th, 2011, 10:31 AM
Kennedy not shot
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
1984: Lloyd Bentsen / Michael Dukakis (D)
1988: Robert Kasten / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen/ Michael Dukakis (D)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2000: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2004: Hillary Rodham / Colin Powell (D) [3] [4]
2008: Hillary Rodham / Colin Powell (D)
2012: Susan Collins / Marco Rubio (R) [5]
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.
[3] First Female President
[4] First African American Vice President
[5] First Hispanic Vice President

Cuomo in '88
1988: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)
1992: Jack Kemp / Pierre S. du Pont IV (R)
1996: Bill Clinton/ Jesse Jackson (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (R)
2001: John Ashcroft / Karl Rove (R) [1]
2004: Jesse Jackson/ Ted Kennedy (D) [2]
2008: Oliver North / Mike Huckabee (R)
2012: Andrew Cuomo / Evan Bayh (D)
[1] Buchanan killed in a terrorist attack on White House, Ashcroft becomes President and appoints Secretary of State Karl Rove as VP.
[2] First African American President

Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]
1988: Richard Nixon / William J. Clinton (RD)
1992: Richard Walton / Eric Chester (United Socialist Party)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (Conservative) [5]
2000: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD) [6] [7]
[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.
[5] Though Walton managed to win the election of 1992 as a third party candidate against Clinton (RD) and Haig (Con); lacking support from the Congress, Walton was unable to push forwards his socialist agenda. Pat Buchanan defeats the Republican Democratic ticket of Chuck Robb and Richard Lugar; and the USP ticket of Walton and Chester. The United States has now entered an era of even darker days.
[6] The Republican Democratic Party is swept back into power after Buchanan's failed attempt to overturn the reforms of the Nixon era.
[7] First Female President.

Tony
August 19th, 2011, 12:27 PM
Kennedy not shot
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
1984: Lloyd Bentsen / Michael Dukakis (D)
1988: Robert Kasten / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen/ Michael Dukakis (D)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2000: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2004: Hillary Rodham / Colin Powell (D) [3] [4]
2008: Hillary Rodham / Colin Powell (D)
2012: Susan Collins / Marco Rubio (R) [5]
2016: Susan Collins / Marco Rubio (R)
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.
[3] First Female President
[4] First African American Vice President
[5] First Hispanic Vice President

Cuomo in '88
1988: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)
1992: Jack Kemp / Pierre S. du Pont IV (R)
1996: Bill Clinton/ Jesse Jackson (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (R)
2001: John Ashcroft / Karl Rove (R) [1]
2004: Jesse Jackson/ Ted Kennedy (D) [2]
2008: Oliver North / Mike Huckabee (R)
2012: Andrew Cuomo / Evan Bayh (D)
2016: Andrew Cuomo / Evan Bayh (D)
[1] Buchanan killed in a terrorist attack on White House, Ashcroft becomes President and appoints Secretary of State Karl Rove as VP.
[2] First African American President

Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]
1988: Richard Nixon / William J. Clinton (RD)
1992: Richard Walton / Eric Chester (United Socialist Party)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (Conservative) [5]
2000: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD) [6] [7]
2004: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD)
[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.
[5] Though Walton managed to win the election of 1992 as a third party candidate against Clinton (RD) and Haig (Con); lacking support from the Congress, Walton was unable to push forwards his socialist agenda. Pat Buchanan defeats the Republican Democratic ticket of Chuck Robb and Richard Lugar; and the USP ticket of Walton and Chester. The United States has now entered an era of even darker days.
[6] The Republican Democratic Party is swept back into power after Buchanan's failed attempt to overturn the reforms of the Nixon era.
[7] First Female President.

Constantinople
August 19th, 2011, 10:45 PM
Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)[/COLOR]
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]
1988: Richard Nixon / William J. Clinton (RD)
1992: Richard Walton / Eric Chester (United Socialist Party)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (Conservative) [5]
2000: Pat Buchanan (Conservative) / Bernie Sanders (USP) [6]

[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.
[5] Though Walton managed to win the election of 1992 as a third party candidate against Clinton (RD) and Haig (Con); lacking support from the Congress, Walton was unable to push forwards his socialist agenda. Pat Buchanan defeats the Republican Democratic ticket of Chuck Robb and Richard Lugar; and the USP ticket of Walton and Chester. The United States has now entered an era of even darker days.
[6] The Conservatives are reelected in a highly contentious election with widespread corruption and political violence. The conservatives manage to secure the presidency, by the socialists, coming second in electoral votes but first in popular vote manage to get the vice presidency. The vice president actively speaks out against the president immediately, and a civil war erupts in the executive branch. The privatisation of social security, and the abolition of the Dept. of Education, and various programs like the National Endowment of the Arts in the first term are all starting to be felt. States like California, New York, Washington, and all of New England, constantly being ignored and savaged and robbed by the federal government for the benefit of Real America begin to deeply assert their political and economic powers, in an attempt to save their states. Cooperation between these blue states, the red states and the federal government begins to break down. California (as an example) begins to pass (almost certainly illegal) laws aimed at curbing federal tax and ground presence in the state. Others begin to follow. Poverty is at an all time high, and so is the wealth of the upper 1%. The occupation of various middle eastern states, (Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan) is causing tens of thousands of deaths, especially among national guard units largely taken from blue states.

Constantinople
August 19th, 2011, 10:46 PM
Bummer! I liked mine!

Badshah
August 19th, 2011, 11:15 PM
Kennedy not shot
1964: Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller (R) [1]
1968: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1972: John Wayne / Charles Percy (R)
1976: Robert F. Kennedy / Henry Jackson (D)
1980: Robert F. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D) [2]
1984: Lloyd Bentsen / Michael Dukakis (D)
1988: Robert Kasten / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen/ Michael Dukakis (D)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2000: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (R)
2004: Hillary Rodham / Colin Powell (D) [3] [4]
2008: Hillary Rodham / Colin Powell (D)
2012: Susan Collins / Marco Rubio (R) [5]
2016: Susan Collins / Marco Rubio (R)
2020: Mark Zuckerburg/ Angelina Jolie (D)
[1] Kennedy's various diseases, addictions and sexual issues are exposed in early 1964. Along with his increasingly unpopular small scale involvement in Vietnam, he is crushed by Goldwater. If anything it is the anti-Kennedy vote (and the Dixiecrats in the south) which is responsible for Goldwater's victory, and not necessarily Goldwaters campaign or message.
[2] Jackson refused to run for reelection due to poor health.
[3] First Female President
[4] First African American Vice President
[5] First Hispanic Vice President

Cuomo in '88
1988: Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton (D)
1992: Jack Kemp / Pierre S. du Pont IV (R)
1996: Bill Clinton/ Jesse Jackson (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (R)
2001: John Ashcroft / Karl Rove (R) [1]
2004: Jesse Jackson/ Ted Kennedy (D) [2]
2008: Oliver North / Mike Huckabee (R)
2012: Andrew Cuomo / Evan Bayh (D)
2016: Andrew Cuomo / Evan Bayh (D)
2020: Chris Christie/Sohail Mohammed (R)
[1] Buchanan killed in a terrorist attack on White House, Ashcroft becomes President and appoints Secretary of State Karl Rove as VP.
[2] First African American President

Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]
1988: Richard Nixon / William J. Clinton (RD)
1992: Richard Walton / Eric Chester (United Socialist Party)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (Conservative) [5]
2000: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD) [6] [7]
2004: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD)
2008: Jerry Brown/ Mitt Romney (RD)
[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.
[5] Though Walton managed to win the election of 1992 as a third party candidate against Clinton (RD) and Haig (Con); lacking support from the Congress, Walton was unable to push forwards his socialist agenda. Pat Buchanan defeats the Republican Democratic ticket of Chuck Robb and Richard Lugar; and the USP ticket of Walton and Chester. The United States has now entered an era of even darker days.
[6] The Republican Democratic Party is swept back into power after Buchanan's failed attempt to overturn the reforms of the Nixon era.
[7] First Female President.
__________________

Constantinople
August 20th, 2011, 12:38 AM
]Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)[/COLOR]
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]
1988: Richard Nixon / William J. Clinton (RD)
1992: Richard Walton / Eric Chester (United Socialist Party)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (Conservative) [5]
2000: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD) [6] [7]
2004: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD)
2008: Jerry Brown/ Mitt Romney (RD)
2012: Jerry Brown/ Mitt Romney (RD)

[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.
[5] Though Walton managed to win the election of 1992 as a third party candidate against Clinton (RD) and Haig (Con); lacking support from the Congress, Walton was unable to push forwards his socialist agenda. Pat Buchanan defeats the Republican Democratic ticket of Chuck Robb and Richard Lugar; and the USP ticket of Walton and Chester. The United States has now entered an era of even darker days.
[6] The Republican Democratic Party is swept back into power after Buchanan's failed attempt to overturn the reforms of the Nixon era.
[7] First Female President.[/B]

Tony
August 20th, 2011, 02:01 AM
Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)[/COLOR]
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]
1988: Richard Nixon / William J. Clinton (RD)
1992: Richard Walton / Eric Chester (United Socialist Party)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (Conservative) [5]
2000: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD) [6] [7]
2004: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD)
2008: Jerry Brown / Mitt Romney (RD)
2012: Jerry Brown / Mitt Romney (RD)
2016: Steve Jobs / Scott Brown (RD)
[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.
[5] Though Walton managed to win the election of 1992 as a third party candidate against Clinton (RD) and Haig (Con); lacking support from the Congress, Walton was unable to push forwards his socialist agenda. Pat Buchanan defeats the Republican Democratic ticket of Chuck Robb and Richard Lugar; and the USP ticket of Walton and Chester. The United States has now entered an era of even darker days.
[6] The Republican Democratic Party is swept back into power after Buchanan's failed attempt to overturn the reforms of the Nixon era.
[7] First Female President.

Constantinople
August 20th, 2011, 02:24 AM
[QUOTE=tonykwok;4919628]Darker Days
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (AIP) [1]
1972: George Wallace/ Curtis LeMay (AIP)[/COLOR]
1976: Richard Nixon (R)/ George McGovern (D)[Unity Coalition] [2]
1980: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [3]
1984: Richard Nixon / Lloyd Bentsen (RD) [4]
1988: Richard Nixon / William J. Clinton (RD)
1992: Richard Walton / Eric Chester (United Socialist Party)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (Conservative) [5]
2000: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD) [6] [7]
2004: Hillary Clinton / John McCain (RD)
2008: Jerry Brown / Mitt Romney (RD)
2012: Jerry Brown / Mitt Romney (RD)
2016: Steve Jobs / Scott Brown (RD)
2020: Steve Jobs / Jerry Brown (RD) [8]


[1] American Independent Party pulls off a very narrow victory after a rough campaign for both major parties.
[2] Nixon makes another comeback in a coalition with the democratic party when the disastrous AIP presidency breaks down party barriers. With ever more nations falling to communism, a civil war in Mexico, icy relations with Europe and major civil rights issues in addition to political and economic paralysis, the chronic underdog, Nixon, is immensely popular.
[3] Moderates and Liberals in both the Democratic and Republican parties combined to become the Republican Democratic Party. Conservatives in both parties and the AIP merged to form the Conservative Party.
[4] The repeal of presidential term limits allows Nixon to run yet again, "to stabilize the country after the disastrous and paranoid 1970s." . His major social reforms and economic (popular) Keynesian policies are supported by the people who are tired of years of economic ruin. The RD parities successful championing of universal healthcare and The final pulling out from South Vietnam in late 1979 clinch reelection.
[5] Though Walton managed to win the election of 1992 as a third party candidate against Clinton (RD) and Haig (Con); lacking support from the Congress, Walton was unable to push forwards his socialist agenda. Pat Buchanan defeats the Republican Democratic ticket of Chuck Robb and Richard Lugar; and the USP ticket of Walton and Chester. The United States has now entered an era of even darker days.
[6] The Republican Democratic Party is swept back into power after Buchanan's failed attempt to overturn the reforms of the Nixon era.
[7] First Female President.
[8] Scott Brown replaced by former president Jerry Brown as vice president after he joins the conservative party.

Nazi Space Spy
August 20th, 2011, 02:30 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955

1956: Richard Nixon/Harold Stassen (R) [1]

1. Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.

jmill
August 20th, 2011, 02:37 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955

1956: Richard Nixon/Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon/Harold Stassen (R)
1. Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divide

Tony
August 20th, 2011, 03:05 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divide

Nazi Space Spy
August 20th, 2011, 03:14 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/John Tower (R)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.

Tony
August 20th, 2011, 03:19 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.

Bush assassinated in Tbilisi
2005: Dick Cheney / Donald Rumsfeld (R)

Badshah
August 20th, 2011, 03:27 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: George Smathers/Geraldine Ferraro (D)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.

Bush assassinated in Tbilisi
2005: Dick Cheney / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
2008: Howard Dean/ Nancy Pelosi (D)

MaskedPickle
August 20th, 2011, 03:28 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson/Milton Shapp (D)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.

Bush assassinated in Tbilisi
2005: Dick Cheney / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
2007: Donald Rumsfeld/Sam Brownback [1]

[1] Cheney suffers a massive stroke

Nazi Space Spy
August 20th, 2011, 03:33 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson/Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp/vacant (D) [2]
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.

Bush assassinated in Tbilisi
2005: Dick Cheney / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
2007: Donald Rumsfeld/Sam Brownback [1]
2008: Evan Bayh/Tim Kaine (D)

[1] Cheney suffers a massive stroke

Badshah
August 20th, 2011, 03:34 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson/Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp/vacant (D) [2]
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.

Bush assassinated in Tbilisi
2005: Dick Cheney / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
2007: Donald Rumsfeld/Sam Brownback [1]
2008: Evan Bayh/Tim Kaine (D)

[1] Cheney suffers a massive stroke
Hey, I posted first!:mad:

Badshah
August 20th, 2011, 03:35 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson/Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp/vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp/Geraldine Ferraro (D)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.

Bush assassinated in Tbilisi
2005: Dick Cheney / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
2007: Donald Rumsfeld/Sam Brownback [1]
2008: Evan Bayh/Tim Kaine (D)
2012: Evan Bayh/ Tim Kaine (D)

Tony
August 20th, 2011, 03:50 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.

Bush assassinated in Tbilisi
2005: Dick Cheney / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
2007: Donald Rumsfeld / Sam Brownback [1]
2008: Evan Bayh /Tim Kaine (D)
2012: Evan Bayh/ Tim Kaine (D)
2016: Rick Perry / George P. Bush (R)
[1] Cheney suffers a massive stroke

Nazi Space Spy
August 20th, 2011, 03:52 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.

Bush assassinated in Tbilisi
2005: Dick Cheney / Donald Rumsfeld (R)
2007: Donald Rumsfeld / Sam Brownback [1]
2008: Evan Bayh /Tim Kaine (D)
2012: Evan Bayh/ Tim Kaine (D)
2016: Rick Perry / George P. Bush (R)
2020: Rick Perry/ George P. Bush (R)
[1] Cheney suffers a massive stroke

Badshah
August 20th, 2011, 03:57 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro/ Ted Kennedy (D)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.

Nazi Space Spy
August 20th, 2011, 04:03 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro/ Ted Kennedy (D)
1996: Geraldine Ferraro/Ted Kaczynski (D) [3]
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.
[3] Kennedy declines another term, replaced by a young Montana Senator...

Badshah
August 20th, 2011, 04:04 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro/ Ted Kennedy (D)
1996: Geraldine Ferraro/Ted Kaczynski (D) [3]
2000:Bob Dole/ George H.W. Bush (R)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.
[3] Kennedy declines another term, replaced by a young Montana Senator...

Nazi Space Spy
August 20th, 2011, 04:07 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro/ Ted Kennedy (D)
1996: Geraldine Ferraro/Ted Kaczynski (D) [3]
2000:Strom Thurmond/ George H.W. Bush (R)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.
[3] Kennedy declines another term, replaced by a young Montana Senator...
Im calling ASB. No way a man who ran for President BEFORE this lists POD is not going to be President at age 98.

Badshah
August 20th, 2011, 04:33 AM
Im calling ASB. No way a man who ran for President BEFORE this lists POD is not going to be President at age 98.
Edited.
filler

Tony
August 20th, 2011, 04:39 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kennedy (D)
1996: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kaczynski (D) [3]
2000: Bob Dole / George H.W. Bush (R)
2003: Newt Gingrich / Lamar Alexander (R) [4]
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.
[3] Kennedy declines another term, replaced by a young Montana Senator...
[4] Both Dole and Bush killed in the White House by a terrorist attack staged by the Jemaah Islamiyah‎. Speaker Gingrich became President, and ordered military actions against Muslim Indonesia.

Badshah
August 20th, 2011, 04:43 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kennedy (D)
1996: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kaczynski (D) [3]
2000: Bob Dole / George H.W. Bush (R)
2003: Newt Gingrich / Lamar Alexander (R) [4]
2004: Bill Clinton/ John Edwards (D)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.
[3] Kennedy declines another term, replaced by a young Montana Senator...
[4] Both Dole and Bush killed in the White House by a terrorist attack staged by the Jemaah Islamiyah‎. Speaker Gingrich became President, and ordered military actions against Muslim Indonesia.

Tony
August 20th, 2011, 04:52 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kennedy (D)
1996: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kaczynski (D) [3]
2000: Bob Dole / George H.W. Bush (R)
2003: Newt Gingrich / Lamar Alexander (R) [4]
2004: Bill Clinton/ John Edwards (D)
2007: John Boehner / Rudy Giuliani (R) [5]
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.
[3] Kennedy declines another term, replaced by a young Montana Senator...
[4] Both Dole and Bush killed in the White House by a terrorist attack staged by the Jemaah Islamiyah‎. Speaker Gingrich became President, and ordered military actions against Muslim Indonesia.
[5] Both Clinton and Edwards impeached on federal campaign finance charges for allegedly using campaign donations to fund their respective mistresses in the 2004 election. Huge anti-Congress and anti-government protests broke out across the country.

Nazi Space Spy
August 20th, 2011, 04:58 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kennedy (D)
1996: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kaczynski (D) [3]
2000: Bob Dole / George H.W. Bush (R)
2003: Newt Gingrich / Lamar Alexander (R) [4]
2004: Bill Clinton/ John Edwards (D)
2007: John Boehner / Rudy Giuliani (R) [5]
2008: Ron Paul/Gary Johnson
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.
[3] Kennedy declines another term, replaced by a young Montana Senator...
[4] Both Dole and Bush killed in the White House by a terrorist attack staged by the Jemaah Islamiyah‎. Speaker Gingrich became President, and ordered military actions against Muslim Indonesia.
[5] Both Clinton and Edwards impeached on federal campaign finance charges for allegedly using campaign donations to fund their respective mistresses in the 2004 election. Huge anti-Congress and anti-government protests broke out across the country.[/QUOTE]

Shadowlord
August 20th, 2011, 05:06 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kennedy (D)
1996: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kaczynski (D) [3]
2000: Bob Dole / George H.W. Bush (R)
2003: Newt Gingrich / Lamar Alexander (R) [4]
2004: Bill Clinton/ John Edwards (D)
2007: John Boehner / Rudy Giuliani (R) [5]
2008: Ron Paul/Gary Johnson
2012: Russ Feingold / Evan Bayh (D)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.
[3] Kennedy declines another term, replaced by a young Montana Senator...
[4] Both Dole and Bush killed in the White House by a terrorist attack staged by the Jemaah Islamiyah‎. Speaker Gingrich became President, and ordered military actions against Muslim Indonesia.
[5] Both Clinton and Edwards impeached on federal campaign finance charges for allegedly using campaign donations to fund their respective mistresses in the 2004 election. Huge anti-Congress and anti-government protests broke out across the country.

Badshah
August 20th, 2011, 05:30 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kennedy (D)
1996: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kaczynski (D) [3]
2000: Bob Dole / George H.W. Bush (R)
2003: Newt Gingrich / Lamar Alexander (R) [4]
2004: Bill Clinton/ John Edwards (D)
2007: John Boehner / Rudy Giuliani (R) [5]
2008: Ron Paul/Gary Johnson
2012: Russ Feingold / Evan Bayh (D)
2016: Russ Feingold/Evan Bayh (D) [6]
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.
[3] Kennedy declines another term, replaced by a young Montana Senator...
[4] Both Dole and Bush killed in the White House by a terrorist attack staged by the Jemaah Islamiyah‎. Speaker Gingrich became President, and ordered military actions against Muslim Indonesia.
[5] Both Clinton and Edwards impeached on federal campaign finance charges for allegedly using campaign donations to fund their respective mistresses in the 2004 election. Huge anti-Congress and anti-government protests broke out across the country.
[6] Ended the Indonesian War successfully during this term, and brokering peace between Israel and Palestine. Largely seen as the Peacemaker.

Tony
August 20th, 2011, 06:12 AM
Eisenhower dies in 1955
1956: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R) [1]
1960: Richard Nixon / Harold Stassen (R)
1964: Hubert Humphrey / George Smathers (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan /John Tower (R)
1976: Henry M. Jackson / Milton Shapp (D)
1979: Milton Shapp / vacant (D) [2]
1980: Milton Shapp / Geraldine Ferraro (D)
1984: Howard Baker / Paul Laxalt (R)
1988: Howard Baker/ Paul Laxalt (R)
1992: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kennedy (D)
1996: Geraldine Ferraro / Ted Kaczynski (D) [3]
2000: Bob Dole / George H.W. Bush (R)
2003: Newt Gingrich / Lamar Alexander (R) [4]
2004: Bill Clinton/ John Edwards (D)
2007: John Boehner / Rudy Giuliani (R) [5]
2008: Ron Paul/Gary Johnson
2012: Russ Feingold / Evan Bayh (D)
2016: Russ Feingold / Evan Bayh (D) [6]
2020: Mark Warner / Anthony D. Weiner (D)
[1] Eisenhower dies of a heart attack in 1955. Nixon becomes the 35th President, but receives heavy opposition from within his own party. He is forced to take arch rival Harold Stassen as a running mate after a divided convention.
[2] Henry Jackson dies in a plane crash.
[3] Kennedy declines another term, replaced by a young Montana Senator...
[4] Both Dole and Bush killed in the White House by a terrorist attack staged by the Jemaah Islamiyah‎. Speaker Gingrich became President, and ordered military actions against Muslim Indonesia.
[5] Both Clinton and Edwards impeached on federal campaign finance charges for allegedly using campaign donations to fund their respective mistresses in the 2004 election. Huge anti-Congress and anti-government protests broke out across the country.
[6] Ended the Indonesian War successfully during this term, and brokering peace between Israel and Palestine. Largely seen as the Peacemaker.

Badshah
August 20th, 2011, 06:41 AM
Hamilton kills Burr

1804: Alexander Hamilton/Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)

Zacoftheaxes
August 20th, 2011, 02:59 PM
Hamilton kills Burr

1804: Alexander Hamilton/Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton/Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)

Thande
August 20th, 2011, 03:17 PM
Suggestion for a future idea for this thread: list Presidents/Governors/National Executives of the USA according to one of the other constitutional proposals (http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/showpost.php?p=4921390&postcount=10). Note the different term limits under the different plans.

MaskedPickle
August 20th, 2011, 03:22 PM
Hamilton kills Burr

1804: Alexander Hamilton/Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton/Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King/Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)

Alternatehistorybuff5341
August 20th, 2011, 03:36 PM
Hamilton kills Burr

1804: Alexander Hamilton/Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton/Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King/Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)

Shadowlord
August 20th, 2011, 03:37 PM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton/Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton/Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King/Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)

An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

Tony
August 20th, 2011, 03:47 PM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)

An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

MaskedPickle
August 20th, 2011, 04:31 PM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)

An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

President_Gore
August 20th, 2011, 05:16 PM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)

An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1984: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

Badshah
August 20th, 2011, 05:26 PM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)

An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1984: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Sam Nunn/ Walter Mondale (D)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

MaskedPickle
August 20th, 2011, 05:59 PM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection

An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1984: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Sam Nunn/ Walter Mondale (D)
1992: Lamar Alexander/Arlen Specter (R)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

freethinker
August 21st, 2011, 04:03 AM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection

An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1984: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Sam Nunn/ Walter Mondale (D)
1992: Lamar Alexander/Arlen Specter (R)
1996: Walter Mondale/ Tom Harkin (D)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

Nazi Space Spy
August 21st, 2011, 04:16 AM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection

An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1984: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Sam Nunn/ Walter Mondale (D)
1992: Lamar Alexander/Arlen Specter (R)
1996: Walter Mondale/ Tom Harkin (D)
2000: Orrin Hatch/William Weld (R)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

freethinker
August 21st, 2011, 04:19 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1952: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection


An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1984: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Sam Nunn/ Walter Mondale (D)
1992: Lamar Alexander/Arlen Specter (R)
1996: Walter Mondale/ Tom Harkin (D)
2000: Orrin Hatch/William Weld (R)
2004: Tom Harkin / Bill Bradley
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

Zacoftheaxes
August 21st, 2011, 04:45 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection


An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1984: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Sam Nunn/ Walter Mondale (D)
1992: Lamar Alexander/Arlen Specter (R)
1996: Walter Mondale/ Tom Harkin (D)
2000: Orrin Hatch/William Weld (R)
2004: Tom Harkin / Bill Bradley (R)
2008: Tom Harkin / Bill Bradley (R)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

Badshah
August 21st, 2011, 04:48 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860:Andrew Johnson/ Jefferson Davis (Democrat-Republican)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection


An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1984: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Sam Nunn/ Walter Mondale (D)
1992: Lamar Alexander/Arlen Specter (R)
1996: Walter Mondale/ Tom Harkin (D)
2000: Orrin Hatch/William Weld (R)
2004: Tom Harkin / Bill Bradley (D)
2008: Tom Harkin / Bill Bradley (D)
2012: Bill Bradley/ Anrew Cuomo (D)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

Nazi Space Spy
August 21st, 2011, 05:10 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860:Andrew Johnson/ Jefferson Davis (Democrat-Republican)
1864:Andrew Johnson/ Jefferson Davis (Democrat-Republican)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection


An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1984: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Sam Nunn/ Walter Mondale (D)
1992: Lamar Alexander/Arlen Specter (R)
1996: Walter Mondale/ Tom Harkin (D)
2000: Orrin Hatch/William Weld (R)
2004: Tom Harkin / Bill Bradley (D)
2008: Tom Harkin / Bill Bradley (D)
2012: Bill Bradley/ Anrew Cuomo (D)
2016: John Bolton/Jeb Bush (R)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.

Wolfpaw
August 21st, 2011, 05:15 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)

[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection


An Earlier Bush Presidency
1974: George H.W. Bush / Nelson Rockefeller (R) [1]
1976: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1984: Jerry Brown/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Sam Nunn/ Walter Mondale (D)
1992: Lamar Alexander/Arlen Specter (R)
1996: Walter Mondale/ Tom Harkin (D)
2000: Orrin Hatch/William Weld (R)
2004: Tom Harkin / Bill Bradley (D)
2008: Tom Harkin / Bill Bradley (D)
2012: Bill Bradley / Andrew Cuomo (D)
2016: John Bolton / Jeb Bush (R)
2018: Andrew Cuomo / Antonio Villaraigosa (D)
[1] Bush wins his Senate race against Bentsen in 1970. He is later selected by Nixon to replace Agnew as VP.


Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)

Nazi Space Spy
August 21st, 2011, 05:25 AM
Can we have one list where Republicans are reelected. Im a Republican and I add to the list according to how the nation would be ATL. I wont reelect a Democrat in 84 if the POD is Reagan winning in 1980...:D

Tony
August 21st, 2011, 04:47 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection

MaskedPickle
August 21st, 2011, 05:02 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)

Zacoftheaxes
August 21st, 2011, 05:16 PM
I'd also like to mention that it's kinda unrealistic to never have Republicans win re-election.

Shadowlord
August 21st, 2011, 06:39 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
[1] Ford Assassinated.

Zacoftheaxes
August 21st, 2011, 06:48 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
[1] Ford Assassinated.

Paul V McNutt
August 21st, 2011, 11:13 PM
I think whomever survived the Burr Hamilton duel would havelost his political career.

Paul V McNutt
August 21st, 2011, 11:37 PM
George HW Bush 1989 - 1993
Bill Clinton 1993 - 2001
George W Bush 2001. - 2009
Hillary Clinton 2009 - 2017
Jeb Bush 2017 - 2025
Chelsea Clinton 2025 - 2033
Jenna Bush 2033 - 2041

Paul V McNutt
August 21st, 2011, 11:38 PM
Notice three Republicans got reelected.

MaskedPickle
August 21st, 2011, 11:46 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole/John Chafee (R) [2]
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.

Paul V McNutt
August 21st, 2011, 11:47 PM
I don't see how Nelson Rockefeller gets the Republican nomination in 1976.
Ronald Reagan almost beat Gerald Ford. Think he would make mince meat out of Rocky

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
[1] Ford Assassinated.
[/QUOTE]

Zacoftheaxes
August 22nd, 2011, 01:16 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland/Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)[3]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole/John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole/Ronald Reagan (R)
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.

JoeMulk
August 22nd, 2011, 01:22 AM
calling next

JoeMulk
August 22nd, 2011, 01:24 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland/Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)[3]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole/John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole/Ronald Reagan (R)
1984: Walter Mondale/Sam Nunn (D)
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.
__________________

Shadowlord
August 22nd, 2011, 01:33 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland/Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland/Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole/John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole/Ronald Reagan (R)
1984: Walter Mondale/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Walter Mondale/Sam Nunn (D)
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.

Zacoftheaxes
August 22nd, 2011, 01:43 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland/Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland/Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland/Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole/John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole/Ronald Reagan (R)
1984: Walter Mondale/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Walter Mondale/Sam Nunn (D)
1992: Newt Gingrich/Dan Quayle (R)
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.

Tony
August 22nd, 2011, 02:19 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole/John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole/Ronald Reagan (R)
1984: Walter Mondale/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Walter Mondale/Sam Nunn (D)
1992: Newt Gingrich/Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Newt Gingrich/Dan Quayle (R)
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.

Zacoftheaxes
August 22nd, 2011, 03:46 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant [5]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole/John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole/Ronald Reagan (R)
1984: Walter Mondale/Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Walter Mondale/Sam Nunn (D)
1992: Newt Gingrich/Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Newt Gingrich/Dan Quayle (R)
2000: Eric Cantor/Russ Feingold (D)
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.

Tony
August 22nd, 2011, 03:51 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole / John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole / Ronald Reagan (R)
1984: Walter Mondale / Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Walter Mondale / Sam Nunn (D)
1992: Newt Gingrich / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Newt Gingrich / Dan Quayle (R)
2000: Eric Cantor / Russ Feingold (D)
2004: Eric Cantor / Zell Miller (D) [2]
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.
[3] Feingold resigns from the ticket, calling Eric Cantor a Republican in disguise.

Zacoftheaxes
August 22nd, 2011, 04:15 AM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole / John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole / Ronald Reagan (R)
1984: Walter Mondale / Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Walter Mondale / Sam Nunn (D)
1992: Newt Gingrich / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Newt Gingrich / Dan Quayle (R)
2000: Eric Cantor / Russ Feingold (D)
2004: Eric Cantor / Zell Miller (D)
2008: Tom Tancredo/Herman Cain (R) [2]
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.
[3] Feingold resigns from the ticket, calling Eric Cantor a Republican in disguise.

Tony
August 22nd, 2011, 04:21 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole / John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole / Ronald Reagan (R)
1984: Walter Mondale / Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Walter Mondale / Sam Nunn (D)
1992: Newt Gingrich / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Newt Gingrich / Dan Quayle (R)
2000: Eric Cantor / Russ Feingold (D)
2004: Eric Cantor / Zell Miller (D) [3]
2008: Tom Tancredo / Herman Cain (R)
2012: Sherrod Brown / Harold Ford, Jr. (D)
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.
[3] Feingold resigns from the ticket, calling Eric Cantor a Republican in disguise.

Paul V McNutt
August 22nd, 2011, 01:26 PM
No incumbent could have been reelected in 1980.

Badshah
August 22nd, 2011, 02:56 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison/John Tyler (Whig)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole / John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole / Ronald Reagan (R)
1984: Walter Mondale / Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Walter Mondale / Sam Nunn (D)
1992: Newt Gingrich / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Newt Gingrich / Dan Quayle (R)
2000: Eric Cantor / Russ Feingold (D)
2004: Eric Cantor / Zell Miller (D) [3]
2008: Tom Tancredo / Herman Cain (R)
2012: Sherrod Brown / Harold Ford, Jr. (D)
2016: Sherrod Brown/ Harold Ford, Jr. (D)
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.
[3] Feingold resigns from the ticket, calling Eric Cantor a Republican in disguise.

Tony
August 22nd, 2011, 03:19 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.

President Rockefeller
1975: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R) [1]
1976: Nelson Rockefeller / Bob Dole (R)
1979: Bob Dole / John Chafee (R) [2]
1980: Bob Dole / Ronald Reagan (R)
1984: Walter Mondale / Sam Nunn (D)
1988: Walter Mondale / Sam Nunn (D)
1992: Newt Gingrich / Dan Quayle (R)
1996: Newt Gingrich / Dan Quayle (R)
2000: Eric Cantor / Russ Feingold (D)
2004: Eric Cantor / Zell Miller (D) [3]
2008: Tom Tancredo / Herman Cain (R)
2012: Sherrod Brown / Harold Ford, Jr. (D)
2016: Sherrod Brown/ Harold Ford, Jr. (D)
2020: Scott Brown / Tagg Romney (R)
[1] Ford Assassinated
[2] Rockefeller dies of a massive stroke.
[3] Feingold resigns from the ticket, calling Eric Cantor a Republican in disguise.

Shadowlord
August 22nd, 2011, 03:31 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.

Tony
August 22nd, 2011, 04:20 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley / Charles Sumner (Whig)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.

Badshah
August 22nd, 2011, 04:26 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs/Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley / Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley/ Charles Sumner (Whig)[6]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.

Tony
August 22nd, 2011, 04:30 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.

OOC: Oh great, Canadian Alaska:eek:

Zacoftheaxes
August 22nd, 2011, 07:21 PM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.

Nazi Space Spy
August 22nd, 2011, 08:33 PM
You need to butterfly the 20th amendment to keep the innaugeration in March for Dewey to be eligable to be President. He would be eligable for the Presidency only by a couple days in anycase!

Badshah
August 23rd, 2011, 01:29 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.

Zacoftheaxes
August 23rd, 2011, 01:36 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1944: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
1868: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [9]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.
[9] Progress is made pressing back the British into their own territory, The War in Europe reaches a stand still with Prussia-Russian-Spanish Alliance holding France and the Ottoman Empire taking Greece.

Badshah
August 23rd, 2011, 01:45 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1944: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
1868: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [9]
1872: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [10]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.
[9] Progress is made pressing back the British into their own territory, The War in Europe reaches a stand still with Prussia-Russian-Spanish Alliance holding France and the Ottoman Empire taking Greece.
[10] The war ends in a status quo antebellum, following the bloody battle of Concord. While the war continues in Europe, it's over for the US...who've really drained their finances on a two-front war, not getting enough aid by their allies.

Zacoftheaxes
August 23rd, 2011, 02:03 AM
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1944: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1948: Helen Taft Manning/Al Smith (Gold Party) [10]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
[10] First female president.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
1868: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [9]
1872: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [10]
1876: Millard Fillmore/Anthony E Roberts (American Republican) [11]
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.
[9] Progress is made pressing back the British into their own territory, The War in Europe reaches a stand still with Prussia-Russian-Spanish Alliance holding France and the Ottoman Empire taking Greece.
[10] The war ends in a status quo antebellum, following the bloody battle of Concord. While the war continues in Europe, it's over for the US...who've really drained their finances on a two-front war, not getting enough aid by their allies.
[11] The war ends in Europe with Russia, Prussia, and Spain winning. Russia takes western portions of British Canada, France fragmenting into three states, and the Ottoman Empire taking over the Balkans. America retains it's previous border with Canada and makes a small gain in Mexico. The nation is however very heavily in debt.

Constantinople
August 23rd, 2011, 05:38 AM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years

1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S Truman (Democrat)

TrickyNixon
August 23rd, 2011, 12:02 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years

1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democrat)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)

Paul V McNutt
August 23rd, 2011, 02:38 PM
Taft would have gone for a moderate to liberal running mate, probably from the East Coast. Someone this site paired him up with the then governor of New Jersey.

TrickyNixon
August 23rd, 2011, 02:43 PM
Taft would have gone for a moderate to liberal running mate, probably from the East Coast. Someone this site paired him up with the then governor of New Jersey.
I went with how Nixon was generally approved by both Eisenhower and Taft supporters in the party when he was nominated, he works as a sort of a compromise. I guess it seems weird though.

jmill
August 23rd, 2011, 04:23 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years

1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democrat)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)

AuH2O '64
1964: Bary Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)

TrickyNixon
August 23rd, 2011, 04:58 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years

1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democrat)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]

[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.


AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)

Badshah
August 23rd, 2011, 05:03 PM
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democrat)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/ John F. Kennedy (Democrat)

[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.


AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democrat)


(http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/newreply.php?do=newreply&p=4934024)

TrickyNixon
August 23rd, 2011, 05:22 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]

[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.

[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)

Badshah
August 23rd, 2011, 05:26 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)

[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.

[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro (Democratic)

TrickyNixon
August 23rd, 2011, 05:29 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1972: Nelson Rockefeller/George H.W Bush (Republican)

[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.

[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.


That wasn't supposed to be an election, Kennedy was assassinated before it.

TrickyNixon
August 23rd, 2011, 05:44 PM
Null and void post.

Zacoftheaxes
August 23rd, 2011, 05:58 PM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1944: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1948: Helen Taft Manning/Al Smith (Gold Party) [10]
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower/John F Kennedy (Independent)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
[10] First female president.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
1868: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [9]
1872: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [10]
1876: Millard Fillmore/Anthony E Roberts (American Republican) [11]
1880: Winfield Scott Hancock/Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.
[9] Progress is made pressing back the British into their own territory, The War in Europe reaches a stand still with Prussia-Russian-Spanish Alliance holding France and the Ottoman Empire taking Greece.
[10] The war ends in a status quo antebellum, following the bloody battle of Concord. While the war continues in Europe, it's over for the US...who've really drained their finances on a two-front war, not getting enough aid by their allies.
[11] The war ends in Europe with Russia, Prussia, and Spain winning. Russia takes western portions of British Canada, France fragmenting into three states, and the Ottoman Empire taking over the Balkans. America retains it's previous border with Canada and makes a small gain in Mexico. The nation is however very heavily in debt.

Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/vacant [3]

[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.

[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.

[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley/Lester "Les" Polsfuss (Independent)

TrickyNixon
August 23rd, 2011, 06:13 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/Vacant (Democratic) [3]
1976: Robert McNamara/Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)

[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.

[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.

[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley/Lester "Les" Polsfuss (Independent)
1988: Charles "Buddy" Holley/Lester "Les" Polsfuss (Independent)

Badshah
August 23rd, 2011, 06:19 PM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1944: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1948: Helen Taft Manning/Al Smith (Gold Party) [10]
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower/John F Kennedy (Independent)
1956: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (Social Federalist) [11]
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
[10] First female president.
[11] Kennedy switches parties after resigning as VP, and manages to get elected President.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
1868: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [9]
1872: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [10]
1876: Millard Fillmore/Anthony E Roberts (American Republican) [11]
1880: Winfield Scott Hancock/Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1884: Winfield Scott Hancock/ Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.
[9] Progress is made pressing back the British into their own territory, The War in Europe reaches a stand still with Prussia-Russian-Spanish Alliance holding France and the Ottoman Empire taking Greece.
[10] The war ends in a status quo antebellum, following the bloody battle of Concord. While the war continues in Europe, it's over for the US...who've really drained their finances on a two-front war, not getting enough aid by their allies.
[11] The war ends in Europe with Russia, Prussia, and Spain winning. Russia takes western portions of British Canada, France fragmenting into three states, and the Ottoman Empire taking over the Balkans. America retains it's previous border with Canada and makes a small gain in Mexico. The nation is however very heavily in debt.

Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/vacant [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/ Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)


[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.

[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.

[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley/Lester "Les" Polsfuss (Independent)
1988: Charles Holley/Lester Polfuss (Independent)

Shadowlord
August 23rd, 2011, 06:35 PM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1944: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1948: Helen Taft Manning/Al Smith (Gold Party) [10]
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower/John F Kennedy (Independent)
1956: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (Social Federalist) [11]
1960: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (SF)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
[10] First female president.
[11] Kennedy switches parties after resigning as VP, and manages to get elected President.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
1868: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [9]
1872: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [10]
1876: Millard Fillmore/Anthony E Roberts (American Republican) [11]
1880: Winfield Scott Hancock/Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1884: Winfield Scott Hancock/ Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.
[9] Progress is made pressing back the British into their own territory, The War in Europe reaches a stand still with Prussia-Russian-Spanish Alliance holding France and the Ottoman Empire taking Greece.
[10] The war ends in a status quo antebellum, following the bloody battle of Concord. While the war continues in Europe, it's over for the US...who've really drained their finances on a two-front war, not getting enough aid by their allies.
[11] The war ends in Europe with Russia, Prussia, and Spain winning. Russia takes western portions of British Canada, France fragmenting into three states, and the Ottoman Empire taking over the Balkans. America retains it's previous border with Canada and makes a small gain in Mexico. The nation is however very heavily in debt.

Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/vacant [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/ Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/ Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley/Lester "Les" Polsfuss (Independent)
1988: Charles Holley/Lester Polfuss (Independent)
1992: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)

TrickyNixon
August 23rd, 2011, 06:44 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/Vacant [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/ Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George H.W. Bush/Bob Dole (Republican)

[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley/Lester "Les" Polfuss (Independent)
1988: Charles Holley/Lester Polfuss (Independent)
1992: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
1996: Ross Perot/Patrick Choate (Reform)

Zacoftheaxes
August 23rd, 2011, 06:47 PM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1944: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1948: Helen Taft Manning/Al Smith (Gold Party) [10]
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower/John F Kennedy (Independent)
1956: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (Social Federalist) [11]
1960: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (SF)
1964: Barry Goldwater/George H. Bender (G)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
[10] First female president.
[11] Kennedy switches parties after resigning as VP, and manages to get elected President.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
1868: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [9]
1872: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [10]
1876: Millard Fillmore/Anthony E Roberts (American Republican) [11]
1880: Winfield Scott Hancock/Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1884: Winfield Scott Hancock/ Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1888: Winfield Scott Hancock/ Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.
[9] Progress is made pressing back the British into their own territory, The War in Europe reaches a stand still with Prussia-Russian-Spanish Alliance holding France and the Ottoman Empire taking Greece.
[10] The war ends in a status quo antebellum, following the bloody battle of Concord. While the war continues in Europe, it's over for the US...who've really drained their finances on a two-front war, not getting enough aid by their allies.
[11] The war ends in Europe with Russia, Prussia, and Spain winning. Russia takes western portions of British Canada, France fragmenting into three states, and the Ottoman Empire taking over the Balkans. America retains it's previous border with Canada and makes a small gain in Mexico. The nation is however very heavily in debt.

Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/vacant [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/ Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/ Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney/Alexander Haig (Republican)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley/Lester "Les" Polsfuss (Independent)
1988: Charles Holley/Lester Polfuss (Independent)
1992: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
1996: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)

Tony
August 26th, 2011, 03:37 AM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1944: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1948: Helen Taft Manning/Al Smith (Gold Party) [10]
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower/John F Kennedy (Independent)
1956: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (Social Federalist) [11]
1960: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (SF)
1964: Barry Goldwater/George H. Bender (G)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
[10] First female president.
[11] Kennedy switches parties after resigning as VP, and manages to get elected President.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
1868: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [9]
1872: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [10]
1876: Millard Fillmore/Anthony E Roberts (American Republican) [11]
1880: Winfield Scott Hancock/Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1884: Winfield Scott Hancock/ Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1888: Winfield Scott Hancock/ Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.
[9] Progress is made pressing back the British into their own territory, The War in Europe reaches a stand still with Prussia-Russian-Spanish Alliance holding France and the Ottoman Empire taking Greece.
[10] The war ends in a status quo antebellum, following the bloody battle of Concord. While the war continues in Europe, it's over for the US...who've really drained their finances on a two-front war, not getting enough aid by their allies.
[11] The war ends in Europe with Russia, Prussia, and Spain winning. Russia takes western portions of British Canada, France fragmenting into three states, and the Ottoman Empire taking over the Balkans. America retains it's previous border with Canada and makes a small gain in Mexico. The nation is however very heavily in debt.

Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/vacant [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/ Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/ Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney / Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley / Lester "Les" Polsfuss (Independent)
1988: Charles Holley / Lester Polfuss (Independent)
1992: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
1996: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / Oliver North (Republican) [1]
[1] General Colin Powell, Secretary of Defense and then Secretary of State of the Cuomo administration, ran as an independent. After Democrats nominated Senator Dennis Kucinich for president, who picked Senator Wellstone as his running mate; several DLC Democrats such as Senator Dave McCurdy and former Governor Bill Clinton endorsed Powell. Powell won the popular vote, but Pat Buchanan won narrowly in the electoral college, becoming the first Republican to win a presidential election since 1968.

King Nazar
August 26th, 2011, 05:24 AM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1944: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1948: Helen Taft Manning/Al Smith (Gold Party) [10]
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower/John F Kennedy (Independent)
1956: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (Social Federalist) [11]
1960: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (SF)
1964: Barry Goldwater/George H. Bender (G)
1968: Barry Goldwater/George H. Bender (G)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
[10] First female president.
[11] Kennedy switches parties after resigning as VP, and manages to get elected President.
Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
1868: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [9]
1872: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [10]
1876: Millard Fillmore/Anthony E Roberts (American Republican) [11]
1880: Winfield Scott Hancock/Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1884: Winfield Scott Hancock/ Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1888: Winfield Scott Hancock/ Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1892: Grover Cleveland / William McKinley (New Federalists)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.
[9] Progress is made pressing back the British into their own territory, The War in Europe reaches a stand still with Prussia-Russian-Spanish Alliance holding France and the Ottoman Empire taking Greece.
[10] The war ends in a status quo antebellum, following the bloody battle of Concord. While the war continues in Europe, it's over for the US...who've really drained their finances on a two-front war, not getting enough aid by their allies.
[11] The war ends in Europe with Russia, Prussia, and Spain winning. Russia takes western portions of British Canada, France fragmenting into three states, and the Ottoman Empire taking over the Balkans. America retains it's previous border with Canada and makes a small gain in Mexico. The nation is however very heavily in debt.

Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/vacant [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/ Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/ Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney / Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
1984: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley / Lester "Les" Polsfuss (Independent)
1988: Charles Holley / Lester Polfuss (Independent)
1992: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
1996: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / Oliver North (Republican) [1]
2004: Pat Buchanan / Oliver North (Republican)
[1] General Colin Powell, Secretary of Defense and then Secretary of State of the Cuomo administration, ran as an independent. After Democrats nominated Senator Dennis Kucinich for president, who picked Senator Wellstone as his running mate; several DLC Democrats such as Senator Dave McCurdy and former Governor Bill Clinton endorsed Powell. Powell won the popular vote, but Pat Buchanan won narrowly in the electoral college, becoming the first Republican to win a presidential election since 1968.

Tony
August 26th, 2011, 05:31 AM
Hamilton kills Burr
1804: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist)
1812: Rufus King / Jared Ingersoll (Federalist)
1816: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1820: William H. Crawford / James Madison (Democrat-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (Federalist)
1828: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1832: William Henry Harrison/Lewis Cass (Democrat)
1836: John Q. Adams/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1840: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist) [1]
1844: Henry Clay/John Calhoun (Federalist)
1848: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1852: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1856: Abraham Lincoln/Charles Francis Adams (Federalist)
1860: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1864: Andrew Johnson/Jefferson Davis (Democratic-Republican)
1868: John C. Fremont / James G. Blaine (Federalist)
1872: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1876: Winfield Scott Hancock/Stephen J. Field (National Union)
1880: James G. Blaine/Thomas Edison (Federalist)
1882: Thomas Edison (Federalist) [2]
1884: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party) [3]
1888: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1892: Grover Cleaveland / Joseph E. McDonald (Gold Party)
1896: Thomas Brackett Reed / Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) [4]
1898: Thomas Brackett Reed/ vacant (Progressive) [5]
1900: Thomas Brackett Reed/ Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1904: Augustus Octavius Bacon / Robert E. Lee Jr. (European American Party) [6]
1908: Augustus Octavius Bacon/Robert E. Lee Jr. (EAP)
1912: Henry Cabot Lodge/ William McKinley (Federalist) [7]
1916: Henry Cabot Lodge/ Eugene V. Debs (Federalist)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist) [8]
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Robert M. La Follette (Social Federalist)
1932: Upton Sinclair / Henry A. Wallace (Social Federalist)
1936: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party) [9]
1940: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1944: Thomas Dewey/Helen Taft Manning (Gold Party)
1948: Helen Taft Manning/Al Smith (Gold Party) [10]
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower/John F Kennedy (Independent)
1956: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (Social Federalist) [11]
1960: John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey (SF)
1964: Barry Goldwater/George H. Bender (G)
1968: Barry Goldwater/George H. Bender (G)
1972: George McGovern / George Smathers (SF)
[1] Former President Clay leads an internal coup against unpopular president Adams at the Federalist Convention and becomes the first President to win a non-consecutive reelection
[2] President Blaine is impeached on grounds of corruption
[3] The Gold Party rises from the ashes of the defunct Democratic-Republicans.
[4] Liberals in the Gold Party amd the largely-marginalized Federalist Party, dissatisfied with the political conditions, formed their own Progressive Party.
[5] Vice President Roosevelt is killed in a horse riding accident.
[6] Vote splitting in the North allows the victory of the southern European American Party.
[7] The Federalists get a new lease on life, after absorbing the Progressive and Socialist Parties.
[8] The party name changes as the socialist wing gains more power.
[9] Revival of Gold Party, now with anti-communist leanings. First female Vice President.
[10] First female president.
[11] Kennedy switches parties after resigning as VP, and manages to get elected President.

Washington Cincinnatus
1789: John Adams/John Rutledge (Federalist)
1792: Thomas Jefferson/John Adams (Democratic-Republican)
1796: John Rutledge / Aaron Burr (F)
1800: Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (DR)
1804: Aaron Burr/James Wilkinson (Meritocracy) [1]
1806: Andrew Jackson (Coup) [2]
1809: Thomas Jefferson/Thomas Paine (Revolutionary Opposition) [3]
1812: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR)
1816: James Madison / Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) [4]
1820: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1824: William H. Crawford / John Quincy Adams (DR)
1828: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (DR)
1829: Daniel Webster (DR) [5]
1832: Daniel Webster / Martin Van Buren (DR)
1836: William H. Harrison / John Tyler (Whig)
1840: William H. Harrison / Charles F. Adams, Sr. (Whig)
1844: Lewis Cass / George M. Dallas (DR)
1848: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig)
1852: Horace Greeley /Charles Sumner (Whig) [6]
1856: John C. Fremont / William Seaward (Whig)
1860: Galusha A. Grow/Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [7]
1864: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [8]
1868: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [9]
1872: Galusha A. Grow/ Millard Fillmore (American Republican) [10]
1876: Millard Fillmore/Anthony E Roberts (American Republican) [11]
1880: Winfield Scott Hancock/Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1884: Winfield Scott Hancock/ Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1888: Winfield Scott Hancock/ Henry B. Payne (New Federalists)
1892: Grover Cleveland / William McKinley (New Federalists)
1896: Grover Cleveland / William McKinley (New Federalists)
[1] Vice President Burr is elected by the House amidst suspicions of corruption.
[2] General Andrew Jackson takes over the government in a coup.
[3] Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine who had been exiled in Canada formed an army an overthrew the Jackson dictatorship in 1808. Afterwards they were easily reelected and Jefferson presided over a revised constitutional convention
[4] The first elections since the Jackson coup. Jefferson steps down and Madison, running under a reformed Democratic Republican Party, wins in a landslide.
[5] President Clay is assassinated by a Federalist lawyer.
[6] Attempted to buy Alaska, but it was rebuffed and ended up becoming British.
[7] Enters America into the Great Imperial War in 1862, allying with The Prussian-German Confederation, Russia, Spain, and Greece. America begins invasion in Canada and Mexico, with moderate success in the former and great success in the later.
[8] The successes of the early invasion quickly turn sour, as British and colonial troops reinforcing Canadian lines push through American land, with Seattle being captured, as well as Boston.
[9] Progress is made pressing back the British into their own territory, The War in Europe reaches a stand still with Prussia-Russian-Spanish Alliance holding France and the Ottoman Empire taking Greece.
[10] The war ends in a status quo antebellum, following the bloody battle of Concord. While the war continues in Europe, it's over for the US...who've really drained their finances on a two-front war, not getting enough aid by their allies.
[11] The war ends in Europe with Russia, Prussia, and Spain winning. Russia takes western portions of British Canada, France fragmenting into three states, and the Ottoman Empire taking over the Balkans. America retains it's previous border with Canada and makes a small gain in Mexico. The nation is however very heavily in debt.

Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/vacant [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/ Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/ Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney / Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
1984: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican)
1988: Alexander Haig / Robert Kasten (Republican)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley / Lester "Les" Polsfuss (Independent)
1988: Charles Holley / Lester Polfuss (Independent)
1992: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
1996: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / Oliver North (Republican) [1]
2004: Pat Buchanan / Oliver North (Republican)
2008: John Ashcroft / Newt Gingrich (Republican) [2]
[1] General Colin Powell, Secretary of Defense and then Secretary of State of the Cuomo administration, ran as an independent. After Democrats nominated Senator Dennis Kucinich for president, who picked Senator Wellstone as his running mate; several DLC Democrats such as Senator Dave McCurdy and former Governor Bill Clinton endorsed Powell. Powell won the popular vote, but Pat Buchanan won narrowly in the electoral college, becoming the first Republican to win a presidential election since 1968.
[2] Democratic presidential nominee John Edwards is disqualified from the election one day before the election day according to the Moral Value Act, after he is arrested for using federal money to fund his mistress. Ashcroft elected unopposed.

TrickyNixon
August 26th, 2011, 02:38 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/Vacant (Democratic) [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney/Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig/Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
1984: Alexander Haig/Howard Baker (Republican)
1988: Alexander Haig/Robert Kasten (Republican)
1992: Ross Perot/James B. Stockdale (Independent)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley / Lester "Les" Polfuss (Independent)
1988: Charles Holley / Lester Polfuss (Independent)
1992: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
1996: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / Oliver North (Republican) [1]
2004: Pat Buchanan / Oliver North (Republican)
2008: John Ashcroft / Newt Gingrich (Republican) [2]
2012: John Ashcroft / Newt Gingrich (Republican)
[1] General Colin Powell, Secretary of Defense and then Secretary of State of the Cuomo administration, ran as an independent. After Democrats nominated Senator Dennis Kucinich for president, who picked Senator Wellstone as his running mate; several DLC Democrats such as Senator Dave McCurdy and former Governor Bill Clinton endorsed Powell. Powell won the popular vote, but Pat Buchanan won narrowly in the electoral college, becoming the first Republican to win a presidential election since 1968.
[2] Democratic presidential nominee John Edwards is disqualified from the election one day before the election day according to the Moral Value Act, after he is arrested for using federal money to fund his mistress. Ashcroft elected unopposed.

Tony
August 26th, 2011, 04:07 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/Vacant (Democratic) [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney / Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
1984: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican)
1988: Alexander Haig/ Robert Kasten (Republican)
1992: Ross Perot / James B. Stockdale (Independent)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (Republican)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

AuH2O '64
1964: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1968: Barry Goldwater/William Miller (Republican)
1972: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1976: Walter Mondale/Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1980: Jimmy Carter/Geraldine Ferraro '(Democratic)
1984: Charles "Buddy" Holley / Lester "Les" Polfuss (Independent)
1988: Charles Holley / Lester Polfuss (Independent)
1992: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
1996: Mario Cuomo / Ann Richards (D)
2000: Pat Buchanan / Oliver North (Republican) [1]
2004: Pat Buchanan / Oliver North (Republican)
2008: John Ashcroft / Newt Gingrich (Republican) [2]
2012: John Ashcroft / Newt Gingrich (Republican)
2015: Hilary Rodham / David Petraeus (Transition) [3]
[1] General Colin Powell, Secretary of Defense and then Secretary of State of the Cuomo administration, ran as an independent. After Democrats nominated Senator Dennis Kucinich for president, who picked Senator Wellstone as his running mate; several DLC Democrats such as Senator Dave McCurdy and former Governor Bill Clinton endorsed Powell. Powell won the popular vote, but Pat Buchanan won narrowly in the electoral college, becoming the first Republican to win a presidential election since 1968.
[2] Democratic presidential nominee John Edwards is disqualified from the election one day before the election day according to the Moral Value Act, after he is arrested for using federal money to fund his mistress. Ashcroft elected unopposed.
[3] After serious vote-rigging in the 2010, 2012 and 2014 congress elections, Republicans managed to win 400 seats in the House of Representatives and 70 seats in the Senate. Ashcroft tried to amend the constitution, granting himself full power and a life presidency. Then the Supreme Court nullified the 2014 mid-term elections. Before elections could be held, Chief Justice Hillary Rodham made herself President of the Transitional Council, appointing General David Petraeus as Vice President and Secretary General of the Council. Republicans across the nation decried the judicial and military coup, riots broke out across the nation. All former Confederate states announced that they would be seceding from the Union.

TrickyNixon
August 26th, 2011, 04:54 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/Vacant (Democratic) [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney / Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
1984: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican)
1988: Alexander Haig/ Robert Kasten (Republican)
1992: Ross Perot / James B. Stockdale (Independent)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (Republican)
2000: Al Gore, Jr./Bill Clinton (Democratic)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

Badshah
August 26th, 2011, 04:56 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/Vacant (Democratic) [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney / Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
1984: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican)
1988: Alexander Haig/ Robert Kasten (Republican)
1992: Ross Perot / James B. Stockdale (Independent)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (Republican)
2000: Al Gore, Jr./Bill Clinton (Democratic)
2004: Al Gore, Jr/ Bill Clinton (Democratic)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

Tony
August 26th, 2011, 05:01 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/Vacant (Democratic) [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney / Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
1984: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican)
1988: Alexander Haig/ Robert Kasten (Republican)
1992: Ross Perot / James B. Stockdale (Independent)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (Republican)
2000: Al Gore, Jr./Bill Clinton (Democratic)
2004: Al Gore, Jr/ Bill Clinton (Democratic)
2008: Mitt Romney / Mike Huckabee (Republican)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

Wolfpaw
August 26th, 2011, 05:04 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/Vacant (Democratic) [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney / Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
1984: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican)
1988: Alexander Haig/ Robert Kasten (Republican)
1992: Ross Perot / James B. Stockdale (Independent)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (Republican)
2000: Al Gore, Jr./Bill Clinton (Democratic)
2004: Al Gore, Jr/ Bill Clinton (Democratic)
2008: Mitt Romney / Mike Huckabee (Republican)
2012: Hillary Clinton / Bill Richardson (Democratic)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)

TrickyNixon
August 26th, 2011, 05:13 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/Vacant (Democratic) [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney / Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
1984: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican)
1988: Alexander Haig/ Robert Kasten (Republican)
1992: Ross Perot / James B. Stockdale (Independent)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (Republican)
2000: Al Gore, Jr./Bill Clinton (Democratic)
2004: Al Gore, Jr./Bill Clinton (Democratic)
2008: Mitt Romney / Mike Huckabee (Republican)
2012: Hillary Clinton / Bill Richardson (Democratic)
2016: Hillary Clinton / Bill Richardson (Democratic)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)

Tony
August 26th, 2011, 05:20 PM
Roosevelt lives another 10 years
1948: Franklin Delano Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1952: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1956: Robert A. Taft/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1960: Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) [1]
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Vacant (Democratic) [2]
1968: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1972: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert McNamara (Democratic)
1973: Robert McNamara/Vacant (Democratic) [3]
1974: Robert McNamara/Hubert H. Humphrey (Democratic)
1976: Robert McNamara/Edward M. Kennedy (Democratic) [4]
1980: George Romney / Alexander Haig (Republican)
1983: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican) [4]
1984: Alexander Haig / Howard Baker (Republican)
1988: Alexander Haig/ Robert Kasten (Republican)
1992: Ross Perot / James B. Stockdale (Independent)
1996: Phil Gramm / Lamar Alexander (Republican)
2000: Al Gore, Jr./Bill Clinton (Democratic)
2004: Al Gore, Jr./Bill Clinton (Democratic)
2008: Mitt Romney / Mike Huckabee (Republican)
2012: Hillary Clinton / Bill Richardson (Democratic)
2016: Hillary Clinton / Bill Richardson (Democratic)
2020: Scott Brown / Bobby Jindal (Republican)
[1] Taft declines to run for a third term due to declining health and his age.
[2] Kennedy is assassinated on June 5 by Sirhan Sirhan while campaigning in California.
[3] LBJ dies of a heart attack on a trip to Houston.
[4] Humphrey resigns when diagnosed with cancer.
[5] Romney assassinated by John Hinckley Jr.

Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)

Badshah
August 26th, 2011, 05:21 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908:Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)

Tony
August 26th, 2011, 05:26 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)

King Nazar
August 26th, 2011, 05:28 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)

TrickyNixon
August 26th, 2011, 05:36 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs/Emil Seidel (Socialist)

Tony
August 26th, 2011, 05:37 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)

Charles James Fox
August 26th, 2011, 08:34 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)

Tony
August 27th, 2011, 02:26 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)

Shadowlord
August 27th, 2011, 02:29 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)

Tony
August 27th, 2011, 03:33 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)

Charles James Fox
August 27th, 2011, 09:42 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)

TrickyNixon
August 27th, 2011, 10:05 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)

Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (American Independent)

Charles James Fox
August 27th, 2011, 03:40 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)

Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)

TrickyNixon
August 27th, 2011, 04:01 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)


Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)

Nazi Space Spy
August 27th, 2011, 05:11 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon/Barry Goldwater (Conservative)



Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd/Phil Crane (American Independent)

Dole beats Clinton
1996: Robert Dole/William Weld (R)

Shadowlord
August 27th, 2011, 06:01 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon/Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon/Barry Goldwater (Conservative)



Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd/Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (D)

Dole beats Clinton
1996: Robert Dole/William Weld (R)
2000: Paul Wellstone / John Edwards (D)

Charles James Fox
August 27th, 2011, 06:08 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)

Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd / Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (D)
1988: John Glenn / Dale Bumpers (D)

Dole beats Clinton
1996: Robert Dole / William Weld (R)
2000: Paul Wellstone / John Edwards (D)
2004: John Edwards / Howard Dean (D) [1]

[1] Paul Wellstone dies in office in 2002.

Mr. Magi
August 27th, 2011, 07:18 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)

Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd / Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (D)
1988: John Glenn / Dale Bumpers (D)
1992: Dale Bumpers / Joe Biden (D)

Dole beats Clinton
1996: Robert Dole / William Weld (R)
2000: Paul Wellstone / John Edwards (D)
2004: John Edwards / Howard Dean (D) [1]
2008: John McCain / George W. Bush (R)

[1] Paul Wellstone dies in office in 2002.

Tony
August 27th, 2011, 07:27 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)

Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd / Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (D)
1988: John Glenn / Dale Bumpers (D)
1992: Dale Bumpers / Joe Biden (D)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)

Dole beats Clinton
1996: Robert Dole / William Weld (R)
2000: Paul Wellstone / John Edwards (D)
2004: John Edwards / Howard Dean (D) [1]
2008: John McCain / George W. Bush (R)
2012: John McCain / George W. Bush (R)
[1] Paul Wellstone dies in office in 2002.

Nazi Space Spy
August 27th, 2011, 08:05 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal/Ralph Nader (Socialist)


Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd / Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (D)
1988: John Glenn / Dale Bumpers (D)
1992: Dale Bumpers / Joe Biden (D)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)

Dole beats Clinton
1996: Robert Dole / William Weld (R)
2000: Paul Wellstone / John Edwards (D)
2004: John Edwards / Howard Dean (D) [1]
2008: John McCain / George W. Bush (R)
2012: John McCain / George W. Bush (R)
2016: Anthony Weiner/Alex Sink (D)
[1] Paul Wellstone dies in office in 2002.[/QUOTE]

Tony
August 27th, 2011, 08:14 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
[1] Vidal assassinated.


Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd / Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (D)
1988: John Glenn / Dale Bumpers (D)
1992: Dale Bumpers / Joe Biden (D)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2004: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (American Independent)

Dole beats Clinton
1996: Robert Dole / William Weld (R)
2000: Paul Wellstone / John Edwards (D)
2004: John Edwards / Howard Dean (D) [1]
2008: John McCain / George W. Bush (R)
2012: John McCain / George W. Bush (R)
2016: Anthony Weiner / Alex Sink (D)
2020: Anthony Weiner / Alex Sink (D)
[1] Paul Wellstone dies in office in 2002.

Charles James Fox
August 27th, 2011, 08:54 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
1984: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist)

[1] Vidal assassinated.

Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd / Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (Democratic)
1988: John Glenn / Dale Bumpers (Democratic)
1992: Dale Bumpers / Joe Biden (Democratic)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2004: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (American Independent)
2008: Jennifer Granholm / Mark Warner (Democratic)

Codae
August 28th, 2011, 12:09 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
1984: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist)
1988: Ralph Nader / Walter Mondale (Independent Socialist) [2]

[1] Vidal assassinated.
[2] Nader loses the consensus support of his party, but still wins the election.

Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd / Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (Democratic)
1988: John Glenn / Dale Bumpers (Democratic)
1992: Dale Bumpers / Joe Biden (Democratic)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2004: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (American Independent)
2008: Jennifer Granholm / Mark Warner (Democratic)
2012: Jennifer Granholm / Mark Warner (Democratic)

Here's one where Buchanan does slightly worse, resulting in a hung EC.

Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)

Tony
August 28th, 2011, 04:51 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
1984: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist)
1988: Ralph Nader / Walter Mondale (Independent Socialist) [2]
1992: Pat Buchanan / David Duke (Conservative)
[1] Vidal assassinated.
[2] Nader loses the consensus support of his party, but still wins the election.

Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd / Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (Democratic)
1988: John Glenn / Dale Bumpers (Democratic)
1992: Dale Bumpers / Joe Biden (Democratic)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2004: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (American Independent)
2008: Jennifer Granholm / Mark Warner (Democratic)
2012: Jennifer Granholm / Mark Warner (Democratic)
2014: Mark Warner / Scott Brown (Democratic) [1]
[1] Gramholm killed in a plane crash after attending a ceremony commemorating the 70th anniversary of D-Day.

Here's one where Buchanan does slightly worse, resulting in a hung EC.
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)

MaskedPickle
August 28th, 2011, 06:06 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
1984: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist)
1988: Ralph Nader / Walter Mondale (Independent Socialist) [2]
1992: Pat Buchanan / David Duke (Conservative)
1996: Lyndon LaRouche/Brian Moore (Socialist)
[1] Vidal assassinated.
[2] Nader loses the consensus support of his party, but still wins the election.

Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd / Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (Democratic)
1988: John Glenn / Dale Bumpers (Democratic)
1992: Dale Bumpers / Joe Biden (Democratic)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2004: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (American Independent)
2008: Jennifer Granholm / Mark Warner (Democratic)
2012: Jennifer Granholm / Mark Warner (Democratic)
2014: Mark Warner / Scott Brown (Democratic) [1]
2016: Mark Warner/Coleman Young II (Democratic)
[1] Gramholm killed in a plane crash after attending a ceremony commemorating the 70th anniversary of D-Day.

Here's one where Buchanan does slightly worse, resulting in a hung EC.
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell/William Seward (Constitutional Union)

Tony
August 28th, 2011, 06:11 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
1984: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist)
1988: Ralph Nader / Walter Mondale (Independent Socialist) [2]
1992: Pat Buchanan / David Duke (Conservative)
1996: Lyndon LaRouche / Brian Moore (Socialist)
2000: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (Conservative)
[1] Vidal assassinated.
[2] Nader loses the consensus support of his party, but still wins the election.

Wallace in '68
1968: George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1972: Edward Kennedy / Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
1976: Robert Byrd / John Sparkman (American Independent)
1980: Robert Byrd / Phil Crane (American Independent)
1984: John Glenn / Gary Hart (Democratic)
1988: John Glenn / Dale Bumpers (Democratic)
1992: Dale Bumpers / Joe Biden (Democratic)
1996: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2000: Pat Buchanan / John Ashcroft (American Independent)
2004: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (American Independent)
2008: Jennifer Granholm / Mark Warner (Democratic)
2012: Jennifer Granholm / Mark Warner (Democratic)
2014: Mark Warner / Scott Brown (Democratic) [1]
2016: Mark Warner/Coleman Young II (Democratic)
2020: Bobby Jindal / Tim Pawlenty (American Independent)
[1] Gramholm killed in a plane crash after attending a ceremony commemorating the 70th anniversary of D-Day.

Here's one where Buchanan does slightly worse, resulting in a hung EC.
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)

Charles James Fox
August 28th, 2011, 01:23 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
1984: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist)
1988: Ralph Nader / Walter Mondale (Independent Socialist) [2]
1992: Pat Buchanan / David Duke (Conservative)
1996: Lyndon LaRouche / Brian Moore (Socialist)
2000: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (Conservative)
2004: Martha Nussbaum / Richard Trumka (Socialist)

[1] Vidal assassinated.
[2] Nader loses the consensus support of his party, but still wins the election.

Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)

Mr. Magi
August 29th, 2011, 07:05 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
1984: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist)
1988: Ralph Nader / Walter Mondale (Independent Socialist) [2]
1992: Pat Buchanan / David Duke (Conservative)
1996: Lyndon LaRouche / Brian Moore (Socialist)
2000: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (Conservative)
2004: Martha Nussbaum / Richard Trumka (Socialist)
2008: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (Conservative)

[1] Vidal assassinated.
[2] Nader loses the consensus support of his party, but still wins the election.

Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)

Tony
August 29th, 2011, 07:11 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
1984: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist)
1988: Ralph Nader / Walter Mondale (Independent Socialist) [2]
1992: Pat Buchanan / David Duke (Conservative)
1996: Lyndon LaRouche / Brian Moore (Socialist)
2000: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (Conservative)
2004: Martha Nussbaum / Richard Trumka (Socialist)
2008: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (Conservative)
2012: Mike Huckabee / Alan Keyes (Conservative)
[1] Vidal assassinated.
[2] Nader loses the consensus support of his party, but still wins the election.

Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)

Mr. Magi
August 29th, 2011, 07:43 AM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
1984: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist)
1988: Ralph Nader / Walter Mondale (Independent Socialist) [2]
1992: Pat Buchanan / David Duke (Conservative)
1996: Lyndon LaRouche / Brian Moore (Socialist)
2000: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (Conservative)
2004: Martha Nussbaum / Richard Trumka (Socialist)
2008: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (Conservative)
2012: Mike Huckabee / Alan Keyes (Conservative)
2016: Mike Huckabee / Alan Keyes (Conservative)

[1] Vidal assassinated.
[2] Nader loses the consensus support of his party, but still wins the election.

Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)

Tony
August 30th, 2011, 02:34 PM
Bryan in '96
1896: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1900: William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewell (Democratic)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1908: Henry Cabot Lodge / Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican)
1912: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1916: Hiram Johnson / Charles W. Fairbanks (Republican)
1920: Eugene V. Debs / Emil Seidel (Socialist)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Upton Sinclair (Socialist)
1928: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Herbert Hoover (Liberal Progressive)
1936: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1940: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1944: John Silas Reed / Henry Wallace (Socialist)
1948: Earl Warren / Harold E. Stassen (Conservative)
1952: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1956: F. Scott Fitzgerald / Sidney Hook (Socialist)
1960: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1964: Richard Nixon / Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1968: Gore Vidal / Eugene McCarthy (Socialist)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1976: Barry Goldwater / Gerald Ford (Conservative)
1980: Gore Vidal / Ralph Nader (Socialist)
1981: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist) [1]
1984: Ralph Nader / George McGovern (Socialist)
1988: Ralph Nader / Walter Mondale (Independent Socialist) [2]
1992: Pat Buchanan / David Duke (Conservative)
1996: Lyndon LaRouche / Brian Moore (Socialist)
2000: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (Conservative)
2004: Martha Nussbaum / Richard Trumka (Socialist)
2008: John Ashcroft / Oliver North (Conservative)
2012: Mike Huckabee / Alan Keyes (Conservative)
2016: Mike Huckabee / Alan Keyes (Conservative)
2020: Sherrod Brown / Richard Trumka (Socialist)
[1] Vidal assassinated.
[2] Nader loses the consensus support of his party, but still wins the election.

Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)

elyski
August 30th, 2011, 05:51 PM
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assasssination.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)

Mr. Magi
August 30th, 2011, 07:51 PM
Damn it, Garfield just can't get a break.;)

Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)

Zacoftheaxes
August 30th, 2011, 07:59 PM
Damn it, Garfield just can't get a break.;)

Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)

Mr. Magi
August 30th, 2011, 08:18 PM
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)

anon_user
August 31st, 2011, 08:34 PM
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) (Republicans return to power due to the Panic of 1895 and division between the Constitutionalists and Populists)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) (Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race)

Mr. Magi
August 31st, 2011, 09:06 PM
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.

Tony
September 6th, 2011, 11:21 PM
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.

Badshah
September 7th, 2011, 12:37 AM
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (Constitutional)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.

Mr. Magi
September 8th, 2011, 07:54 PM
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (Constitutional)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (Constitutional) [6]

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.

Nazi Space Spy
September 8th, 2011, 11:06 PM
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (Constitutional)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (Constitutional) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John Davis (Constitutional)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas/Samuel Tilden (Unity)
[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.

Badshah
September 8th, 2011, 11:10 PM
Compromise of 1856
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (Constitutional)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (Constitutional) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John Davis (Constitutional)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge/John D. Rockefeller Jr (Populist)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents)
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas/Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden/Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.
http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/images/buttons/quote.gif (http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/newreply.php?do=newreply&p=5003091)

jerseyrules
September 9th, 2011, 02:04 AM
Compromise of 1856:
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (Constitutional)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (Constitutional) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John Davis (Constitutional)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (Populist)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (U / C) [7]

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (U)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.

Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)

http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/images/buttons/quote.gif (http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/newreply.php?do=newreply&p=5003091).............

Mr. Magi
September 9th, 2011, 03:30 AM
Compromise of 1856:
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (Constitutional)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (Constitutional) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John Davis (Constitutional)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (Populist)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (Constitutional)


[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.



Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)

Codae
September 9th, 2011, 03:56 AM
Compromise of 1856:
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (Constitutional)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (Constitutional) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John Davis (Constitutional)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (Populist)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (Constitutional)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C)[8]


[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.


Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)

jerseyrules
September 10th, 2011, 12:19 AM
Compromise of 1856:
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (Constitutional)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (Constitutional) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (Constitutional)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (Populist)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (Constitutional)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C)[8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge (C)


[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.


Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)

Nazi Space Spy
September 10th, 2011, 12:27 AM
Compromise of 1856:
1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (Constitutional)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (Constitutional) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (Constitutional)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (Populist)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (Constitutional)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C)[8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge (C)


[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.


Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James Polk/David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.

jerseyrules
September 10th, 2011, 12:54 AM
Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (Republican)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (Republican) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (Republican)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (Republican) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (Republican)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (Republican) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (Constitutional) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (Constitutional)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (Constitutional) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (Constitutional)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (Populist)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (Constitutional)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C)[8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge (C) [9]


[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War (conquest of Mexico and Latin America, with Canada voting to join the US (AMERIWANK!))

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (C)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.


Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.

Mr. Magi
September 10th, 2011, 12:51 PM
Polk's presidency severely ruined his health. How severely? To the point the poor guy died about a year after leaving the Oval Office. I can't see him living another 16 years and another full term at that point.

Also, Lodge likely wouldn't live into 1936 and Lodge Jr. would be thirty-four even counting the lame duck session either way, so he's one year short to be a vp.



Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C)[8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C) [10]

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was an attempted conquest of Mexico and Central America (Unless you also meant S. America).
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.



Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.

jerseyrules
September 11th, 2011, 03:35 AM
Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C)[8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C) [10]
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was an attempted conquest of Mexico and Central America (Unless you also meant S. America).
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (C)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.



Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.

King Nazar
September 11th, 2011, 04:32 AM
Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C)[8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C) [10]
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C)
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was an attempted conquest of Mexico and Central America (Unless you also meant S. America).
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (C)
1912: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (C)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.



Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.

Shadowlord
September 11th, 2011, 04:40 AM
OOC: Cleaned up oddities as we had two 1908s and 1912s.

Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C)[8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C) [10]
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C)
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was an attempted conquest of Mexico and Central America (Unless you also meant S. America).
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1916: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (C)
1920: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (C)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert La Follette (Unity)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.



Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1880: Mark Hanna / James A. Garfield (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.

Nazi Space Spy
September 11th, 2011, 05:48 AM
Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C)[8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C) [10]
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C)
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater/Walter Judd (C)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was an attempted conquest of Mexico and Central America (Unless you also meant S. America).
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1916: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (C)
1920: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (C)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert La Follette (Unity)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Franklin Roosevelt (Unity)
[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.



Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1880: Mark Hanna / James A. Garfield (W)
1881: James Garfield/vacant (W) [2]

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.
[2] President Hanna is shot and killed by an assasin in Maine.

Mr. Magi
September 11th, 2011, 02:02 PM
Fine, I'll change footnote 10 due to illiteracy.

Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C)[8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater/Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater/Walter Judd (C)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was an attempted conquest of Mexico and Central America (Unless you also meant S. America).
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1916: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1920: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert La Follette (Unity)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Franklin Roosevelt (Unity)
1932: Albert Ritchie / Will Rogers (Unity) [3]

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.
[3] Debs suffered a pair of heart attacks in 1930 and 1931, which causes him to reconsider running again.



Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1880: Mark Hanna / James A. Garfield (W)
1881: James Garfield/vacant (W) [2]
1884: James Garfield / James G. Blaine (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.
[2] President Hanna is shot and killed by an assassin in Maine.

Wolfpaw
September 11th, 2011, 07:01 PM
Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1880: Mark Hanna / James A. Garfield (W)
1881: James Garfield/vacant (W) [2]
1884: James Garfield / James G. Blaine (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.
[2] President Hanna is shot and killed by an assassin in Maine.Mark Hanna and Garfield can't be elected on the same ticket; they're both from Ohio.

jerseyrules
September 12th, 2011, 12:06 AM
Mark Hanna and Garfield can't be elected on the same ticket; they're both from Ohio.


Yes, OTL. However Garfield could've pulled a Cheney, sold his house in Ohio, moved to Alaska, and changed his residency status.

Wolfpaw
September 12th, 2011, 12:09 AM
Yes, OTL. However Garfield could've pulled a Cheney, sold his house in Ohio, moved to Alaska, and changed his residency status.Because politicians were so well known for that back then, especially when regional balance trumped ideology.

jerseyrules
September 12th, 2011, 12:10 AM
Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1916: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1920: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert La Follette (Unity)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Franklin Roosevelt (Unity)
1932: Albert Ritchie / Will Rogers (Unity) [3]
1936: Grover Cleveland, Jr. / Theodore Roosevelt Jr. (C) [4]


[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.
[3] Debs suffered a pair of heart attacks in 1930 and 1931, which causes him to reconsider running again.
[4] Popular disdain for the Unity party grows due to the economic stagnation and thus former Vice President Grover Cleveland, Jr. is elected in a landslide


Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1880: Mark Hanna / James A. Garfield (W)
1881: James Garfield / vacant (W) [2]
1884: James Garfield / James G. Blaine (W)
1888: James G. Blane / Grover Cleveland (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.
[2] President Hanna is shot and killed by an assassin in Maine.

jerseyrules
September 12th, 2011, 12:12 AM
Because politicians were so well known for that back then, especially when regional balance trumped ideology.

Perhaps Alaska was a new state and he wanted to ensure it became a Whig stronghold. Maybe several well-known Whig politicians did so as well, in order to ensure that the 7 new states admitted during the ITTL first term of the Garfield administration would send Whigs to Congress.

Constantinople
September 12th, 2011, 01:17 AM
[QUOTE=jerseyrules;5016575]Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1978: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown(DP) [12]

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.

jerseyrules
September 12th, 2011, 02:41 AM
Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1916: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1920: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert La Follette (Unity)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Franklin Roosevelt (Unity)
1932: Albert Ritchie / Will Rogers (Unity) [3]
1936: Grover Cleveland, Jr. / Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (C) [4]
1940: Grover Cleveland, Jr. / Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (C)


[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.
[3] Debs suffered a pair of heart attacks in 1930 and 1931, which causes him to reconsider running again.
[4] Popular disdain for the Unity party grows due to the economic stagnation and thus former Vice President Grover Cleveland, Jr. is elected in a landslide


Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1880: Mark Hanna / James A. Garfield (W)
1881: James Garfield / vacant (W) [2]
1884: James Garfield / James G. Blaine (W)
1888: James G. Blane / Grover Cleveland (W)
1892: William McKinley / Henry G. Davis (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.
[2] President Hanna is shot and killed by an assassin in Maine.

King Nazar
September 12th, 2011, 03:07 AM
Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.

Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1916: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1920: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert La Follette (Unity)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Franklin Roosevelt (Unity)
1932: Albert Ritchie / Will Rogers (Unity) [3]
1936: Grover Cleveland, Jr. / Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (C) [4]
1940: Grover Cleveland, Jr. / Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (C)
1944: Theodore Roosevelt Jr. / Thomas Dewey (C)


[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.
[3] Debs suffered a pair of heart attacks in 1930 and 1931, which causes him to reconsider running again.
[4] Popular disdain for the Unity party grows due to the economic stagnation and thus former Vice President Grover Cleveland, Jr. is elected in a landslide


Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1880: Mark Hanna / James A. Garfield (W)
1881: James Garfield / vacant (W) [2]
1884: James Garfield / James G. Blaine (W)
1888: James G. Blane / Grover Cleveland (W)
1892: William McKinley / Henry G. Davis (W)
1896: William McKinley / Henry G. Davis (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.
[2] President Hanna is shot and killed by an assassin in Maine.

Mr. Magi
September 12th, 2011, 03:41 AM
I removed jerseyrule's second pick for Oddities and the Polk timeline.

Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1988: Geraldine Ferraro / Al Gore (DP)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):
1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1916: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1920: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert La Follette (Unity)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Franklin Roosevelt (Unity)
1932: Albert Ritchie / Will Rogers (Unity) [3]
1936: Grover Cleveland, Jr. / Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (C) [4]
1940: Theodore Roosevelt Jr. / Thomas Dewey (C)
1944: Theodore Roosevelt Jr. / Thomas Dewey (C)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.
[3] Debs suffered a pair of heart attacks in 1930 and 1931, which causes him to reconsider running again.
[4] Popular disdain for the Unity party grows due to the economic stagnation and thus former Vice President Grover Cleveland, Jr. is elected in a landslide



Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1880: Mark Hanna / James A. Garfield (W)
1881: James Garfield / vacant (W) [2]
1884: James Garfield / James G. Blaine (W)
1888: James G. Blane / Grover Cleveland (W)
1892: William McKinley / Henry G. Davis (W)
1896: William McKinley / Henry G. Davis (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.
[2] President Hanna is shot and killed by an assassin in Maine.

Constantinople
September 12th, 2011, 03:58 AM
[QUOTE=Mr. Magi;5017651]I removed jerseyrule's second pick for Oddities and the Polk timeline.

Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1988: Geraldine Ferraro / Al Gore (DP)
1992: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [13]


[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.
[13] Former Vice President Jerry Brown is elected with immigrant Golda Meir on the ticket of the New Social justice party. Brown was taking advantage of the amended constitution allowing for naturalized immigrants to become president. Years of more or less extreme libertarian and watered down Democratic Populists rule have created a vast underclass in American society. While the market based economy is booming many are left behind. Brown proposes to keep America's wondrous market economy, while preventing millions from slipping through the cracks. Meir is brought on the ticket to attract the more socialist side of the social justice party. They utterly smash the two other parties, with the DPs getting no electoral votes whatsoever, its voters turned off by libertarian pandering politicians. The Constitutional Party loses dozens and of seats to the Social Justice Party while dozens more Democratic Poplists congressmen switch sides. This is in addition to many SJs being elected to congress. The party finds itself with strong plurality of both houses, and with tacit support from the Democratic Populists it can pass its bills. It promises to be an interesting decade with the fiscal hawk, yet strangely liberal Brown at the helm, with his socialist immigrant female Jewish VP at his side.

achilles483
September 12th, 2011, 07:36 AM
Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1988: Geraldine Ferraro / Al Gore (DP)
1992: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [13]
1996: Colin Powell / Phil Gramm (C)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.
[13] Former Vice President Jerry Brown is elected with immigrant Golda Meir on the ticket of the New Social justice party. Brown was taking advantage of the amended constitution allowing for naturalized immigrants to become president. Years of more or less extreme libertarian and watered down Democratic Populists rule have created a vast underclass in American society. While the market based economy is booming many are left behind. Brown proposes to keep America's wondrous market economy, while preventing millions from slipping through the cracks. Meir is brought on the ticket to attract the more socialist side of the social justice party. They utterly smash the two other parties, with the DPs getting no electoral votes whatsoever, its voters turned off by libertarian pandering politicians. The Constitutional Party loses dozens and of seats to the Social Justice Party while dozens more Democratic Poplists congressmen switch sides. This is in addition to many SJs being elected to congress. The party finds itself with strong plurality of both houses, and with tacit support from the Democratic Populists it can pass its bills. It promises to be an interesting decade with the fiscal hawk, yet strangely liberal Brown at the helm, with his socialist immigrant female Jewish VP at his side.

Constantinople
September 12th, 2011, 08:12 AM
[QUOTE=achilles483;5018234]Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1988: Geraldine Ferraro / Al Gore (DP)
1992: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [13]
1996: Colin Powell / Phil Gramm (C)
2000: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [14]

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.
[13] Former Vice President Jerry Brown is elected with immigrant Golda Meir on the ticket of the New Social justice party. Brown was taking advantage of the amended constitution allowing for naturalized immigrants to become president. Years of more or less extreme libertarian and watered down Democratic Populists rule have created a vast underclass in American society. While the market based economy is booming many are left behind. Brown proposes to keep America's wondrous market economy, while preventing millions from slipping through the cracks. Meir is brought on the ticket to attract the more socialist side of the social justice party. They utterly smash the two other parties, with the DPs getting no electoral votes whatsoever, its voters turned off by libertarian pandering politicians. The Constitutional Party loses dozens and of seats to the Social Justice Party while dozens more Democratic Poplists congressmen switch sides. This is in addition to many SJs being elected to congress. The party finds itself with strong plurality of both houses, and with tacit support from the Democratic Populists it can pass its bills. It promises to be an interesting decade with the fiscal hawk, yet strangely liberal Brown at the helm, with his socialist immigrant female Jewish VP at his side.{
[14] The election many perceived as 'stolen' by Colin Powell caused a major backlash propelling Brown and Meir back in to an election four years later. Their wipe out victory (and consequential coat tail effect in congress) is resounding. The Constitutionalists were shrunken to a small minority with the Democratic Populists taking official opposition status.


Now don't just write some refutation of that, try thinking about it and making it logical and providing some background.

Mr. Magi
September 12th, 2011, 09:01 PM
Now don't just write some refutation of that, try thinking about it and making it logical and providing some background. No, because what you just typed reminded me of jerseyrules when tonykwok had TR assassinated.



Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1988: Geraldine Ferraro / Al Gore (DP)
1992: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [13]
1996: Colin Powell / Phil Gramm (C)
2000: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [14]
2004: John McCain / Bill Clinton (C)

[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.
[13] Former Vice President Jerry Brown is elected with immigrant Golda Meir on the ticket of the New Social justice party. Brown was taking advantage of the amended constitution allowing for naturalized immigrants to become president. Years of more or less extreme libertarian and watered down Democratic Populists rule have created a vast underclass in American society. While the market based economy is booming many are left behind. Brown proposes to keep America's wondrous market economy, while preventing millions from slipping through the cracks. Meir is brought on the ticket to attract the more socialist side of the social justice party. They utterly smash the two other parties, with the DPs getting no electoral votes whatsoever, its voters turned off by libertarian pandering politicians. The Constitutional Party loses dozens and of seats to the Social Justice Party while dozens more Democratic Poplists congressmen switch sides. This is in addition to many SJs being elected to congress. The party finds itself with strong plurality of both houses, and with tacit support from the Democratic Populists it can pass its bills. It promises to be an interesting decade with the fiscal hawk, yet strangely liberal Brown at the helm, with his socialist immigrant female Jewish VP at his side.{
[14] The election many perceived as 'stolen' by Colin Powell caused a major backlash propelling Brown and Meir back in to an election four years later. Their wipe out victory (and consequential coat tail effect in congress) is resounding. The Constitutionalists were shrunken to a small minority with the Democratic Populists taking official opposition status.



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):

1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1916: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1920: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert La Follette (Unity)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Franklin Roosevelt (Unity)
1932: Albert Ritchie / Will Rogers (Unity) [3]
1936: Grover Cleveland, Jr. / Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (C) [4]
1940: Theodore Roosevelt Jr. / Thomas Dewey (C)
1944: Theodore Roosevelt Jr. / Thomas Dewey (C)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.
[3] Debs suffered a pair of heart attacks in 1930 and 1931, which causes him to reconsider running again.
[4] Popular disdain for the Unity party grows due to the economic stagnation and thus former Vice President Grover Cleveland, Jr. is elected in a landslide



Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1880: Mark Hanna / James A. Garfield (W)
1881: James Garfield / vacant (W) [2]
1884: James Garfield / James G. Blaine (W)
1888: James G. Blane / Grover Cleveland (W)
1892: William McKinley / Henry G. Davis (W)
1896: William McKinley / Henry G. Davis (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.
[2] President Hanna is shot and killed by an assassin in Maine.

Constantinople
September 12th, 2011, 09:34 PM
Fine.


Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)[/B]
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1988: Geraldine Ferraro / Al Gore (DP)
1992: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [13]
1996: Colin Powell / Phil Gramm (C)
2000: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [14]
2004: John McCain / Bill Clinton (C)
2008: Golda Meir / Cynthia Mckinney (Social Justice)[15]


[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.
[13] Former Vice President Jerry Brown is elected with immigrant Golda Meir on the ticket of the New Social justice party. Brown was taking advantage of the amended constitution allowing for naturalized immigrants to become president. Years of more or less extreme libertarian and watered down Democratic Populists rule have created a vast underclass in American society. While the market based economy is booming many are left behind. Brown proposes to keep America's wondrous market economy, while preventing millions from slipping through the cracks. Meir is brought on the ticket to attract the more socialist side of the social justice party. They utterly smash the two other parties, with the DPs getting no electoral votes whatsoever, its voters turned off by libertarian pandering politicians. The Constitutional Party loses dozens and of seats to the Social Justice Party while dozens more Democratic Poplists congressmen switch sides. This is in addition to many SJs being elected to congress. The party finds itself with strong plurality of both houses, and with tacit support from the Democratic Populists it can pass its bills. It promises to be an interesting decade with the fiscal hawk, yet strangely liberal Brown at the helm, with his socialist immigrant female Jewish VP at his side.{
[14] The election many perceived as 'stolen' by Colin Powell caused a major backlash propelling Brown and Meir back in to an election four years later. Their wipe out victory (and consequential coat tail effect in congress) is resounding. The Constitutionalists were shrunken to a small minority with the Democratic Populists taking official opposition status.
[15] The second stolen election by the Constitutionalist party leads to a larger backlash against the party again in 2008. They are more or less eliminated as a congressional force. They have just 5 senators and 10 representatives. Major scandals, corruption, and trials of Constitutional party members only further drives nails in to the parties coffin.

Mr. Magi
September 12th, 2011, 09:49 PM
Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)[/B]
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1988: Geraldine Ferraro / Al Gore (DP)
1992: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [13]
1996: Colin Powell / Phil Gramm (C)
2000: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [14]
2004: John McCain / Bill Clinton (C)
2008: Golda Meir / Cynthia Mckinney (Social Justice)[15]
2010: Raymond T. Odierno / Gary Roughead / Edward A. Rice Jr. (Military) [16]


[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.
[13] Former Vice President Jerry Brown is elected with immigrant Golda Meir on the ticket of the New Social justice party. Brown was taking advantage of the amended constitution allowing for naturalized immigrants to become president. Years of more or less extreme libertarian and watered down Democratic Populists rule have created a vast underclass in American society. While the market based economy is booming many are left behind. Brown proposes to keep America's wondrous market economy, while preventing millions from slipping through the cracks. Meir is brought on the ticket to attract the more socialist side of the social justice party. They utterly smash the two other parties, with the DPs getting no electoral votes whatsoever, its voters turned off by libertarian pandering politicians. The Constitutional Party loses dozens and of seats to the Social Justice Party while dozens more Democratic Poplists congressmen switch sides. This is in addition to many SJs being elected to congress. The party finds itself with strong plurality of both houses, and with tacit support from the Democratic Populists it can pass its bills. It promises to be an interesting decade with the fiscal hawk, yet strangely liberal Brown at the helm, with his socialist immigrant female Jewish VP at his side.{
[14] The election many perceived as 'stolen' by Colin Powell caused a major backlash propelling Brown and Meir back in to an election four years later. Their wipe out victory (and consequential coat tail effect in congress) is resounding. The Constitutionalists were shrunken to a small minority with the Democratic Populists taking official opposition status.
[15] The second stolen election by the Constitutionalist party leads to a larger backlash against the party. They are reduced to a small rump of a dozen or so congressmen in total.
[16] Allegations of voter fraud against both the Constitutional Party and the Social Justice party, as well as threats of an armed revolution forces the Army Chief of Staff Odierno to intervene militarily. He decides to set the election date to 2012, as by then the electoral system will be modernized and and made more fair. He also renounces any ideas that he will run for political office, and urges the other two of the American Triumvirate to do the same.



Oddities (Only Rule: No OTL presidents):

1828: John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman / Davy Crockett (Independent)
1832: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1836: Henry Clay / Daniel Webster (National Republican)
1840: Lewis Cass / James K. Polk (Democratic)
1844: Theodore Frelinghuysen / John Davis (National Republican)
1848: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1852: Levi Woodbury / William Orlando Butler (Democratic)
1856: Herschel V. Johnson / William L. Marcy (Democratic)
1860: Stephen A. Douglas / Salmon P. Chase (Democratic-Unity) [1]
1864: Winfield Scott / Cassius M. Clay (American)
1868: Montgomery Blair / Horace Greeley (American) [2]
1872: Montgomery Blair/ Horace Greeley (American)
1876: Benjamin Bristow / James G. Blaine (American)
1880: Stephan A. Douglas / Samuel Tilden (Unity)
1884: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1888: Samuel Tilden / Alonzo B. Cornell (Unity)
1892: Thomas B. Reed / John J. Ingalls (American)
1896: James D. Richardson / Edward Murphy (Unity)
1900: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1904: Henry Cabot Lodge / Nicholas Butler (Conservative)
1908: Nicholas Butler / Mark Hanna (Conservative)
1912: Champ Clark / Eugene V. Debs (Unity)
1916: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1920: Nicholas Butler / Grover Cleveland, Jr. (Conservative)
1924: Eugene V. Debs / Robert La Follette (Unity)
1928: Eugene V. Debs / Franklin Roosevelt (Unity)
1932: Albert Ritchie / Will Rogers (Unity) [3]
1936: Grover Cleveland, Jr. / Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (C) [4]
1940: Theodore Roosevelt Jr. / Thomas Dewey (C)
1944: Theodore Roosevelt Jr. / Thomas Dewey (C)

[1] Douglas beat Edward Bates (American) and Franklin Pierce (Democratic) in the first major 3-party race.
[2] Scott refused to run for reelection citing health reasons.
[3] Debs suffered a pair of heart attacks in 1930 and 1931, which causes him to reconsider running again.
[4] Popular disdain for the Unity party grows due to the economic stagnation and thus former Vice President Grover Cleveland, Jr. is elected in a landslide



Van Buren re-elected

1848: Martin Van Buren / Winnfield Scott (Free Soil)
1852: Winfield Scott / Millard Fillmore (Whig)
1856: William R. King / David Rice Atchison (Democratic)
1860: Millard Fillmore / Abraham Lincoln (W)
1864: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (Patriot) [1]
1868: James K. Polk / David Rice Atchison (P)
1872: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1876: Robert Todd Lincoln / Mark Hanna (W)
1880: Mark Hanna / James A. Garfield (W)
1881: James Garfield / vacant (W) [2]
1884: James Garfield / James G. Blaine (W)
1888: James G. Blane / Grover Cleveland (W)
1892: William McKinley / Henry G. Davis (W)
1896: William McKinley / Henry G. Davis (W)

[1] 16 years after ending his term, former President Polk forms the Patriot Party and leads a moderate, pro expansionist campaign, taking the White House once more.
[2] President Hanna is shot and killed by an assassin in Maine.

Constantinople
September 12th, 2011, 10:07 PM
[QUOTE=Mr. Magi;5020064]Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)[/B]
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1988: Geraldine Ferraro / Al Gore (DP)
1992: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [13]
1996: Colin Powell / Phil Gramm (C)
2000: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [14]
2004: John McCain / Bill Clinton (C)
2008: Golda Meir / Cynthia Mckinney (Social Justice)[15]
2010: Raymond T. Odierno / Gary Roughead / Edward A. Rice Jr. (Military) [16]
2018: Robert T. Matsui / Gary Johnson (Enterprise Party) [Real Power Held by conglomerate of Zaibatsus, American Megacorps and the Yakuza.] [17]



[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.
[13] Former Vice President Jerry Brown is elected with immigrant Golda Meir on the ticket of the New Social justice party. Brown was taking advantage of the amended constitution allowing for naturalized immigrants to become president. Years of more or less extreme libertarian and watered down Democratic Populists rule have created a vast underclass in American society. While the market based economy is booming many are left behind. Brown proposes to keep America's wondrous market economy, while preventing millions from slipping through the cracks. Meir is brought on the ticket to attract the more socialist side of the social justice party. They utterly smash the two other parties, with the DPs getting no electoral votes whatsoever, its voters turned off by libertarian pandering politicians. The Constitutional Party loses dozens and of seats to the Social Justice Party while dozens more Democratic Poplists congressmen switch sides. This is in addition to many SJs being elected to congress. The party finds itself with strong plurality of both houses, and with tacit support from the Democratic Populists it can pass its bills. It promises to be an interesting decade with the fiscal hawk, yet strangely liberal Brown at the helm, with his socialist immigrant female Jewish VP at his side.{
[14] The election many perceived as 'stolen' by Colin Powell caused a major backlash propelling Brown and Meir back in to an election four years later. Their wipe out victory (and consequential coat tail effect in congress) is resounding. The Constitutionalists were shrunken to a small minority with the Democratic Populists taking official opposition status.
[15] The second stolen election by the Constitutionalist party leads to a larger backlash against the party. They are reduced to a small rump of a dozen or so congressmen in total.
[16] Allegations of voter fraud against both the Constitutional Party and the Social Justice party, as well as threats of an armed revolution forces the Army Chief of Staff Odierno to intervene militarily. He decides to set the election date to 2012, as by then the electoral system will be modernized and and made more fair. He also renounces any ideas that he will run for political office, and urges the other two of the American Triumvirate to do the same.
[17] The years of military rule have left a scar on the American psyche. The original promise of a 2012 election was broken, and the corrupt military government combined allowed major corporate interests to fully take hold of the American government. Major industrial, technology and military firms are both exceptionally wealthy and elusive. Major decisions about policy are more likely to originate in the corporate offices of one Tokyo Zaibatsu or another, than in the White House of Capitol building. The moral-less research of the Ron Paul and Goldwater eras combined with the uncontrolled capitalism permanently made a part of the American cultural and business fabric (despite the best efforts of the Social Justice party) allows for an increasingly chaotic (yet innovative) American society, defined not by fair competition in the market, but by the level of intelligence money can buy, corporate espionage and human experimentation.

Badshah
September 12th, 2011, 10:10 PM
Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)[/B]
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1988: Geraldine Ferraro / Al Gore (DP)
1992: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [13]
1996: Colin Powell / Phil Gramm (C)
2000: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [14]
2004: John McCain / Bill Clinton (C)
2008: Golda Meir / Cynthia Mckinney (Social Justice)[15]
2010: Raymond T. Odierno / Gary Roughead / Edward A. Rice Jr. (Military) [16]
2018: Robert T. Matsui / Gary Johnson (Enterprise Party) [Real Power Held by conglomerate of Zaibatsus, American Megacorps and the Yakuza.] [17]
2020: August Granville/ Hrithik Karwani (Social Justice Party) [18]



[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.
[13] Former Vice President Jerry Brown is elected with immigrant Golda Meir on the ticket of the New Social justice party. Brown was taking advantage of the amended constitution allowing for naturalized immigrants to become president. Years of more or less extreme libertarian and watered down Democratic Populists rule have created a vast underclass in American society. While the market based economy is booming many are left behind. Brown proposes to keep America's wondrous market economy, while preventing millions from slipping through the cracks. Meir is brought on the ticket to attract the more socialist side of the social justice party. They utterly smash the two other parties, with the DPs getting no electoral votes whatsoever, its voters turned off by libertarian pandering politicians. The Constitutional Party loses dozens and of seats to the Social Justice Party while dozens more Democratic Poplists congressmen switch sides. This is in addition to many SJs being elected to congress. The party finds itself with strong plurality of both houses, and with tacit support from the Democratic Populists it can pass its bills. It promises to be an interesting decade with the fiscal hawk, yet strangely liberal Brown at the helm, with his socialist immigrant female Jewish VP at his side.{
[14] The election many perceived as 'stolen' by Colin Powell caused a major backlash propelling Brown and Meir back in to an election four years later. Their wipe out victory (and consequential coat tail effect in congress) is resounding. The Constitutionalists were shrunken to a small minority with the Democratic Populists taking official opposition status.
[15] The second stolen election by the Constitutionalist party leads to a larger backlash against the party. They are reduced to a small rump of a dozen or so congressmen in total.
[16] Allegations of voter fraud against both the Constitutional Party and the Social Justice party, as well as threats of an armed revolution forces the Army Chief of Staff Odierno to intervene militarily. He decides to set the election date to 2012, as by then the electoral system will be modernized and and made more fair. He also renounces any ideas that he will run for political office, and urges the other two of the American Triumvirate to do the same.
[17] The years of military rule have left a scar on the American psyche. The original promise of a 2012 election was broken, and the corrupt military government combined allowed major corporate interests to fully take hold of the American government. Major industrial, technology and military firms are both exceptionally wealthy and elusive. Major decisions about policy are more likely to originate in the corporate offices of one Tokyo Zaibatsu or another, than in the White House of Capitol building. The moral-less research of the Ron Paul and Goldwater eras combined with the uncontrolled capitalism permanently made a part of the American cultural and business fabric (despite the best efforts of the Social Justice party) allows for an increasingly chaotic (yet innovative) American society, defined not by fair competition in the market, but by the level of intelligence money can buy, corporate espionage and human experimentation.
[18] Responsible for the Blue Revolution, bringing back true democracy and impeaching the former President.

Constantinople
September 12th, 2011, 10:13 PM
[QUOTE=trollhole;5020180]Compromise of 1856:

1856: Millard Fillmore / Andrew Donelson (American)[/B]
1860: John Bell / William Seward (Constitutional Union)
1864: John Bell / William Seward (CU)
1868: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (Republican)
1872: Charles Francis Adams / Andrew Curtin (R)
1876: James G. Blaine / James A. Garfield (R)
1879: James A. Garfield / vacant (R) [1]
1880: James A. Garfield / Horace Greeley (R)
1881: Horace Greeley / vacant (R) [2]
1884: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1888: Horace Greeley / Theodore Roosevelt Sr. (R)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Henry G. Davis (Constitutional)
1896: Matthew Quay/Joseph Foraker (R) [3]
1900: William Jennings Bryan / Alton B. Parker (C) [4]
1904: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas E. Watson (Populist) [5]
1908: James S. Sherman/ William Howard Taft (C)
1912: William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (C) [6]
1916: Charles Evan Hughes/John W. Davis (C)
1920: Henry Cabot Lodge / John D. Rockefeller Jr (P)
1924: Henry Cabot Lodge / John W. Davis (P / C) [7]
1928: Miles Poindexter / Charles G. Dawes (C)
1932: Huey Long / Charles G. Dawes (DP / C) [8]
1936: Charles G. Dawes / Arthur H. Vandenburg (C)
1940: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C)
1944: Charles G. Dawes / Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (C) [9]
1948: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Earl Warren (C)
1952: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. / Harold B. Stassen (C) [10]
1956: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1960: John Kennedy / Hubert Humphrey (DP)
1964: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1968: Barry Goldwater / Walter Judd (C)
1972: Barry Goldwater / Ron Paul (C) [11]
1976: Barry Goldwater / Jerry Brown (DP) [12]
1980: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1984: Ron Paul / Ronald Reagan (C)
1988: Geraldine Ferraro / Al Gore (DP)
1992: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [13]
1996: Colin Powell / Phil Gramm (C)
2000: Jerry Brown / Golda Meir (Social Justice) [14]
2004: John McCain / Bill Clinton (C)
2008: Golda Meir / Cynthia Mckinney (Social Justice)[15]
2010: Raymond T. Odierno / Gary Roughead / Edward A. Rice Jr. (Military) [16]
2018: Robert T. Matsui / Gary Johnson (Enterprise Party) [Real Power Held by conglomerate of Zaibatsus, American Megacorps and the Yakuza.] [17]
2020: August Granville/ Hrithik Karwani (Social Justice Party)[Real Power Held by conglomerate of Zaibatsus, American Megacorps and the Yakuza.] [18][19]



[1] Blaine was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
[2] Garfield assassinated by Greeley supporter, leaving conspiracies that Greeley organized the assassination.
[3] Panic of 1895 made Cleveland's tenure unpopular. Quay won using this.
[4] Quay couldn't handle the economic downturn, and Bryan's oratory skill managed to paint the Panic of 1895 as the result of poor Republican administration.
[5] Bryan denied renomination by the Constitutional Party, and was nominated by the Populist Party instead. President Bryan narrowly defeated Vice President Parker (D-NY) and Senator Albert J. Beveridge (R-IN).
[6] Taft accidentally became president when Sherman died a week after his re-election. He chose Butler, who was more interested in politics than him as VP.
[7] Election thrown into House due to a three-way split in the Electoral College
[8] Long breaks with the Populist Party, leading to a race with five plausible contenders (mainstream Populist, Democratic Populist, Constitutional, Republican, and the revived isolationist American Party). Nobody gets a majority, and the Senate and House split in their decisions, leading to a divided administration.
[9] Dawes runs for a third term due to popular demand and the North American War, which was a conquest of Mexican, as well as Central and Latin American nations
[10] Unjustly blamed for the War, which resulted in the US evacuating Central America and most of Mexico. He loses to the Populist candidate handily.
[11] Barry Goldwater re-elected with 57% of the popular vote; VP Judd chooses to become a senator rather than remain VP
[12] Goldwater hangs on, but an indecisive election leads to Brown being picked as VP.
[13] Former Vice President Jerry Brown is elected with immigrant Golda Meir on the ticket of the New Social justice party. Brown was taking advantage of the amended constitution allowing for naturalized immigrants to become president. Years of more or less extreme libertarian and watered down Democratic Populists rule have created a vast underclass in American society. While the market based economy is booming many are left behind. Brown proposes to keep America's wondrous market economy, while preventing millions from slipping through the cracks. Meir is brought on the ticket to attract the more socialist side of the social justice party. They utterly smash the two other parties, with the DPs getting no electoral votes whatsoever, its voters turned off by libertarian pandering politicians. The Constitutional Party loses dozens and of seats to the Social Justice Party while dozens more Democratic Poplists congressmen switch sides. This is in addition to many SJs being elected to congress. The party finds itself with strong plurality of both houses, and with tacit support from the Democratic Populists it can pass its bills. It promises to be an interesting decade with the fiscal hawk, yet strangely liberal Brown at the helm, with his socialist immigrant female Jewish VP at his side.{
[14] The election many perceived as 'stolen' by Colin Powell caused a major backlash propelling Brown and Meir back in to an election four years later. Their wipe out victory (and consequential coat tail effect in congress) is resounding. The Constitutionalists were shrunken to a small minority with the Democratic Populists taking official opposition status.
[15] The second stolen election by the Constitutionalist party leads to a larger backlash against the party. They are reduced to a small rump of a dozen or so congressmen in total.
[16] Allegations of voter fraud against both the Constitutional Party and the Social Justice party, as well as threats of an armed revolution forces the Army Chief of Staff Odierno to intervene militarily. He decides to set the election date to 2012, as by then the electoral system will be modernized and and made more fair. He also renounces any ideas that he will run for political office, and urges the other two of the American Triumvirate to do the same.
[17] The years of military rule have left a scar on the American psyche. The original promise of a 2012 election was broken, and the corrupt military government combined allowed major corporate interests to fully take hold of the American government. Major industrial, technology and military firms are both exceptionally wealthy and elusive. Major decisions about policy are more likely to originate in the corporate offices of one Tokyo Zaibatsu or another, than in the White House of Capitol building. The moral-less research of the Ron Paul and Goldwater eras combined with the uncontrolled capitalism permanently made a part of the American cultural and business fabric (despite the best efforts of the Social Justice party) allows for an increasingly chaotic (yet innovative) American society, defined not by fair competition in the market, but by the level of intelligence money can buy, corporate espionage and human experimentation.
[18] Responsible for the Blue Revolution, bringing back true democracy and impeaching the former President.
[19] However the megacorps are far too entrenched in the USA to be eliminated, and the new government is nothing more than a puppet of the same interests. Human augmentation becomes ever popular, creating a new class of god cyborged humans and a lower class which can never outthink their cyborg overlords.

Constantinople
September 12th, 2011, 10:14 PM
Game won!!

Badshah
September 12th, 2011, 10:18 PM
Game won!!
You can't edit someone else's turn when the game is finished.

Mr. Magi
September 12th, 2011, 10:20 PM
Besides, I was the one who won. I aimed for that list to be euthanized due to Teddy Roosevelt Syndrome (TRS), and lo and behold, mission accomplished.;)

Constantinople
September 12th, 2011, 10:21 PM
You can't edit someone else's turn when the game is finished.

Well I didn't go beyond 2020, I just added an event to 2020.

Besides, I was the one who won. I aimed for that list to be euthanized due to jerseyrules syndrome, and lo and behold, mission accomplished.;)

I aimed to end it do to the same chronic "well I'm refuting that BECAUSE, BECAUSE!" crap. :)

Badshah
September 12th, 2011, 10:23 PM
Governor Generals of the American Commonwealth

1786-1791: Benedict Arnold/ Benjamin Franklin (Unionist)

Turquoise Blue
September 12th, 2011, 10:25 PM
For this one, have a republic declare itself in the 20th Century.

Mr. Magi
September 12th, 2011, 10:40 PM
Is the second slot the PM?