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


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JoeMulk
March 14th, 2011, 07:38 PM
FDR stops at two terms

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)

A Knox
March 14th, 2011, 08:52 PM
FDR stops at two terms

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)

Yo, it's a great idea, but can we finish the TWO current timelines?

A Knox
March 15th, 2011, 01:50 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)

Taft Wins TL

1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)

King Nazar
March 15th, 2011, 08:15 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)

Taft Wins TL

1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)

A Knox
March 15th, 2011, 09:04 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)


Taft Wins TL

1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)

King Nazar
March 15th, 2011, 09:53 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)


Taft Wins TL

1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)

Rogov
March 15th, 2011, 11:54 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)

Time for a civil war.

Odysseus
March 16th, 2011, 01:39 AM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"


Free Republic of America

1884: John A. Bingham/John Brown Jr. (Radical Party)

Blue Max
March 16th, 2011, 06:06 AM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888- John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?

A Knox
March 16th, 2011, 02:48 PM
Taft Wins TL

1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)


Other, funner, TL

1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888- John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892- John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)

Blue Max
March 16th, 2011, 03:29 PM
Taft Wins TL

1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.



Other, funner, TL

1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)

King Nazar
March 16th, 2011, 09:03 PM
Taft Wins TL

1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)



Other, funner, TL

1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)

Rogov
March 16th, 2011, 11:49 PM
Taft Wins TL

1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)
1988: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)

King Nazar
March 17th, 2011, 07:14 AM
1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)
1988: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1992: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)



Other, funner, TL

1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)

A Knox
March 17th, 2011, 02:32 PM
1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)
1988: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1992: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1996: Ralph Nader / Dolores Huerta (NP)



Other, funner, TL

1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)

Rogov
March 17th, 2011, 08:52 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
19012: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*

*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.

anon_user
March 17th, 2011, 09:03 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1916: Carter Glass / William G. McAdoo (UP) - Foster, having secured victory, decides not to participate in the 1916 election, instead becoming chairman of the Union Party.

jmill
March 17th, 2011, 09:06 PM
Taft re-elected:
1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)
1988: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1992: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1996: Ralph Nader / Dolores Huerta (NP)
2000: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)




Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
19012: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
__________________
The Soviet Union was bad. Stalin was bad.
http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/images/buttons/quote.gif (http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/newreply.php?do=newreply&p=4298989)

King Nazar
March 17th, 2011, 10:40 PM
Taft re-elected:
1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)
1988: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1992: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1996: Ralph Nader / Dolores Huerta (NP)
2000: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2004: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)







Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)

President_Gore
March 17th, 2011, 11:06 PM
Taft re-elected:
1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)
1988: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1992: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1996: Ralph Nader / Dolores Huerta (NP)
2000: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2004: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2008: Alan Grayson / Barbara Boxer (NP)







Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)

Odysseus
March 17th, 2011, 11:52 PM
Taft re-elected:
1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)
1988: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1992: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1996: Ralph Nader / Dolores Huerta (NP)
2000: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2004: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2008: Alan Grayson / Barbara Boxer (NP)







Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.

King Nazar
March 18th, 2011, 12:00 AM
Taft re-elected:
1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)
1988: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1992: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1996: Ralph Nader / Dolores Huerta (NP)
2000: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2004: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2008: Alan Grayson / Barbara Boxer (NP)
2012: Alan Grayson / Barbara Boxer (NP)







Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)

Blue Max
March 18th, 2011, 05:58 AM
Taft re-elected:
1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)
1988: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1992: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1996: Ralph Nader / Dolores Huerta (NP)
2000: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2004: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2008: Alan Grayson / Barbara Boxer (NP)
2012: Alan Grayson / Barbara Boxer (NP)
2016: Scott Walker / Sarah Palin (R)






Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)

King Nazar
March 18th, 2011, 06:08 AM
Taft re-elected:
1912: William Howard Taft / James S. Sherman (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1920: Andrew Mellon/Calvin Coolidge (R)TR primaried, business elite support a regression to earlier times.
1922: Calvin Coolidge / Vacant (R)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R) Stephenson is...popular in ways that Coolidge needs to retain power.
1928: Calvin Coolidge / D.C. Stephenson (R)
1932: Raymond L. Haight / Henry Wallace (New Progressives)
1936: Raymond L. Haight / Upton Sinclair (NP) The NPs move left.
1940: Upton Sinclair / Henry Wallace (NP)
1944: Henry Ford / Theodore Bilbo (R) Renews the Industrialist-White Supremacist Coalition.
1946: Theodore Bilbo / Vacant (R) Ford assassinated by Malcolm Little
1948: Theodore Bilbo / Thomas Dewey (R)
1952: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1956: John Steinbeck / Walter Reuther (NP)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1964: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Edwin W. Pauley (R)
1968: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1972: Walter Reuther / Bayard Rustin (NP)
1976: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lawrence P. McDonald (R)
1980: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R) Watson needs help firing up the crowds. Larouche offers the populist appeal that he needs to maintain the plutocratic ideas of the Republican party.
1984: Thomas J. Watson, Jr. / Lyndon Larouche (R)
1988: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1992: John J. Sweeney / Ralph Nader (NP)
1996: Ralph Nader / Dolores Huerta (NP)
2000: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2004: Donald Trump/ Colin Powell (R)
2008: Alan Grayson / Barbara Boxer (NP)
2012: Alan Grayson / Barbara Boxer (NP)
2016: Scott Walker / Sarah Palin (R)
2020: Kirsten Gillibrand / Russ Feingold (NP)







Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)

anon_user
March 18th, 2011, 09:23 AM
Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)

A Knox
March 18th, 2011, 01:36 PM
Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.

anon_user
March 18th, 2011, 01:49 PM
Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.

King Nazar
March 18th, 2011, 01:50 PM
Edit: nija'd

King Nazar
March 18th, 2011, 03:06 PM
Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States

anon_user
March 18th, 2011, 03:34 PM
Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.

King Nazar
March 18th, 2011, 04:25 PM
Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.

Odysseus
March 18th, 2011, 05:08 PM
Adams re-elected:
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.

Dean501
March 18th, 2011, 05:17 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties

President_Gore
March 18th, 2011, 06:09 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)

King Nazar
March 18th, 2011, 06:54 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)

Odysseus
March 18th, 2011, 09:58 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern

President_Gore
March 18th, 2011, 10:30 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote

Odysseus
March 18th, 2011, 11:15 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern (Progressive)
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote
1986: Mark Hatfield / Mario Cuomo (Liberty/Progressive) For the second time in a row, the election goes to Congress. The Progressive controlled Senate selects Mario Cuomo to be Vice President, while the House narrowly selects a compromise candidate: Mark Hatfield

King Nazar
March 18th, 2011, 11:41 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern (Progressive)
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote
1986: Mark Hatfield / Mario Cuomo (Liberty/Progressive) For the second time in a row, the election goes to Congress. The Progressive controlled Senate selects Mario Cuomo to be Vice President, while the House narrowly selects a compromise candidate: Mark Hatfield
1990: Mario Cuomo / Edward M. Kennedy (Progressive)

Turquoise Blue
March 19th, 2011, 12:45 AM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern (Progressive)
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote
1986: Mark Hatfield / Mario Cuomo (Liberty/Progressive) For the second time in a row, the election goes to Congress. The Progressive controlled Senate selects Mario Cuomo to be Vice President, while the House narrowly selects a compromise candidate: Mark Hatfield
1990: Mario Cuomo / Edward M. Kennedy (Progressive)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy (Cuomo has an heart stroke.)

King Nazar
March 19th, 2011, 12:55 AM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern (Progressive)
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote
1986: Mark Hatfield / Mario Cuomo (Liberty/Progressive) For the second time in a row, the election goes to Congress. The Progressive controlled Senate selects Mario Cuomo to be Vice President, while the House narrowly selects a compromise candidate: Mark Hatfield
1990: Mario Cuomo / Edward M. Kennedy (Progressive)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy (Cuomo has an heart stroke.)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy / Bill Clinton (Progressive)

President_Gore
March 19th, 2011, 12:09 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern (Progressive)
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote
1986: Mark Hatfield / Mario Cuomo (Liberty/Progressive) For the second time in a row, the election goes to Congress. The Progressive controlled Senate selects Mario Cuomo to be Vice President, while the House narrowly selects a compromise candidate: Mark Hatfield
1990: Mario Cuomo / Edward M. Kennedy (Progressive)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy (Cuomo has an heart stroke.)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
1998: Dianne Feinstein / Robert Bennett (Liberty)

Turquoise Blue
March 19th, 2011, 12:18 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern (Progressive)
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote
1986: Mark Hatfield / Mario Cuomo (Liberty/Progressive) For the second time in a row, the election goes to Congress. The Progressive controlled Senate selects Mario Cuomo to be Vice President, while the House narrowly selects a compromise candidate: Mark Hatfield
1990: Mario Cuomo / Edward M. Kennedy (Progressive)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy (Cuomo has an heart stroke.)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
1998: Dianne Feinstein / Robert Bennett (Liberty)[/QUOTE]
2002: Dave Mustaine / Bill Clinton (Progressive)

King Nazar
March 19th, 2011, 08:29 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern (Progressive)
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote
1986: Mark Hatfield / Mario Cuomo (Liberty/Progressive) For the second time in a row, the election goes to Congress. The Progressive controlled Senate selects Mario Cuomo to be Vice President, while the House narrowly selects a compromise candidate: Mark Hatfield
1990: Mario Cuomo / Edward M. Kennedy (Progressive)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy (Cuomo has an heart stroke.)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
1998: Dianne Feinstein / Robert Bennett (Liberty)
2002: Dave Mustaine / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
2006: Dave Mustaine / Bill Clinton (Progressive)

Rogov
March 19th, 2011, 09:01 PM
FDR stops at two terms -

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)

King Nazar
March 19th, 2011, 09:09 PM
1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)



The other list is not finished yet:)

Odysseus
March 19th, 2011, 09:21 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern (Progressive)
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote
1986: Mark Hatfield / Mario Cuomo (Liberty/Progressive) For the second time in a row, the election goes to Congress. The Progressive controlled Senate selects Mario Cuomo to be Vice President, while the House narrowly selects a compromise candidate: Mark Hatfield
1990: Mario Cuomo / Edward M. Kennedy (Progressive)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy (Cuomo has an heart stroke.)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
1998: Dianne Feinstein / Robert Bennett (Liberty)
2002: Dave Mustaine / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
2006: Dave Mustaine / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
2010: Greg Giraldo/Joe Biden (Progressive)

King Nazar
March 19th, 2011, 09:22 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern (Progressive)
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote
1986: Mark Hatfield / Mario Cuomo (Liberty/Progressive) For the second time in a row, the election goes to Congress. The Progressive controlled Senate selects Mario Cuomo to be Vice President, while the House narrowly selects a compromise candidate: Mark Hatfield
1990: Mario Cuomo / Edward M. Kennedy (Progressive)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy (Cuomo has an heart stroke.)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
1998: Dianne Feinstein / Robert Bennett (Liberty)
2002: Dave Mustaine / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
2006: Dave Mustaine / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
2010: Greg Giraldo/Joe Biden (Progressive)
2014: Greg Giraldo/Joe Biden (Progressive)

Rogov
March 20th, 2011, 08:31 PM
1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)



The other list is not finished yet:)


Neither is this one, which is also a previous list. We tend to work on two at a time, not one. We completed one of the two we working on, which automatically brings up the next remaining previously began list - this one, which was started on a previous page by someone.

Turquoise Blue
March 20th, 2011, 08:40 PM
1800: John Adams / Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
1804: Alexander Hamilton / George Clinton (F/ Democratic-Republican)
1804: Government Crisis. President Hamilton killed by New York Senator Aaron Burr in a Duel. On an emergency basis, General Nathanael Greene assumes the Presidency
1808: Nathanael Greene/Andrew Moore (National Union Party)
1812: Nathanael Greene / Andrew Moore (NU)
1813: Andrew Moore / Vacant (NU) *President Greene dies unexpectedly, Andrew Moore decides to assume the Presidency to protect the stability of the Union.
1816: Andrew Moore / James Monroe (NU)
1816: James Monroe / Vacant (NU) (President Moore dies of a heart attack)
1820: James Monroe / John Quincy Adams (NU)
1824: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (National Party, Union collapses after infighting)
1828: Henry Clay / John Calhoun (NP)
1832: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1836: John Calhoun / Davy Crockett (NP)
1840: William C. Rives/Martin Van Buren (People's Party)
1844: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1848: James Buchanan / Andrew Stevenson (NP)
1852: Winfield Scott / William Seward (NP)
1856: Winfield Scott / Washington Hunt (NP)
1860: Washington Hunt / Abraham Lincoln (NP)
1864: Washington Hunt / John Bell (NP)
1865: John Bell / vacant (NP) Hunt assassinated
1868: John Bell / J. Neely Johnson (NP)
1872: J. Neely Johnson / William T. Sherman (NP)
1876: John H. Reagan / James R. Doolittle (NP) (The National Party keeps walking the fine moderate line so as not to upset slaveholders or abolitionists too badly)
1879: James R. Doolittle / vacant (NP) ( John H. Reagan assassinated)
1880: Henry George / John Brown Jr. (Opposition)
1884: James B. Beck/Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (National Party)
1884: A Civil War erupts after the National Party is accused of buying or rigging the extremely close election. All of the "northern" states except for Kansas, Nebraska, Illinois, and Colorado secede as the "Free Republic of America"
1888: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party) The end of the Civil War ends with two highly respected military leaders in command of the country, a ruined Northern United States, and a national acceptance that slavery is a correct from of government. Perhaps worse is the "penal slaves" that emerge from PoWs of the previous conflict. Slavery has won; has America lost?
1892: John Chivington / George Gordon (Union Party)
1896: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1900: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1904: Murphy J. Foster / Phillip W. McKinney (Union Party)
1908: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)
1912: Murphy J. Foster / William G. McAdoo (Union Party)*
1915: William G. McAdoo/Vacant(Union Party) Foster assassinated by German agents. This Action sparked America's entrance into the Great War (1915-1922) which would claim 1,987,900 American lives.
*Foster's grand triumph, having won the party nomination for a fifth time only by engineering the purge of Northern and non-conservative members from the Union Party and government positions. After spending his 16 years in office disenfranchising everyone but white male conservatives, there is no Unionist faction capable of preventing him from fulfilling his life-long desire to cut out the Northerners and generally those he believes tainted with "Free Republic treason". The Californian, McAdoo keeps out of the internal party struggle, giving the semblance of the Union Party still being a North-South alliance of national unity.
1916: William G. McAdoo / John J. Pershing (Union Party)
1919: A coup takes place in the United States against the Union Party by the disenfranchised working and minority classes in a series of protests eventually joined by the middle classes. President McAdoo and Vice President Pershing are both executed by General Hugh Scott, a Southerner who is Commander of the Kentucky and Tennessee battalions. Scott and his Nationalist Party assume control, the new President is Thomas Marshall who is sworn in on Labor Day 1919. Scott becomes Chief of the US Military.
1920: Thomas R. Marshall / Robert L. Owen (Nationalist)
1924: Robert L. Owen / Joseph Robinson (Nationalist) Thomas Marshall decides not to run for a second term. Also, an opposition party finally appears: The New People's Party lead by William Borah.
1927: Joseph Robinson / Vacant (Owen assassinated)
1927: Government Crisis (Robinson Assassinated)
1927: Hugh Scott / Vacant (No Party) (General Hugh Scott appoints himself Dictator)
1938: Mel Blanc (leader of the Sons of Liberty, the revolutionary group that finally overthrows the Scott regime)
1939: Virgil H. Effinger (Patriot Legion) Paramilitary group that General Scott let do his dirty work for him reorganizes and seizes the White House.
1940: General Arturo Rawson, Marshal Mascarenhas de Morais, Admiral Jorge Alessandri (Pan-American League Commissioners for the Pacification of the USA) - Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean commanders of the Pan-American League's operations in the USA; though Mexico had pushed for a seat on the table, the ABC powers (who contributed more manpower and funds to the League) took control of the multinational forces sent to stabilize and pacify the USA.
1950: Henry Blair / Thomas Bentsen (Independence) First Presidential Election held in a stabilized United States
1954: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) The Jones/Kaiser ticket beats Blair/Bentsen thanks to a well-run media campaign and Blair & Bentsen's general dullness, which came out most strongly in the radio debates.
1958: Chuck Jones/Henry Kaiser (Liberty) TheJones/Kaiser ticket wins due to good economy.
1962: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. / Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) Presidents limited to two terms.
1966: Kermit Roosevelt, Jr./ Nelson Rockefeller (Progressive) The Progressives (Center Left), Liberty Party (Center Right), and Independence Party (Libertarian) stabalize as the three main American political parties
1970: Nelson Rockefeller / Harold Strassen (Progressive)
1974: Alexander Robinson / Barry Goldwater (Liberty)
1978: Nelson Rockefeller / George McGovern (Progressive)
1982: Phil Crane / Percy L. Greaves (Independence) Election goes to Congress after split between McGovern, Crane and John Anderson; as Independence holds Congress, Crane becomes President despite coming second in the electoral votes although he did win the popular vote
1986: Mark Hatfield / Mario Cuomo (Liberty/Progressive) For the second time in a row, the election goes to Congress. The Progressive controlled Senate selects Mario Cuomo to be Vice President, while the House narrowly selects a compromise candidate: Mark Hatfield
1990: Mario Cuomo / Edward M. Kennedy (Progressive)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy (Cuomo has an heart stroke.)
1994: Edward M. Kennedy / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
1998: Dianne Feinstein / Robert Bennett (Liberty)
2002: Dave Mustaine / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
2006: Dave Mustaine / Bill Clinton (Progressive)
2010: Greg Giraldo/Joe Biden (Progressive)
2014: Greg Giraldo/Joe Biden (Progressive)
2018: Bill Clinton/Joe Biden (Progressive)

King Nazar
March 21st, 2011, 01:15 AM
New List:)
Garfield looses 1880

1880: Wilfred Hancock / William Hayden English (D)

A Knox
March 21st, 2011, 02:05 PM
FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)


Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)

King Nazar
March 21st, 2011, 02:27 PM
FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)


Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D) (Hancock dies of a heart attack)

West Ham
March 21st, 2011, 07:57 PM
FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)

Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)

Dean501
March 21st, 2011, 08:02 PM
FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)


Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)

President_Gore
March 21st, 2011, 08:25 PM
FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)


Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)

King Nazar
March 21st, 2011, 09:05 PM
FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)


Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)

Rogov
March 21st, 2011, 10:10 PM
FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)

King Nazar
March 21st, 2011, 10:19 PM
FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)

A Knox
March 22nd, 2011, 02:28 PM
Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)

Dean501
March 22nd, 2011, 03:02 PM
Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Theodore Roosevelt/ Howard Taft (R)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: Dale Bumpers/ John V. Tunney (D)

President_Gore
March 22nd, 2011, 03:45 PM
Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)

King Nazar
March 22nd, 2011, 11:15 PM
Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)

theReturner
March 23rd, 2011, 04:40 AM
Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)


FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)

King Nazar
March 23rd, 2011, 05:12 AM
Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)


FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1992: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)

A Knox
March 23rd, 2011, 01:25 PM
Garfield loses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1992: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1996: Jack Kemp / Michael Bilirakis (R)

President_Gore
March 23rd, 2011, 04:38 PM
Garfield loses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1992: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1996: Jack Kemp / Michael Bilirakis (R)
2000: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)

King Nazar
March 23rd, 2011, 08:37 PM
Garfield loses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1992: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1996: Jack Kemp / Michael Bilirakis (R)
2000: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2004: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)

Bahamut-255
March 23rd, 2011, 11:47 PM
Garfield loses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1992: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1996: Jack Kemp / Michael Bilirakis (R)
2000: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2004: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2008: John McCain/Colin Powell (R)

Mr. Magi
March 24th, 2011, 12:37 AM
Garfield loses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1992: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1996: Jack Kemp / Michael Bilirakis (R)
2000: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2004: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2008: John McCain/Colin Powell (R)
2012: John McCain/Colin Powell (R)

King Nazar
March 24th, 2011, 12:45 AM
Garfield loses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1992: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1996: Jack Kemp / Michael Bilirakis (R)
2000: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2004: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2008: John McCain/Colin Powell (R)
2012: John McCain/Colin Powell (R)
2016: Colin Powell / Mitt Romney

West Ham
March 24th, 2011, 01:37 AM
Garfield loses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1992: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1996: Jack Kemp / Michael Bilirakis (R)
2000: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2004: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2008: John McCain/Colin Powell (R)
2012: John McCain/Colin Powell (R)
2016: Colin Powell / Mitt Romney
2018: Mitt Romney / Vacant (R) (Colin Powell dies of a stroke)

King Nazar
March 24th, 2011, 04:05 AM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)


FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1984: George Deukmejian / George Bush (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1992: Michael Dukakis / Mitt Romney (D)
1996: Jack Kemp / Michael Bilirakis (R)
2000: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2004: John F. Kennedy Jr. / Joseph Biden (D)
2008: John McCain/Colin Powell (R)
2012: John McCain/Colin Powell (R)
2016: Colin Powell / Mitt Romney
2018: Mitt Romney / Vacant (R) (Colin Powell dies of a stroke)
2018: Mitt Romney / Bobby Jindal (R)

A Knox
March 24th, 2011, 12:59 PM
Garfield loses TL:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)

New quick TL: Equal Opportunity to Govern Amendment (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal_Opportunity_to_Govern_Amendment) is ratified by 2004, so naturalized citizens can now ascend to the presidency.
2004: George W. Bush / Mel Martinez (R)

Dean501
March 24th, 2011, 02:12 PM
Garfield loses TL:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)

New quick TL: Equal Opportunity to Govern Amendment (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal_Opportunity_to_Govern_Amendment) is ratified by 2004, so naturalized citizens can now ascend to the presidency.
2004: George W. Bush / Mel Martinez (R)
2008: Hillary Clinton/Evan Bayh (D)

President_Gore
March 24th, 2011, 03:42 PM
Garfield loses TL:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)

New quick TL: Equal Opportunity to Govern Amendment (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal_Opportunity_to_Govern_Amendment) is ratified by 2004, so naturalized citizens can now ascend to the presidency.
2004: George W. Bush / Mel Martinez (R)
2008: Hillary Clinton/Evan Bayh (D)
2012: Arnold Schwarzenegger / Tim Pawlenty (R)

Turquoise Blue
March 24th, 2011, 03:54 PM
Why not have an US one where they have Canada?

jmill
March 24th, 2011, 04:14 PM
Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Theodore Roosevelt/ Howard Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Howard Taft (R)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: Dale Bumpers/ John V. Tunney (D)
1984: George H.W. Bush /Nancy Kassebaum (R)

King Nazar
March 24th, 2011, 08:30 PM
Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Theodore Roosevelt/ Howard Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Howard Taft (R)
1912: Howard Taft / Charles E. Hughs (R)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: Dale Bumpers/ John V. Tunney (D)
1984: George H.W. Bush /Nancy Kassebaum (R)
1988: George H.W. Bush /Nancy Kassebaum (R)

A Knox
March 24th, 2011, 09:17 PM
Garfield looses 1880:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Theodore Roosevelt/ Howard Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Howard Taft (R)
1912: Howard Taft / Charles E. Hughs (R)

FDR stops at two terms:

1940: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1944: James Farley/Henry Wallace (D)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Earl Warren (R)
1950: Earl Warren (R) (Dewey is assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists)
1952: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1956: Earl Warren / Dwight Eisenhower (R)
1960: Stuart Symington/ John F. Kennedy (D)
1964: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1968: Henry Cabot Lodge / Hiram Fong (R)
1972: Robert McNamara / Dale Bumpers (D)
1973: Dale Bumpers / Vacant (D) (McNamara dies in a plane crash)
1976: Dale Bumpers /John V. Tunney (D)
1980: Dale Bumpers/ John V. Tunney (D)
1984: George H.W. Bush /Nancy Kassebaum (R)
1988: George H.W. Bush /Nancy Kassebaum (R)

Wait, what? Why did you two just spontaneously retcon two timelines, one of which is closed?

Mr. Magi
March 24th, 2011, 10:12 PM
Blame jmill. He clearly didn't follow the guidelines for these lists.

Anyway this gives me the idea for a drinking game for this list.

The Rules:

1. Drink once for every third or new party that wins an election.
2. Drink a sip for people who died OTL that win a ticket.
3. One Shot for every progressive ticket
4. One drink for every coup d'etat
5. Finish your drink for the following people: Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan

Any here's the real TL we're working on. Let the FDR one go to rest for a while.

Garfield loses TL:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)

King Nazar
March 24th, 2011, 11:49 PM
Garfield loses TL:

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)

Dean501
March 25th, 2011, 12:05 AM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)

King Nazar
March 25th, 2011, 12:06 AM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)

jmill
March 25th, 2011, 12:25 AM
Blame jmill. He clearly didn't follow the guidelines for these lists.

Anyway this gives me the idea for a drinking game for this list.



what are you talking about these are the guidelines that were set in the beginning
This one will have three rules:

One election per post

Wait at least two posts before going again

Don't skip into the future, go in order.

I did none of these:mad: and TR was added in the post before me.

Dean501
March 25th, 2011, 12:31 AM
Blame jmill. He clearly didn't follow the guidelines for these lists.

Anyway this gives me the idea for a drinking game for this list.

The Rules:

1. Drink once for every third or new party that wins an election.
2. Drink a sip for people who died OTL that win a ticket.
3. One Shot for every progressive ticket
4. One drink for every coup d'etat
5. Finish your drink for the following people: Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan

Any here's the real TL we're working on. Let the FDR one go to rest for a while.




Two drinks for every time Teddy Roosevelt wins 3 terms

Mr. Magi
March 25th, 2011, 02:33 AM
what are you talking about these are the guidelines that were set in the beginning

I did none of these:mad: and TR was added in the post before me.

Didn't catch that the first time... sorry.

However, those picks you revived were ignored when they were put out there; something that shouldn't have happened. But it's too late now to correct it. One of the lists is done, and the others over half a century different.

Two drinks for every time Teddy Roosevelt wins 3 terms Today 08:25 PM

Great one!

Rules for Thread Drinking Game

1. Drink once for every third or new party that wins an election.
2. Drink a sip for people who died OTL that win a ticket.
3. One Shot for every progressive ticket
4. Two drinks for every time Teddy Roosevelt wins 3 terms
5. One sip every time Franklin Roosevelt wins 3 terms
6. One drink for every coup d'etat
7. Finish your drink for the following people: Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)

Zacoftheaxes
March 26th, 2011, 05:06 PM
Oh yay! A drinking game!



Rules for Thread Drinking Game

1. Drink once for every third or new party that wins an election.
2. Drink a sip for people who died OTL that win a ticket.
3. One Shot for every progressive ticket
4. Two drinks for every time Teddy Roosevelt wins 3 terms
5. One sip every time Franklin Roosevelt wins 3 terms
6. One drink for every coup d'etat
7. Finish your drink for the following people: Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Hebert Hoover, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Barack Obama
8. Take a shot every time a musician becomes president
9. Take a shot for every fascist or socialist election victory
10. Take one drink whenever these men pop up: Ron Paul, William Jennings Bryan, George S Patton, Harold Stassen, Barry Goldwater, and Thomas Dewey.




1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)

President_Gore
March 26th, 2011, 07:02 PM
Oh yay! A drinking game!




1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)

King Nazar
March 26th, 2011, 07:16 PM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)

Mr. Magi
March 26th, 2011, 09:44 PM
By the way, finish your drink Nazar. You put in Reagan.:D

1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)

Now let me get a can to finish too...

Zacoftheaxes
March 26th, 2011, 10:21 PM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)

King Nazar
March 26th, 2011, 10:30 PM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)

Dean501
March 27th, 2011, 12:58 AM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)
1992: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt

King Nazar
March 27th, 2011, 01:31 AM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)
1992: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt
1996: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt

EvilSpaceAlien
March 27th, 2011, 02:04 AM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)
1992: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
1996: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
2000: Thomas Daschle/Barbara Mikulski (D)

King Nazar
March 27th, 2011, 02:09 AM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)
1992: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
1996: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
2000: Thomas Daschle/Barbara Mikulski (D)
2004: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 27th, 2011, 02:54 AM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)
1992: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
1996: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
2000: Thomas Daschle/Barbara Mikulski (D)
2004: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2008: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)

Mr. Magi
March 27th, 2011, 07:59 PM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)
1992: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
1996: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
2000: Thomas Daschle/Barbara Mikulski (D)
2004: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2008: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2011: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 27th, 2011, 09:28 PM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)
1992: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
1996: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
2000: Thomas Daschle/Barbara Mikulski (D)
2004: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2008: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2012: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2014: Colin Powell / vacant (R) McCain is assassinated at a rally in Kansas City, Missouri

Odysseus
March 27th, 2011, 09:50 PM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)
1992: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
1996: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
2000: Thomas Daschle/Barbara Mikulski (D)
2004: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2008: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2012: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2014: Colin Powell / vacant (R) McCain is assassinated at a rally in Kansas City, Missouri
2014: Chris Van Hollen / vacant (D) Colin Powell dies.

EvilSpaceAlien
March 27th, 2011, 10:09 PM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)
1992: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
1996: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
2000: Thomas Daschle/Barbara Mikulski (D)
2004: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2008: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2012: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2014: Colin Powell / vacant (R) McCain is assassinated at a rally in Kansas City, Missouri
2014: Chris Van Hollen / vacant (D) Colin Powell dies.
2016: Martin O'Malley / Russ Feingold (D)

King Nazar
March 28th, 2011, 12:34 AM
1880: Winfield Hancock / William Hayden English (D)
1884: Winfield Hancock / Allen G. Thurman (D)
1885: Allen G. Thurman / Vacant (D)
1888: John Sherman / Chauncey Depew (R)
1892: James G. Blaine/ Chauncey Depew (R) (President Sherman suffers a heart attack and dies at the convention. Depew is kept as Vice President)
1896: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1900: Robert E. Pattison / John Roll McLean (D)
1903: John Roll McLean / vacant (D) The stress of the presidency gets to President Pattison and he has a stroke which puts him in a semi-comatose state. Emergency measures make VP McLean the acting president.
1904: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1908: Joseph B. Foraker / William H. Taft (R)
1909: William H. Taft (R) / vacant (Foraker dies)
1912: William H. Taft / John Andrew Rea (R)
1916: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1920: Champ Clark / Eugene Foss (D)
1924: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1928: Charles Curtis / Herbert Hoover (R)
1932: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1936: William Randolph Hearst / Alben Barkley (D)
1940: Alben Barkley / Bennett Champ Clark (D)
1944:Thomas Dewey/ John W. Bricker (R)
1948: Robert Kerr / Averill Harriman (D)
1952: Harold Stassen / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1960: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./ Jennings Randolph (D)
1964: Jennings Randolph / Hubert Humphrey (D)
1968: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1972: Anne Frances Robbins / Roy Cohn (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1984: Ronald Reagan / Gerald Ford (R)
1988: Paul M. Simon / Bruce Babbitt (D)
1992: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
1996: Paul M. Simon/ Bruce Babbitt (D)
2000: Thomas Daschle/Barbara Mikulski (D)
2004: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2008: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2012: John McCain / Colin Powell (R)
2014: Colin Powell / vacant (R) McCain is assassinated at a rally in Kansas City, Missouri
2014: Chris Van Hollen / vacant (D) Colin Powell dies.
2016: Martin O'Malley / Russ Feingold (D)
2020: Martin O'Malley / Russ Feingold (D)

anon_user
March 28th, 2011, 01:08 AM
Proposal: Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.
1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)

King Nazar
March 28th, 2011, 01:16 AM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.
1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 28th, 2011, 01:27 AM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.
1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)

anon_user
March 28th, 2011, 01:36 AM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.
1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.

King Nazar
March 28th, 2011, 01:40 AM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.
1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)

Odysseus
March 28th, 2011, 02:13 AM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.

1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.

King Nazar
March 28th, 2011, 03:57 AM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.

1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.
1988: Walter Mondale / Bill Clinton (D) Mondale elected on the rally effect from the assassination of President Jackson

Wendell
March 28th, 2011, 03:58 AM
I did not realize that this had become the ASB Presidents thread:rolleyes:

Odysseus
March 28th, 2011, 05:32 AM
snip

The assassination? He died of an aortic aneurysm. :confused:

Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.

1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.
1988: Walter Mondale / Bill Clinton (D) Mondale elected on the rally effect from the untimely death of President Jackson
1992: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)

Mr. Magi
March 28th, 2011, 06:26 AM
I did not realize that this had become the ASB Presidents thread:rolleyes:

Probably when you decided to call it that. I honestly recommend you look through some of the older lists on this thread. Some of them are a good deal nuttier than these.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Agnew's replaced TL.

1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.
1988: Walter Mondale / Bill Clinton (D) Mondale elected on the rally effect from the untimely death of President Jackson
1992: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
1996: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)

Here's another TL too.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 28th, 2011, 08:24 AM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.

1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.
1988: Walter Mondale / Bill Clinton (D) Mondale elected on the rally effect from the untimely death of President Jackson
1992: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
1996: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
2000: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor

Pingvin99
March 28th, 2011, 09:30 AM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.

1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.
1988: Walter Mondale / Bill Clinton (D) Mondale elected on the rally effect from the untimely death of President Jackson
1992: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
1996: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
2000: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2004: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)

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Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)

anon_user
March 28th, 2011, 09:41 AM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.

1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.
1988: Walter Mondale / Bill Clinton (D) Mondale elected on the rally effect from the untimely death of President Jackson
1992: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
1996: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
2000: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2004: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2006: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D) Shaheen selects the governor of Colorado as her VP after Gephardt is removed under the 25th Amendment, having suffered a severe stroke leaving him in a coma.

OOC: Dammit, HST's run for Pitkin County Sheriff was in 1970, before the PoD.

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Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 28th, 2011, 10:34 AM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.

1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.
1988: Walter Mondale / Bill Clinton (D) Mondale elected on the rally effect from the untimely death of President Jackson
1992: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
1996: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
2000: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2004: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2006: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D) Shaheen selects the governor of Colorado as her VP after Gephardt is removed under the 25th Amendment, having suffered a severe stroke leaving him in a coma.
2008: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D)

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Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)

King Nazar
March 28th, 2011, 12:19 PM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.

1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.
1988: Walter Mondale / Bill Clinton (D) Mondale elected on the rally effect from the untimely death of President Jackson
1992: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
1996: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
2000: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2004: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2006: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D) Shaheen selects the governor of Colorado as her VP after Gephardt is removed under the 25th Amendment, having suffered a severe stroke leaving him in a coma.
2008: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D)
2012: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D)

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Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 28th, 2011, 12:42 PM
Nixon replaces Agnew in '72.

1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.
1988: Walter Mondale / Bill Clinton (D) Mondale elected on the rally effect from the untimely death of President Jackson
1992: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
1996: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
2000: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2004: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2006: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D) Shaheen selects the governor of Colorado as her VP after Gephardt is removed under the 25th Amendment, having suffered a severe stroke leaving him in a coma.
2008: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D)
2012: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D)
2016: John Thune/Bobby Jindal (R)

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Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President

jmill
March 28th, 2011, 02:19 PM
1972: Richard Nixon (R)/John Connally (I) (Connally formally declares himself an independent; Nixon pushes his nomination through the '72 RNC)
1973: John Connally (I) / Vacant (Nixon assasinated)[
1976: John Connally / Ronald Reagan (R) (Connally joins the Republican Party before the '76 election and is able to win the primary by the skin of his teeth)
1980: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) Stagflation, along with anemic support for Connally from the GOP's base, allows Jackson to win election in 1980.
1984: Scoop Jackson/Walter Mondale (D) (Jackson and Mondale ride the now booming economy to victory)
1985: Walter Mondale (D) Jackson dies of an aortic aneurysm.
1988: Walter Mondale / Bill Clinton (D) Mondale elected on the rally effect from the untimely death of President Jackson
1992: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
1996: Larry Pressler/Bob Dole (R)
2000: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2004: Dick Gephardt/Jeanne Shaheen (D)
2006: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D) Shaheen selects the governor of Colorado as her VP after Gephardt is removed under the 25th Amendment, having suffered a severe stroke leaving him in a coma.
2008: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D)
2012: Jeanne Shaheen/Bill Ritter (D)
2016: John Thune/Bobby Jindal (R)
2020: John Thune/Bobby Jindal (R)
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Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President __
1953: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
________________

EvilSpaceAlien
March 28th, 2011, 02:29 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)

Mr. Magi
March 28th, 2011, 03:12 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)

President_Gore
March 28th, 2011, 03:18 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)

jmill
March 28th, 2011, 03:56 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 28th, 2011, 04:37 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)

King Nazar
March 28th, 2011, 04:55 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 28th, 2011, 05:03 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)

King Nazar
March 28th, 2011, 05:09 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 28th, 2011, 05:22 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)

President_Gore
March 28th, 2011, 05:30 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)

Odysseus
March 28th, 2011, 09:45 PM
Willkie Wins TL

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)

JoeMulk
March 28th, 2011, 09:50 PM
RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)

Mr. Magi
March 28th, 2011, 10:33 PM
I should make an addendum to the drinking game where you take a shot whenever a Kennedy shows up.;)

RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)

King Nazar
March 28th, 2011, 11:37 PM
RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)

Mr. Magi
March 29th, 2011, 12:16 AM
RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)

Odysseus
March 29th, 2011, 01:59 AM
New Rule: Take a drink whenever someone starts a new list before the current one is done.

King Nazar
March 29th, 2011, 02:06 AM
RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)

Mr. Magi
March 29th, 2011, 02:14 AM
Rules for Thread Drinking Game

1. Drink once for every third or new party that wins an election.
2. Drink a sip for people who died OTL that win a ticket.
3. One Shot for every progressive ticket
4. Two drinks for every time Teddy Roosevelt wins 3 terms
5. One sip every time Franklin Roosevelt wins 3 terms
6. One drink for every coup d'etat
7. Finish your drink for the following people: Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Hebert Hoover, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Barack Obama
8. Take a shot for every time a Kennedy wins an election
9. Take a shot every time a musician becomes president
10. Take a shot for every fascist or socialist election victory
11. Take one drink whenever these men pop up: Ron Paul, William Jennings Bryan, George S Patton, Harold Stassen, Barry Goldwater, and Thomas Dewey.
12. Take a drink for starting a new list
13. Take another for making one before another one's finished.

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RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)

Aero
March 29th, 2011, 02:15 AM
RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)

Wendell Willkie lives

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (George Mitchell assassinated)

Odysseus
March 29th, 2011, 02:31 AM
RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)

Wendell Willkie wins

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (George Mitchell assassinated)[/QUOTE]
1996: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (R)

Mr. Magi
March 29th, 2011, 02:50 AM
RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1996: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)

Wendell Willkie wins

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (George Mitchell assassinated)[/QUOTE]
1996: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (R)
2000: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (R)

King Nazar
March 29th, 2011, 03:01 AM
RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1996: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
2000: Al Gore / Bill Clinton (D)

Wendell Willkie wins

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (George Mitchell assassinated)[/QUOTE]
1996: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (R)
2000: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (R)
2001: Paul Wellstone / vacant (R) Gore assassinated

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 04:47 AM
RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1993: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Vacant (R) (Pressler assassinated)
1996: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Steve Forbes (R)

Wendell Willkie wins

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (George Mitchell assassinated)[/QUOTE]
1996: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2000: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2004: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)

Mr. Magi
March 29th, 2011, 04:51 AM
Nazar, any reason why I'm seeing double?

RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1996: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
2000: Al Gore / Bill Clinton (D)

Wendell Willkie wins

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (George Mitchell assassinated)
1996: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (R)
2000: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (R)
2001: Paul Wellstone / vacant (R) Goreassassinated

RFK Lives

1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1993: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Vacant (R) (Pressler assassinated)

Wendell Willkie wins

1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (George Mitchell assassinated)
1996: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (R)
2000: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (R)

King Nazar
March 29th, 2011, 11:54 AM
Nazar, any reason why I'm seeing double?

Double post deleted

Tony
March 29th, 2011, 12:20 PM
RFK Lives
1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1993: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Vacant (R) (Pressler assassinated)
1996: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Steve Forbes (R)
2000: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)


Wendell Willkie wins
1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (D) (George Mitchell assassinated)
1996: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2000: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2004: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2008: Mitt Romney / Haley Barbour (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 01:50 PM
RFK Lives
1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1993: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Vacant (R) (Pressler assassinated)
1996: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Steve Forbes (R)
2000: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2004: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)

Wendell Willkie wins
1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (D) (George Mitchell assassinated)
1996: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2000: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2004: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2008: Mitt Romney / Haley Barbour (R)
2012: Mitt Romney / Haley Barbour (R)

Tony
March 29th, 2011, 03:57 PM
RFK Lives
1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1993: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Vacant (R) (Pressler assassinated)
1996: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Steve Forbes (R)
2000: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2004: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2006: Joe Biden / Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (D) (Edwards impeached, RFK Jr. nominated VP under the 25th Amendment)


Wendell Willkie wins
1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (D) (George Mitchell assassinated)
1996: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2000: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2004: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2008: Mitt Romney / Haley Barbour (R)
2012: Mitt Romney / Haley Barbour (R)
2016: Andrew Cuomo / Mark Warner (D)

THE OBSERVER
March 29th, 2011, 04:31 PM
President Chuck Heston????? That's very ASB and I just can't begin to imagine what it would be like!!

King Nazar
March 29th, 2011, 04:49 PM
RFK Lives
1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1993: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Vacant (R) (Pressler assassinated)
1996: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Steve Forbes (R)
2000: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2004: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2006: Joe Biden / Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (D)(Edwards impeached, RFK Jr. nominated VP under the 25th Amendment)
2008: John McCain / Bobby Jindal (R)


Wendell Willkie wins
1940: Wendell Willkie / Charles L. McNary (R)
1943: Wendell Willkie / Everett Dirksen (R) McNary resigns because of his brain tumor
1944: Everett Dirksen/Vacant (R)
1944: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1948: Everett Dirksen/Edward Stettinius (R)
1949: Edward Stettinius / vacant (R)
1949: Sam Rayburn/vacant (D) Stettinius dies from a coronary thrombosis and the Speaker of the House becomes President
1952: George S. Patton/ Douglas MacArthur (R)
1956: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1960: Adlai Stevenson/Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson / Robert F. Kennedy (D)
1968: Ronald Reagan/ Shirley Temple Black (R)
1972: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1976: Ronald Reagan/Shirley Temple Black (R)
1980: Jerry Brown/Michael Dukakis (D)
1981: Micheal Dukakis / vacant (D) (Jerry Brown assasinated)
1984: Michael Dukakis/Max Baucus (D)
1988: Angela Lansbury / James Baker (R)
1992: George J. Mitchell/Al Gore, Jr. (D)
1993: Al Gore Jr. / vacant (D) (George Mitchell assassinated)
1996: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2000: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2004: Al Gore Jr. / Paul Wellstone (D)
2008: Mitt Romney / Haley Barbour (R)
2012: Mitt Romney / Haley Barbour (R)
2016: Andrew Cuomo / Mark Warner (D)
2020: Andrew Cuomo / Mark Warner (D)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 05:54 PM
RFK Lives
1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1993: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Vacant (R) (Pressler assassinated)
1996: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Steve Forbes (R)
2000: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2004: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2006: Joe Biden / Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (D)(Edwards impeached, RFK Jr. nominated VP under the 25th Amendment)
2008: John McCain / Bobby Jindal (R)
2012: John McCain / Bobby Jindal (R)

Odysseus
March 29th, 2011, 07:22 PM
RFK Lives
1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1993: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Vacant (R) (Pressler assassinated)
1996: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Steve Forbes (R)
2000: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2004: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2006: Joe Biden / Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (D)(Edwards impeached, RFK Jr. nominated VP under the 25th Amendment)
2008: John McCain / Bobby Jindal (R)
2012: John McCain / Bobby Jindal (R)
2016: Anthony Weiner / Mark Warner (D)

TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)

Mr. Magi
March 29th, 2011, 07:28 PM
RFK Lives
1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1993: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Vacant (R) (Pressler assassinated)
1996: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Steve Forbes (R)
2000: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2004: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2006: Joe Biden / Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (D)(Edwards impeached, RFK Jr. nominated VP under the 25th Amendment)
2008: John McCain / Bobby Jindal (R)
2012: John McCain / Bobby Jindal (R)
2016: Anthony Weiner / Mark Warner (D)
2020: Anthony Weiner / Mark Warner (D)

TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks / Elihu Root (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 07:28 PM
RFK Lives
1968: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1972: Robert F Kennedy/Terry Sanford (D)
1976: Edward M. Kennedy / Lloyd Bentsen (D)
1977: Lloyd Bentsen / Vacant (D) (Edward Kennedy assassinated)
1980: Lloyd Bentsen / Jerry Brown (D)
1984: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1988: Charlton Heston / Larry Pressler (R)
1992: Larry Pressler / Nancy L. Kassebaum (R)
1993: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Vacant (R) (Pressler assassinated)
1996: Nancy L. Kassebaum / Steve Forbes (R)
2000: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2004: John Edwards / Joe Biden (D)
2006: Joe Biden / Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (D)(Edwards impeached, RFK Jr. nominated VP under the 25th Amendment)
2008: John McCain / Bobby Jindal (R)
2012: John McCain / Bobby Jindal (R)
2016: Anthony Weiner / Mark Warner (D)
2020: Anthony Weiner / Mark Warner (D)

TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)

JoeMulk
March 29th, 2011, 07:40 PM
TR Runs in 1908
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
[/QUOTE]
1916: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 07:47 PM
TR Runs in 1908
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1916: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D)

Odysseus
March 29th, 2011, 07:50 PM
TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.

Compromise between conflicting posts.

EDIT: Clark died in 1921 in OTL, its unlikely he'll survive any longer as President.

RogueBeaver
March 29th, 2011, 07:51 PM
TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt/ Albert Ritchie (D)

Odysseus
March 29th, 2011, 07:54 PM
TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)

elyski
March 29th, 2011, 08:05 PM
TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 08:36 PM
TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)

Odysseus
March 29th, 2011, 08:41 PM
TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.

RogueBeaver
March 29th, 2011, 08:44 PM
[QUOTE=Odysseus;4349664]TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 09:08 PM
TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)

RogueBeaver
March 29th, 2011, 09:39 PM
TR Runs in 1908

1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)

DSS
March 29th, 2011, 09:51 PM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 09:57 PM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.

RogueBeaver
March 29th, 2011, 10:24 PM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)

elyski
March 29th, 2011, 10:32 PM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after people called for a return of more right winged parties. The Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from that campaign. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.

RogueBeaver
March 29th, 2011, 10:34 PM
Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)

Odysseus
March 29th, 2011, 10:41 PM
Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electoral vote.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 10:43 PM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)

elyski
March 29th, 2011, 10:48 PM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after people called for a return of more right winged parties. The Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from that campaign. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater / George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: George Wallace / Roger Macbride (Conservative) After a disaustorous term for Goldwater and lackluster frontrunners for other parties the Conservatives won by a signifigant margin (90 electorates)

jmill
March 29th, 2011, 10:52 PM
Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
_________________

Cleveland Looses 1884:
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 10:59 PM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after people called for a return of more right winged parties. The Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from that campaign. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater / George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: George Wallace / Roger Macbride (Conservative) After a disaustorous term for Goldwater and lackluster frontrunners for other parties the Conservatives won by a signifigant margin (90 electorates)


Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
_________________

Cleveland Looses 1884:
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)

Any reason why you completely retconned two posts? (one in jmill's case)

Just so there's no confusion, this is the current list:
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)

elyski
March 29th, 2011, 11:01 PM
Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)
1984: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green) The American Green party was formed in 1974 in belief that the two major parties were either too far to the right or left and that three poltical parties on oppisite ends of the spectrum will be a solution to the problem

Clevland looses 1884 (http://uselectionatlas.org/TOOLS/POLMTX/thetest.php)
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 11:03 PM
Guys, could you please stop it with the retconning!? :mad: Once a list is up, it's up. You can't just go and change it as you please.

elyski
March 29th, 2011, 11:07 PM
Guys, could you please stop it with the retconning!? :mad: Once a list is up, it's up. You can't just go and change it as you please.

One of those was my fault, sorry, I posted it before I saw the official list though.

Turquoise Blue
March 29th, 2011, 11:07 PM
Could e have an AH of a list?
Like Teddy runs in 1908
AH is Socialists win 1984?

elyski
March 29th, 2011, 11:08 PM
Could e have an AH of a list?
Like Teddy runs in 1908
AH is Socialists win 1984?

I would like to see Teddy run again.

EvilSpaceAlien
March 29th, 2011, 11:09 PM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)
1984: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green) The American Green party was formed in 1974 in belief that the two major parties were either too far to the right or left and that three poltical parties on oppisite ends of the spectrum will be a solution to the problem
1988: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green)

Clevland looses 1884 (http://uselectionatlas.org/TOOLS/POLMTX/thetest.php)
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies

elyski
March 29th, 2011, 11:17 PM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)
1984: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green) The American Green party was formed in 1974 in belief that the two major parties were either too far to the right or left and that three poltical parties on oppisite ends of the spectrum will be a solution to the problem
1988: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green)
1992: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan ( Green)

Clevland looses 1884 (http://uselectionatlas.org/TOOLS/POLMTX/thetest.php)
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)

elyski
March 29th, 2011, 11:32 PM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)
1984: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green) The American Green party was formed in 1974 in belief that the two major parties were either too far to the right or left and that three poltical parties on oppisite ends of the spectrum will be a solution to the problem
1988: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green)
1992: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
1996: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
2000: Bill Clinton / Mary Cal Hollis (S)

Clevland looses 1884 (http://uselectionatlas.org/TOOLS/POLMTX/thetest.php)
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)


http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/images/misc/progress.gif

jmill
March 29th, 2011, 11:44 PM
Any reason why you completely retconned two posts? (one in jmill's case)

The other two posted while was still writing mine.

jmill
March 30th, 2011, 12:59 AM
elyski View Public Profile (http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/member.php?u=28667) Send a personal message to elyski (http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/private.php?do=newpm&u=28667) Find all posts by elyski (http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/search.php?do=finduser&u=28667) Add elyski to Your Contacts (http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/profile.php?do=addlist&userlist=buddy&u=28667)




1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)
1984: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green) The American Green party was formed in 1974 in belief that the two major parties were either too far to the right or left and that three poltical parties on oppisite ends of the spectrum will be a solution to the problem
1988: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green)
1992: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
1996: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
2000: Bill Clinton / Mary Cal Hollis (S)
2004: JEB Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty) New Liberty is a conservative party on the based of OTL GOP

Clevland looses 1884 (http://uselectionatlas.org/TOOLS/POLMTX/thetest.php)
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*


* McKinley assassinated

elyski
March 30th, 2011, 01:10 AM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)
1984: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green) The American Green party was formed in 1974 in belief that the two major parties were either too far to the right or left and that three poltical parties on oppisite ends of the spectrum will be a solution to the problem
1988: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green)
1992: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
1996: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
2000: Bill Clinton / Mary Cal Hollis (S)
2004: JEB Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty) New Liberty is a conservative party on the based of OTL GOP
2008: Jeb Bush Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty)

Clevland looses 1884 (http://uselectionatlas.org/TOOLS/POLMTX/thetest.php)
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Rosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)


* McKinley assassinated

King Nazar
March 30th, 2011, 01:22 AM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)
1984: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green) The American Green party was formed in 1974 in belief that the two major parties were either too far to the right or left and that three poltical parties on oppisite ends of the spectrum will be a solution to the problem
1988: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green)
1992: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
1996: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
2000: Bill Clinton / Mary Cal Hollis (S)
2004: JEB Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty) New Liberty is a conservative party on the based of OTL GOP
2008: Jeb Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty)
2012: Jeb Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty)

Clevland looses 1884 (http://uselectionatlas.org/TOOLS/POLMTX/thetest.php)
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R) McKinley assassinated
1904: Theodore Rosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1918: Theodore Rosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)

Mr. Magi
March 30th, 2011, 01:25 AM
I would like to see Teddy run again.

I'd wait a list or two considering one of the current lists had him run for '08 already

Cleveland loses 1884 (http://uselectionatlas.org/TOOLS/POLMTX/thetest.php)
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Rosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Rosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.

JoeMulk
March 30th, 2011, 01:35 AM
Nixon resigns early, special election of 1974

1974: Hubert Humphrey/Jimmy Carter (D)

elyski
March 30th, 2011, 01:45 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Rosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Rosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Rosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)

Mr. Magi
March 30th, 2011, 01:53 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated

JoeMulk
March 30th, 2011, 01:56 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)

elyski
March 30th, 2011, 01:59 AM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)
1984: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green) The American Green party was formed in 1974 in belief that the two major parties were either too far to the right or left and that three poltical parties on oppisite ends of the spectrum will be a solution to the problem
1988: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green)
1992: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
1996: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
2000: Bill Clinton / Mary Cal Hollis (S)
2004: JEB Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty) New Liberty is a conservative party on the based of OTL GOP
2008: Jeb Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty)
2012: Jeb Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty)
2016: Ron Paul / Jeb Bush (New Liberty)

Mr. Magi
March 30th, 2011, 02:01 AM
By the way, we all have to take shots for every Progressive ticket.

1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)

JoeMulk
March 30th, 2011, 02:04 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith/Herbert Hoover (P)

Mr. Magi
March 30th, 2011, 02:07 AM
Mulk, we only do one ticket per post.

1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)

elyski
March 30th, 2011, 02:24 AM
1908: Theodore Roosevelt/ Charles W. Fairbanks (R)
1912: Charles W. Fairbanks/Elihu Root (R)
1916: Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram Johnson (P)
1920: Champ Clark/Franklin Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt declines to run for a fifth term, instead allowing Leonard Wood to win the nomination. Wood loses to Clark in the general election.
1922: Franklin Roosevelt / Vacant (D) Clark dies.
1924: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1928: Franklin Roosevelt / Albert Ritchie (D)
1932: John J. Blane / Joseph Irwin France (R)
1936: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) A late and much worse depression than OTL leads to a socialist upset over the Democratic candidate (the Republicans only won two states)
1940: Norman Thomas / Upton Sinclair (Socialist) The Socialist party ticket wins in a massive landslide after the collapse of the Republican party, who either join the Democrats, or join the newly revived Progressive Party in 1942.
1944: Thomas Dewey/Tom Connally (D)
1948: Henry Wallace/Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
1952: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1956: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (D)
1960: Samuel H. Friedman/Ronald Reagan (S) Butterflies leads to Reagan joining the Socialist Party.
1964: Allan Shivers/Barry Goldwater (D)
1968: Nelson Rockefeller / George Romney (Centerist) The Centerist party was fomed after the Republican schisim of 1965 with the Centerist and Conservative parties being formed from the ashes of the party. The election of 1968 was extremely close with Rockefeller winning by 1 electorate.
1972: Barry Goldwater/George H.W. Bush (D)
1976: Ronald Reagan / George McGovern (S) Reagan and McGovern are elected in a swing election after growing dissatisfaction with the Goldwater Administration.
1980: Ronald Reagan/George McGovern (S)
1984: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green) The American Green party was formed in 1974 in belief that the two major parties were either too far to the right or left and that three poltical parties on oppisite ends of the spectrum will be a solution to the problem
1988: Walter Mondale / Gary Hart (Green)
1992: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
1996: Ross Perot / Pat Buchanan (Green)
2000: Bill Clinton / Mary Cal Hollis (S)
2004: JEB Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty) New Liberty is a conservative party on the based of OTL GOP
2008: Jeb Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty)
2012: Jeb Bush/ Christine Todd Whittman (New Liberty)
2016: Ron Paul / Jeb Bush (New Liberty)
2020: Ron Paul / Jeb Bush (New Liberty)

end timeline

jmill
March 30th, 2011, 02:30 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)

King Nazar
March 30th, 2011, 02:38 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)

Mr. Magi
March 30th, 2011, 03:04 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)

King Nazar
March 30th, 2011, 03:06 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)

Tony
March 30th, 2011, 04:17 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)

Mr. Magi
March 30th, 2011, 05:05 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)

Tony
March 30th, 2011, 06:11 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 30th, 2011, 06:18 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)

anon_user
March 30th, 2011, 06:19 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP

EvilSpaceAlien
March 30th, 2011, 10:08 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated

King Nazar
March 30th, 2011, 11:53 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)

Tony
March 30th, 2011, 11:58 AM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)

King Nazar
March 30th, 2011, 12:01 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 30th, 2011, 12:43 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1984: Terry Sanford / Daniel Inouye (D) - A booming economy easily hands the Sanford/Inouye ticket the election as President Unruh decides not to run for a third term.

King Nazar
March 30th, 2011, 04:54 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1984: Terry Sanford / Daniel Inouye (D) - A booming economy easily hands the Sanford/Inouye ticket the election as President Unruh decides not to run for a third term.
1988: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)

President_Gore
March 30th, 2011, 04:57 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1984: Terry Sanford / Daniel Inouye (D) - A booming economy easily hands the Sanford/Inouye ticket the election as President Unruh decides not to run for a third term.
1988: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)

King Nazar
March 30th, 2011, 05:07 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1984: Terry Sanford / Daniel Inouye (D) - A booming economy easily hands the Sanford/Inouye ticket the election as President Unruh decides not to run for a third term.
1988: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
1996: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 30th, 2011, 05:22 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1984: Terry Sanford / Daniel Inouye (D) - A booming economy easily hands the Sanford/Inouye ticket the election as President Unruh decides not to run for a third term.
1988: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
1996: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2000: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)

President_Gore
March 30th, 2011, 05:32 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1984: Terry Sanford / Daniel Inouye (D) - A booming economy easily hands the Sanford/Inouye ticket the election as President Unruh decides not to run for a third term.
1988: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
1996: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2000: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2004: Daniel P. Moynihan / Wesley Clark (Independent) Moynihan narrowly lost the Democratic nomination to Al Gore and ran an independent campaign with a large amount of Democratic support

jmill
March 30th, 2011, 05:35 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1984: Terry Sanford / Daniel Inouye (D) - A booming economy easily hands the Sanford/Inouye ticket the election as President Unruh decides not to run for a third term.
1988: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
1996: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2000: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2004: Daniel P. Moynihan / Wesley Clark (Independent) Moynihan narrowly lost the Democratic nomination to Al Gore and ran an independent campaign with a large amount of Democratic support
2008: Elizabeth Dole / Eric Cantor (R)

EvilSpaceAlien
March 30th, 2011, 06:27 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1984: Terry Sanford / Daniel Inouye (D) - A booming economy easily hands the Sanford/Inouye ticket the election as President Unruh decides not to run for a third term.
1988: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
1996: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2000: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2004: Daniel P. Moynihan / Wesley Clark (Independent) Moynihan narrowly lost the Democratic nomination to Al Gore and ran an independent campaign with a large amount of Democratic support
2008: Elizabeth Dole / Eric Cantor (R)
2012: Michael Bloomberg / Arlen Specter (Independent) Inspired by Moynihan in 2004, Bloomberg runs as an independent due to dissatisfaction with the Dole presidency and is able to win due to Dole's weak approvals and the Democrats running a weak candidate seen as too liberal.

Mr. Magi
March 30th, 2011, 07:59 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1984: Terry Sanford / Daniel Inouye (D) - A booming economy easily hands the Sanford/Inouye ticket the election as President Unruh decides not to run for a third term.
1988: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
1996: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2000: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2004: Daniel P. Moynihan / Wesley Clark (Independent) Moynihan narrowly lost the Democratic nomination to Al Gore and ran an independent campaign with a large amount of Democratic support
2008: Elizabeth Dole / Eric Cantor (R)
2012: Michael Bloomberg / Arlen Specter (Independent) Inspired by Moynihan in 2004, Bloomberg runs as an independent due to dissatisfaction with the Dole presidency and is able to win due to Dole's weak approvals and the Democrats running a weak candidate seen as too liberal.
2016: Pat Toomey / Bobby Jindal (R)

elyski
March 30th, 2011, 08:03 PM
1884: James G. Blaine / John A. Logan (R)
1888: Benjamin Harrison / John Sherman (R)
1892: Benjamin Harrison / vacant (R) Sherman dies
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: William Mckinley / Theodore Rosevelt (R)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt/ Vacant (R)*
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Mark Hanna (R)
1912: William Jennings Bryan / Thomas R. Marshall (D) Hanna and Roosevelt come to blows after Roosevelt tries to go a third term. A split republican party allows Bryan to squeak by with a win.
1916: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1919: Hiram Johnson / vacant (P) Roosevelt is assassinated
1920: Hiram Johnson/Upton Sinclair (P)
1924: Charles Curtis / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1928: Charles Curtis/Calvin Coolidge (R)
1932: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1936: Al Smith / Huey Long (D)
1940: Wendell Wilkie / Alf Landon (R)
1944: Wendell Wilkie / Irving Ives(R)
1948: Thomas Dewey / Harold Stassen (R)
1952: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1956: Huey Long / Paul A. Dever (D)
1960: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1964: Earl Warren / Margaret C. Smith (R)
1968: Margaret C. Smith / Hiram Fong (R) - Notable for the first female president and the first Asian-American VP
1970: Hiram Fong / vacant (R) Smith assassinated
1972: Hiram Fong / Nelson Rockeffellor (R)
1976: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1980: Jesse Unruh / Terry Sanford (D)
1984: Terry Sanford / Daniel Inouye (D) - A booming economy easily hands the Sanford/Inouye ticket the election as President Unruh decides not to run for a third term.
1988: George H.W. Bush / Bob Dole (R)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
1996: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2000: Lloyd Bentsen / Daniel P. Moynihan (D)
2004: Daniel P. Moynihan / Wesley Clark (Independent) Moynihan narrowly lost the Democratic nomination to Al Gore and ran an independent campaign with a large amount of Democratic support
2008: Elizabeth Dole / Eric Cantor (R)
2012: Michael Bloomberg / Arlen Specter (Independent) Inspired by Moynihan in 2004, Bloomberg runs as an independent due to dissatisfaction with the Dole presidency and is able to win due to Dole's weak approvals and the Democrats running a weak candidate seen as too liberal.
2016: Pat Toomey / Bobby Jindal (R)
2020: Bobby Jindal / Ron Paul (R)

End of Timeline

elyski
March 30th, 2011, 09:04 PM
Washington does not run for president

1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)

jmill
March 30th, 2011, 10:44 PM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)

elyski
March 30th, 2011, 10:45 PM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)

jmill
March 30th, 2011, 11:13 PM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)

King Nazar
March 31st, 2011, 12:18 AM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)

elyski
March 31st, 2011, 12:41 AM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)

Tony
April 3rd, 2011, 03:36 PM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (Democratic-Republican)

JoeMulk
April 3rd, 2011, 07:26 PM
1876: Samuel J Tilden/Thomas A Hendricks (D)

King Nazar
April 3rd, 2011, 09:50 PM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney/ Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (Democratic-Republican)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (Democratic-Republican)


Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden/Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden/Thomas A Hendricks (D)

jerseyrules
April 3rd, 2011, 10:31 PM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (Democratic-Republican)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (Democratic-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)


Tilden wins TL

1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)

1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)

1884: James B. Weaver (R) / Benjamin Harrison (R)

JoeMulk
April 4th, 2011, 12:11 AM
Tilden wins TL

1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)

1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)

1884: James B. Weaver (R) / Benjamin Harrison (R)

1888: Grover Clevland (D)/Allen Thurman (D)

Tony
April 4th, 2011, 01:40 AM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (Democratic-Republican)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (Democratic-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (Democratic-Republican)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)

Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Clevland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Clevland / Allen Thurman (D)

King Nazar
April 4th, 2011, 02:29 AM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (Democratic-Republican)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (Democratic-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (Democratic-Republican)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)


Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)

Tony
April 4th, 2011, 03:04 AM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (Democratic-Republican)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (Democratic-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (Democratic-Republican)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)

Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)

King Nazar
April 4th, 2011, 03:34 AM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (Democratic-Republican)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (Democratic-Republican)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (Democratic-Republican)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)

Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)

Mr. Magi
April 4th, 2011, 03:35 AM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)

Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)

Tony
April 4th, 2011, 04:45 AM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)

Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)

King Nazar
April 4th, 2011, 12:27 PM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)


Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)

Tony
April 4th, 2011, 04:03 PM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)


Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)

King Nazar
April 4th, 2011, 05:02 PM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1860: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)



Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)

achilles483
April 4th, 2011, 05:51 PM
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1860: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1864: Stephen Douglas / Andrew Johnson (D)

Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1928: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)

JoeMulk
April 4th, 2011, 10:09 PM
Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1928: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)

Mr. Magi
April 4th, 2011, 10:58 PM
President Adams TL
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1860: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1864: Stephen Douglas / Andrew Johnson (D)
1866: Andrew Johnson / vacant (D) (Douglas catches typhoid and dies)



Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1928: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1936: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)

jerseyrules
April 4th, 2011, 11:33 PM
President Adams TL
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1860: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1864: Stephen Douglas / Andrew Johnson (D)
1866: Andrew Johnson / vacant (D) (Douglas catches typhoid and dies)
1868: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R) (many whigs defect republican over issues of the Civil War and slavery)



Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1928: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1936: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1940: Robert Taft / Thomas E. Dewey (R)

King Nazar
April 5th, 2011, 12:38 AM
President Adams TL
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1860: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1864: Stephen Douglas / Andrew Johnson (D)
1866: Andrew Johnson / vacant (D) (Douglas catches typhoid and dies)
1868: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R) (many whigs defect republican over issues of the Civil War and slavery)
1872: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R)



Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1928: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1936: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1940: Robert Taft / Thomas E. Dewey (R)
1944: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Harry Truman (D)

Jello_Biafra
April 5th, 2011, 12:54 AM
]President Adams TL
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1860: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1864: Stephen Douglas / Andrew Johnson (D)
1866: Andrew Johnson / vacant (D) (Douglas catches typhoid and dies)
1868: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R) (many whigs defect republican over issues of the Civil War and slavery)
1872: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R)
1876: Abraham Lincoln / William A. Wheeler (R)



Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1928: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1936: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1940: Robert Taft / Thomas E. Dewey (R)
1944: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Harry Truman (D)
1947: Harry Truman / vacant (D)

jerseyrules
April 5th, 2011, 02:56 AM
[QUOTE=Jello_Biafra;4377014]]President Adams TL
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1860: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1864: Stephen Douglas / Andrew Johnson (D)
1866: Andrew Johnson / vacant (D) (Douglas catches typhoid and dies)
1868: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R) (many whigs defect republican over issues of the Civil War and slavery)
1872: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R)
1876: Abraham Lincoln / William A. Wheeler (R)
1880: Abraham Lincoln / Andrew Johnson (National Union)


Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1928: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1936: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1940: Robert Taft / Thomas E. Dewey (R)
1944: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Harry Truman (D)
1947: Harry Truman / vacant (D)

1948: Dwight D. Eisenhower / Earl Warren (R)

King Nazar
April 5th, 2011, 04:14 AM
President Adams TL
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1860: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1864: Stephen Douglas / Andrew Johnson (D)
1866: Andrew Johnson / vacant (D) (Douglas catches typhoid and dies)
1868: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R) (many whigs defect republican over issues of the Civil War and slavery)
1872: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R)
1876: Abraham Lincoln / William A. Wheeler (R)
1880: Abraham Lincoln / Andrew Johnson (National Union)
1880: Abraham Lincoln / James G. Blaine (NU)


Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1928: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1936: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1940: Robert Taft / Thomas E. Dewey (R)
1944: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Harry Truman (D)
1947: Harry Truman / vacant (D)
1948: Dwight D. Eisenhower / Earl Warren (R)
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower / Earl Warren (R)

jerseyrules
April 5th, 2011, 04:56 AM
President Adams TL
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1860: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1864: Stephen Douglas / Andrew Johnson (D)
1866: Andrew Johnson / vacant (D) (Douglas catches typhoid and dies)
1868: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R) (many whigs defect republican over issues of the Civil War and slavery)
1872: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R)
1876: Abraham Lincoln / William A. Wheeler (R)
1880: Abraham Lincoln / Andrew Johnson (National Union)
1880: Abraham Lincoln / James G. Blaine (NU)
1884: Abraham Lincoln / James G. Blaine (NU)


Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1928: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1936: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1940: Robert Taft / Thomas E. Dewey (R)
1944: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Harry Truman (D)
1947: Harry Truman / vacant (D)
1948: Dwight D. Eisenhower / Earl Warren (R)
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Dwight D. Eisenhower / Richard Nixon (R) (Warren becomes justice on SCOTUS)

King Nazar
April 5th, 2011, 05:02 AM
President Adams TL
1792: John Adams / Charles Cotesworth Pickney (Federalist)
1796: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1800: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1804: Charles Cotesworth Pickney / Alexander Hamilton (F)
1808: Alexander Hamilton / Rufus King (F)
1812: James Monroe / Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican)
1816: James Monroe / John C. Calhoun (D-R)
1820: John C. Calhoun / Daniel Tompkins (D-R)
1824: Henry Clay / William Crawford (D-R)
1828: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1832: Andrew Jackson / Thomas Ritchie (D)
1836: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1840: Thomas Ritchie / Martin Van Buren (D)
1844: William Henry Harrison / Daniel Webster (Whig)
1848: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1852: Daniel Webster / William H. Seward (Whig)
1856: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1860: Winfield Scott / John C. Fremont (Whig)
1864: Stephen Douglas / Andrew Johnson (D)
1866: Andrew Johnson / vacant (D) (Douglas catches typhoid and dies)
1868: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R) (many whigs defect republican over issues of the Civil War and slavery)
1872: Hannibal Hamlin (R) / Abraham Lincoln (R)
1876: Abraham Lincoln / William A. Wheeler (R)
1880: Abraham Lincoln / Andrew Johnson (National Union)
1880: Abraham Lincoln / James G. Blaine (NU)
1884: Abraham Lincoln / James G. Blaine (NU)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen G. Thurmon (D)


Tilden wins TL
1876: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1880: Samuel J Tilden / Thomas A Hendricks (D)
1884: James B. Weaver / Benjamin Harrison (R)
1888: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1892: Grover Cleveland / Allen Thurman (D)
1896: Benjamin Harrison / William McKinley (R)
1900: Benjamin Harrison / Theodore Roosevelt (R)
1904: Theodore Roosevelt / W. H. Taft (R)
1908: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R) (Taft refuses to run again, he later on becomes a justice thanks to Teddy)
1912: Theodore Roosevelt / Elihu Root (R)
1916: Elihu Root / Charles Evan Hughes (R)
1920: William J. Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)
1924: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1928: Calvin Coolidge / Warren Harding (R)
1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1936: Franklin D. Roosevelt/Wendell Wilkie (D)
1940: Robert Taft / Thomas E. Dewey (R)
1944: Franklin D. Roosevelt / Harry Truman (D)
1947: Harry Truman / vacant (D)
1948: Dwight D. Eisenhower / Earl Warren (R)
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower / Earl Warren (R)
1956: Dwight D. Eisenhower / Richard Nixon (R) (Warren becomes justice on SCOTUS)
1960: Richard Nixon / Nelson Rockefeller (R)