List of Alternate Presidents and PMs II

Status
Not open for further replies.
Who Else But W.B. Mason!
1881-1889: Samuel Tilden (D-NY)/Winfield Hancock (D-PA)
1889-1897: James Blaine (R-ME)/Charles Guiteau (R-NY)
1897-1901: William Jennings Bryan (D-NE)/Adlai Stevenson (D-IL)
1901-1905: Grover Cleveland (D-NJ)/Adlai Stevenson (D-IL)
1905-1911*: W.B. Mason (R-MA)/Theodore Roosevelt (R-NY)
1911-1913: Theodore Roosevelt (R-NY)/Vacant
1913-1921: Theodore Roosevelt (R-NY)/William Howard Taft (R-OH)
1921-1929: James Cox (R-OH)/W.G. McAdoo (D-CA)
1929-1937: John Nance Gardner (D-TX)/Al Smith (D-NY)
1937-1949: Quentin Roosevelt (R-NY)/Herbert Hoover (R-CA)
1949**: Herbert Hoover (R-CA)/Harold Stassen (R-MN)
1949-1953: Harold Stassen (R-MN)/Vacant
1953-1957: Adlai Stevenson II (D-IL)/Lyndon Johnson (D-TX)
1957-1961: Harold Stassen (P-MN)/Henry Wallace (P-IA)
1961-1969: Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY)/Barry Goldwater (R-AZ)
1969-1971***: John Kennedy (P-MA)/Pierre Trudeau (P-QU)
1971-1973: Pierre Trudeau (P-QU)/Vacant
1973-1985: Richard Nixon (R-CA)/Dick Cheney (R-WY)
1985-1989: Robert Dole (R-WY)/Nancy Reagan (R-CA)
1989-1997: William Clinton (D-AR)/Fidel Castro (P-CU)
1997-2000****: Herbert Hoover III (P-CA)/Harold Stassen (P-MN)
2000-2001: Herbert Hoover III (P-CA)/Vacant
2001-2005: Herbert Hoover III (P-CA)/Raul Castro (P-CU)
2005-2007*****: John Edwards (D-NC)/Hillary Rodham (D-NY)
2007-2009: Hillary Rodham (D-NY)/Vacant
2009-2017: Barack Obama (P-IL)/Jill Stein (P-MA)
2017-2025: Marco Rubio (R-CU)/Elizabeth Cheney-Schwarzenegger (R-CA)
2025-2031: Elizabeth Cheney Schwarzenegger (R-CA)/Margaret Hoover (R-CO)
2031-Present: Justin Trudeau (P-QU)/Tulsi Gabbard (P-WA)





*Died of a Heart Attack
**Assassinated by Cuban Nationalists
***Resigned after many extramarital affairs and impeachment procedures beginning against him.
****Stassen died of a heart attack
*****Impeached for Embezzling funds from the US government.
 
If you first do Clinton-as-Wilson ...

President of the United States

1913 - 1921: T. Woodrow Wilson (Democratic) / Thomas R. Marshall
1912: def. William H. Taft (Republican) / James S. Sherman, Andrew W. Mellon (Independent) / George Dewey
1916: def. Charles Curtis (Republican) / George W. Fairchild, Andrew W. Mellon (Reform) / Henry C. Adams

120px-Thomas_Woodrow_Wilson%2C_Harris_%26_Ewing_bw_photo_portrait%2C_1919.jpg


A popular Governor who unseated a Republican President, Wilson oversaw a period of American economic growth and prosperity, although his administration was often overshadowed by other matters. His first term was dominated by an unsuccessful attempt to pass federal healthcare legislation, though he did manage to improve relations and trade with other North American nations. After winning re-election, he was impeached in his second term, as he was accused of lying to Congress about an affair with an aide. His popularity improved following Senate acquittal, and he was also able to achieve several minor foreign policy successes before leaving office.

1921 - 1929: James R. Garfield (Republican) / Russell A. Alger
1920: def. Thomas R. Marshall (Democratic) / Carter Glass
1924: def. Peter G. Gerry (Democratic) / Kenneth D. McKellar

172px-JRGarfield.jpg


The son of a former President, Garfield took office following a controversial and impossibly close election, as he narrowly defeated Vice President Thomas Marshall. Garfield and the Republican Congress cut taxes, and passed some federal policy reforms. However, a series of terrorist attacks during his first term rapidly overtook domestic issues, and led to America being drawn into a series of foreign entanglements. Though he was re-elected, his second term saw problem after problem, as he was criticized for poor federal response to a devastating hurricane, and then saw the economy severely contract. While his administration passed legislation in an attempt to rectify the situation, Garfield was widely blamed for the recession, and was extremely unpopular as he left office.

1929 - 1937: Alfred E. Smith (Democratic) / Claude A. Swanson
1928: def. Wesley L. Jones (Republican) / Theodore Christianson
1932: def. Herbert C. Hoover (Republican) / Carl G. Bachmann

195px-AlfredSmith.jpg


Elected to much fanfare as the nation's first Roman Catholic President, Smith entered the White House in the midst of the worst recession in a generation. His administration attempted to tackle the financial crisis, and also passed a law expanding federal provision of healthcare. While he had risen to power in part by criticizing the foreign policy of the Garfield administration, many of his progressive supporters felt that he did not do enough to rollback its excesses. While Smith left office as an unusually popular president, his approval rating did not transfer to his party. The Democrats lost the House in 1930, the Senate in 1934, and then would see the White House fall two years later.

1937 - 1941?: Henry Ford (Republican) / Alfred M. Landon
1936: def. Edith Wilson (Democratic) / David I. Walsh

henry-ford-hero.jpg


In arguably the most shocking rise to the White House ever, Henry Ford rose from being a rich businessman, making incendiary comments from the political sidelines, to the Presidency over a whirlwind two year period. Ford achieved popularity as a populist candidate, viciously attacking President Smith, and holding wild rallies to adoring crowds. Though he was criticized as racist, and was widely denounced for bigoted remarks regarding Smith's Catholicism, a narrow electoral college victory took Ford to Washington, DC...
 
Last edited:
Reagan as a Republican FDR (who lived)
32. Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat-NY) 1933-1953 / John Nance Garner (Democrat-TX) 1933-1941 / Henry A. Wallace (Democrat-IA) 1941-1945 / Harry S. Truman (Democrat-MO) 1945-1953
33. Dwight Eisenhower (Republican-KS) / Richard Nixon (Republican-CA) 1953-1961
34. John F. Kennedy (Democrat-MA) / Lyndon B. Johnson (Democrat-TX) 1961-1963*
35. Lyndon B. Johnson (Democrat-TX) 1963-1969 /
VACANT 1963-1965 / Hubert Humphrey (Democrat-MN) 1965-1969

36. Ronald Reagan (Republican-CA) 1969-1989 / John Lindsay (Republican-NY) 1969-1973 / George Romney (Republican-MI) 1973-1981 / George H.W. Bush (Republican-TX) 1981-1989
37. Micheal Dukakis (Democrat-MA) / Lloyd Bentsen (Democrat-TX) 1989-1997
40. George H.W. Bush / John Kasich (Republican-OH) 1997-2005
39. Bill Clinton (Democrat-AR) / John Kerry (Democrat-MA) 2005-2007*
40. John Kerry (Democrat-MA) / John Edwards 2007-2013
 
Last edited:
Reagan as a Republican FDR (who lived)
33. Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat-NY) 1933-1953 / John Nance Garner (Democrat-TX) 1933-1941 / Henry A. Wallace (Democrat-IA) 1941-1945 / Harry S. Truman (Democrat-MO) 1945-1953
34. Dwight Eisenhower (Republican-KS) / Richard Nixon (Republican-CA) 1953-1961
35. John F. Kennedy (Democrat-MA) / Lyndon B. Johnson (Democrat-TX) 1961-1963*
36. Lyndon B. Johnson (Democrat-TX) 1963-1969 /
VACANT 1963-1965 / Hubert Humphrey (Democrat-MN) 1965-1969

37. Ronald Reagan (Republican-CA) 1969-1989 / John Lindsay (Republican-NY) 1969-1973 / George Romney (Republican-MI) 1973-1981 / George H.W. Bush (Republican-TX) 1981-1989
38. Micheal Dukakis (Democrat-MA) / Lloyd Bentsen (Democrat-TX) 1989-1997
39. George H.W. Bush / John Kasich (Republican-OH) 1997-2005
40. Bill Clinton (Democrat-AR) / John Kerry (Democrat-MA) 2005-2007*
41. John Kerry (Democrat-MA) / John Edwards 2007-2013
How was he a FDR?
 
1953-1957: Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1952 def. Adlai Stevenson II/John Sparkman (Democratic)
1957-1961: Robert B. Anderson/Harold Stassen (Republican)
1956 def. Averell Harriman/John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1961-1965: Adlai Stevenson II/Frank G. Clement (Democratic)
1960 def. Robert Anderson/Harold Stassen (Republican), Harry Byrd/Strom Thurmond (States’ Rights)
1964 def. Lauris Norstad/John J. Williams (Republican), Orval Faubus/Ross Barnett (States’ Rights)

1965-1969: Frank G. Clement/Vacant (Democratic)
1969-1971: Thomas Dewey/Jacqueline Cochran (Republican)
1968 def. Frank G. Clement/Orville Freeman (Democratic)
1971-1973: Jacqueline Cochran/Vacant (Republican)
1973-1977: Jacqueline Cochran/Bob Packwood (Republican)
1972 def. William Spong/Joseph Montoya (Democratic)
1977-1985: Larry O’Brien/John Y. Brown Jr. (Democratic)
1976 def. Jacqueline Cochran/Bob Packwood (Republican)
1980 def. Bo Callaway/Hiram Fong (Republican)

1985-Present: Louie Nunn/William French Smith (Republican)
1984 def. Ed Koch/Tom Harkin (Democratic)


Eisenhower decides not to run for reelection in 1956 and Adlai Stevenson declines as well. With the support of the WH, Anderson defeats Nixon and Stassen for the nomination and defeats Harriman in a landslide for the general election. Anderson’s term is met with resentment from the Eastern establishesment and a poor response to the late-1950s recession. Many also claim that his pro-imperialist stance encouraged President Massu and PM Sandys.

Adlai Stevenson makes a comeback in 1960 as he uses his respected nature among Americans to defeat to defeat the scandal-prone Anderson. Stevenson’s start in office would be on adopting a Keynesian economic plan and pushing for civil rights. Stevenson’s legacy has been remembered as one of a booming 1960s. However, many claim that he was responsible for the build-up in Vietnam.

Upon the sudden death of President Stevenson, Vice President Clement would launch a very different agenda. Clement ramped up US efforts in Vietnam significantly, beliving that more troops would be needed for a victory. At home, he was more skeptical of additional progressive reforms. With a divided Democratic party, Chief Justice Dewey’s campaign wins in a landslide.

Dewey’s presidency would be short-lived as the aviator Jacqueline Cochran would take office. Cochran would arrange a peace deal in Vietnam and established relations with the Chen-Chiang “United Front” government of China.
 
We've done Reagan as FDR, so how about FDR as Reagan?

32. Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933-1941), D-NY
33. John Nance Garner (1941-1945), D-TX

34. Wendell Willkie (1945-1953), R-NY
35. Tully Charles Garner (1953-1961), D-TX
36. James P. Mitchell (1961-1969), R-NJ
37. George Romney (1969-?), D-MI

In this ATL, WWII doesn't break out and FDR declines to run for a third term. Vice-President Garner of Texas is nominated by the Democrats, and prosecutor Thomas Dewey is chosen by the Republicans. Dewey has an early lead, but his cold personality and incompetent general election campaign open the door for Garner to upset him and become America's 33rd President. However, Garner is overwhelmed by domestic issues and in 1944 he loses to charismatic New York Governor* Wendell Willkie. (In this ATL Willkie lives ten years longer due to butterflies). Willkie is a popular President, but a sex scandal erupts in his second term and destroys his credibility. Garner's son, Texas Governor Tully Charles Garner, capitalizes on the scandal to narrowly defeat Willkie's Vice-President in the closest election in American history. Yet Garner stumbles into a disastrous war in Vietnam, and a major recession in 1958 sees the Republicans sweep the midterms. Two years later, New Jersey Governor James P. Mitchell is elected as America's first Catholic President. But in 1968, Secretary of State Henry Cabot Lodge loses to former businessman George Romney of Michigan**.

*Willkie wanted to run for Governor in 1942, but Dewey's candidacy prevented him from doing so.
**Romney considered entering politics as a member of either party. In this ATL he chooses the Democrats instead of the Republicans.
 
We've done Reagan as FDR, so how about FDR as Reagan?

32. Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933-1941), D-NY
33. John Nance Garner (1941-1945), D-TX

34. Wendell Willkie (1945-1953), R-NY
35. Tully Charles Garner (1953-1961), D-TX
36. James P. Mitchell (1961-1969), R-NJ
37. George Romney (1969-?), D-MI

In this ATL, WWII doesn't break out and FDR declines to run for a third term. Vice-President Garner of Texas is nominated by the Democrats, and prosecutor Thomas Dewey is chosen by the Republicans. Dewey has an early lead, but his cold personality and incompetent general election campaign open the door for Garner to upset him and become America's 33rd President. However, Garner is overwhelmed by domestic issues and in 1944 he loses to charismatic New York Governor* Wendell Willkie. (In this ATL Willkie lives ten years longer due to butterflies). Willkie is a popular President, but a sex scandal erupts in his second term and destroys his credibility. Garner's son, Texas Governor Tully Charles Garner, capitalizes on the scandal to narrowly defeat Willkie's Vice-President in the closest election in American history. Yet Garner stumbles into a disastrous war in Vietnam, and a major recession in 1958 sees the Republicans sweep the midterms. Two years later, New Jersey Governor James P. Mitchell is elected as America's first Catholic President. But in 1968, Secretary of State Henry Cabot Lodge loses to former businessman George Romney of Michigan**.

*Willkie wanted to run for Governor in 1942, but Dewey's candidacy prevented him from doing so.
**Romney considered entering politics as a member of either party. In this ATL he chooses the Democrats instead of the Republicans.
I like, but aside from them both being businessmen I really don’t think Romney works as Trump. Maybe someone like Howard Hughes? Or heck, just throw in Fred Trump.
 
Presidents of the United States
38. 1974-1981: Gerald Ford / Robert "Bob" Dole (Republican)
1976: James E. "Jimmy" Carter / Walter Mondale (Democratic)
39. 1981-1989: Hugh Carey / Dale Bumpers (Democratic)
1980: Ronald Reagan / Richard Schweiker (Republican)
1984: George H.W. Bush / John Connally (Republican)

40. 1989-1993: Dale Bumpers / Reubin Askew (Democratic)
1988: Nancy Kassebaum / Paul Laxalt (Republican)
41. 1993-2001: George Deukmejian / Sandra Day O'Connor (Republican)
1992: Dale Bumpers / Reubin Askew (Democratic)
1996: Al Gore / Joe Biden (Democratic)

42. 2001-2009: Dick Gephardt / Patricia Schroeder (Democratic)
2000: Sandra Day O'Connor / John Engler (Republican)
2004: William Weld / Howard Baker (Republican)

43. 2009-2017: Richard Zimmer / Lisa Murkowski (Republican)
2008: Patricia Schroeder / John Kerry (Democratic)
2012: John Kerry / Bill Richardson (Democratic)

44. 2017-20xx: Lisa Murkowski / Susan Collins (Republican)
2016: Evan Bayh / Mark Warner (Democratic)
 
Expectations Met
Hillary Clinton/Evan Bayh 2009-2013
2008: Def. John McCain/Sarah Palin
Sarah Palin/Lindsey Graham 2013-2021

2012: Def. Hillary Clinton/Evan Bayh, Dennis Kucinich/Jill Stein
2016: Def. Elizabeth Warren/Martin O'Malley, Michael Bloomberg/Mark Cuban, Gary Johnson/Austin Petersen
Andrew Gillum/Terry MacAuliffe 2021-2025
2020: Def. Jim DeMint/John Kasich, Michael Bloomberg/Joe Lieberman
Mike Lee/Martha McSally 2025-2029
2024: Def. Andrew Gillum/John Hickenlooper, Lindsey Graham/Tom Cotton
Jared Polis/Mike Espy 2029-2037
2028: Def. Mike Lee/Martha McSally
2032: Def. Elise Stefanik/Ron DeSantis
Raul Labrador/Josh Hawley 2037-

2036: Def. Beto O'Rourke/Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
2040: Def. Scarlett Johansson/Tulsi Gabbard
 
No Chappaquiddick:

37. Richard Nixon (1969-1974), R-CA
38. Gerald Ford (1974-1977), R-MI

39. Edward M. Kennedy (1977-1985), D-MA
40. Bob Dole (1985-1993), R-KS
41. Jack Kemp (1993-1997), R-NY

42. Bill Bradley (1997-2005), D-NJ
43. John McCain (2005-2013), R-AZ
44. Barack Obama (2013-2021), D-IL

As expected, Ted Kennedy runs for President in 1972 and is nominated by the Democratic Party. He runs a relatively close race against Nixon, but still loses the election. However, following the economic crash and the Watergate scandal Democratic voters call for Kennedy's return in 1976. EMK reluctantly runs again, and this time defeats President Ford by a solid margin. Kennedy passes a Keynesian economic stimulus and his coveted universal health care bill in 1979. However, the same year the second oil crisis hits and the economy takes another dive. But the Iran Hostage Crisis leads to a surge in Kennedy's popularity. Republican nominee Ronald Reagan manages to narrow the gap in the 1980 fall campaign, hitting Kennedy hard on economic issues and "big government", but the surprise release of the American hostages in October 1980 makes Kennedy unbeatable.

Kennedy's second term would not go quite as well. A major recession breaks out in 1981, and a series of sex scandals damage Kennedy's popularity the following year. The Republicans make major gains in 1982, and finally retake the White House in 1984. They win again in 1988 and 1992, before finally facing defeat at the hands of Bill Bradley in 1996. His successors, John McCain and Barack Obama, would both prove relatively popular despite the economic turmoil of the late 00's.
 
An Alternate West Wing
John Hoynes/Josiah Bartlet 1999-2003

1998: Def. David Eisenhower/Robert Richie
Arnold Vinick/Glenn Allen Walken 2003-2011

2002: Def. John Hoynes/Josiah Bartlet
2006: Def. Josiah Bartlet/Ricky Rafferty
Leo McGarry/Sam Seaborne 2011-2019

2010: Def. Glenn Allen Walken/Darren Gibson
2014: Def. Robert Richie/Mike Reed
Matt Skinner/Ainsley Hayes 2019-

2018: Def. Sam Seaborne/Eric Baker
 
The Shamed People

First Party System (Whig vs National)

1798-1803: Thomas Jefferson (Whig-Virginia)
1803-1813: Aaron Burr (National-New York)
1813-1818: James Madison (Whig-Virginia)
1818-1823: Rufus King (National-Massachusetts)
1823-1828: Nathan Sanford (Whig-New York)
1828-1838: Andrew Jackson (Nationalist-North Carolina)

Second Party System (National vs Republican)

1838-1848: George Dallas (National-Pennsylvania)
1848-1853: William King (Republican-Alabama)
1853-1858: Leonidas Polk (National-Chickasaw)

Third Party System (National vs Republican vs Liberty)
1858-1861*:Franklin Pierce (National-New Hampshire)
1861-1863: Thaddeus Stevens (Liberty-Pennsylvania)
1863-1873: Ulysses S. Grant (National-Ohio)
1873-1878: George McClellan (National-New Jersey)

Fourth Party System (National Unity vs Free Democratic vs Dixie )

1878-1883: Horace Greely (Free Democratic-New York)
1883-1893: James Blaine (National Unity-Maine)
1893-1898: Grover Cleveland (National Unity-New York)

Fifth Party System (National Unity vs Good Christian)

1898-1913: Thomas Watson (Good Christian-Georgia)
1913-1918: Charles Evans Hughes (National Unity-New York)
1918-1923*: Woodrow Wilson (Good Christian-New Jersey)
1923-1933: Milo Reno (Good Christian-Transappalachia)
1933-1946**: Edwin Knight (Good Christian-West Florida)
1946-1953: Alexis Du Pont (National Unity-Delaware)

Sixth Party System (National Unity vs Rosist vs Lockist vs NeoWatsonian)

1953-1958: Adlai Stevenson (Rosist-Superior)
1958-1968: John Kennedy (National Unity-Massachusetts)
1968-1973: Herbert Humphrey (Rosist-Lacusia)
1973-1983: Leslie King (National Unity-Huron)
1983-1988: John Anderson (National Unity)
1988-1998: Patrick Buchanan (NeoWatsonian-Maryland)
1998-2008: Ron Paul (Lockist-Pennsylvania)
2008-2013: Susan Collins (National Unity-Upper Massachusetts)
2013-2018: Rand Paul (Lockist-Pennsylvania)
2018-20??: Bernie Sanders (Rosist-Iroquoisia)



*Assassinated
**Impeached
 
Chairmen of the People's Revolutionary Peasants and Labor Party of The People's Confederacy of Dixieland-New Afrika (1983-Present)

Huey Newton (1983-2000)

John Sinclair (2000-2014)


Martin Heinrich (2014-Present)

Factions:
Vanguardist/Agrarian Orthodox Faction

Reformist/Industrialist Faction


History: The People's Confederacy of Dixieland-New Afrika began as a the People's Labor and Peasantry Liberation Movement. This movement was a more radical sect of the greater Civil Rights and Economic Equality
movement which began in the 50s with more moderate thinkers such as W. E. B. Du Bois and Martin Luther King Jr, but these movements faced harsh punishments from Confederate Presidents such as George Wallace (1959-1972) and Jimmy Carter (1972-1983). This lead to the empowerment of the more radical People's Labor and Peasantry Liberation Movement, which was financed by the Soviet Union and Chinese Socialist Republic. The revolution began in 1983 and after a short civil war that lasted from October of 1983 to November of 1985, the revolutionary forces won. They began their work to create an Idealistic Green Nation where the agrarian lifestyle was widespread. This was not well received until the Cultural Revolution of 1989 purged counter revolutionary elements and forcefully relocated millions of unemployed citizens to the countryside to work on state run Collectivized plantations. This was followed by a general rejection of industrialized methods of production and encouraging rural methods. The Cultural Revolution was deemed a failure by incumbent Chairman Martin Heinrich. After the Death of Huey Newton in 2000, his close colleague and ally John Sinclair was made his successor. Sinclair was a northern born Marxist who became attracted to Newtonism after moving to the south. Sinclair continued Newtons policies until his usurpation by Martin Heinrich, a young reformist from the western borders of the Confederacy, he has allowed small scale industrialization and privatization. The PCDNA is at a crossroads as more Orthodox Newtonian Agrarian Socialists fight against Heinrich's government.








 
Alright, attempt one to finish that list (idea is Canada as the UK if you couldn't tell):

Prime Ministers of Canada:
1935-1945: William Lyon Mackenzie King (Liberal)

1935: R.B. Bennett (Liberal-Conservative), John Blackmore (Social Credit), J.S. Woodsworth (CCF), H.H. Stevens (Reconstruction)
1940: Robert Manion (National Government/Liberal-Conservative), William Herridge (New Democracy/Social Credit), J.S. Woodsworth (CCF)

1945-1951: M.J. Coldwell (CCF)
1945: William Lyon Mackenzie King (Liberal), John Bracken (Progressive Conservative), Solon Earl Low (Social Credit)
1950 (Minority): William Lyon Mackenzie King (Liberal), George Drew (Progressive Conservative), Solon Earl Low (Social Credit)

1951-1955: William Lyon Mackenzie King (Liberal)
1951: M.J. Coldwell (CCF), George Drew (Progressive Conservative), Solon Earl Low (Social Credit)
1955-1957: Louis St. Laurent (Liberal)

1955: M.J. Coldwell (CCF), George Drew (Progressive Conservative), Solon Earl Low (Social Credit)
1957-1963: Paul Martin (Liberal)
1959: ??? (CCF) , John Diefenbaker (Progressive Conservative), Robert Thompson (Social Credit)
1963-1964: Lester Pearson (Liberal)
1964-1970: Tommy Douglas (CCF)

1964: Lester Pearson (Liberal), John Diefenbaker (Progressive Conservative)
1966: Mitchell Sharp (Liberal), John Diefenbaker (Progressive Conservative)
1970-1974: Mitchell Sharp (Liberal)
1970: Tommy Douglas (CCF), John Diefenbaker (Progressive Conservative)
1974-1976: Tommy Douglas (CCF)
Feb. 1974 (Minority): Mitchell Sharp (Liberal), Duff Roblin (Progressive Conservative)
Oct. 1974: Mitchell Sharp (Liberal), Duff Roblin (Progressive Conservative)

1976-1979: David Lewis (CCF)
1979-1990: Pierre Trudeau (Liberal)

1979: David Lewis (CCF),
Duff Roblin (Progressive Conservative)
1983: James Laxer (CCF), Duff Roblin/Frank Howard (Progressive Conservative/National)
1987: Ed Broadbent (CCF), Duff Roblin/Frank Howard (Progressive Conservative/National)
1990-1997: Jean Chretien (Liberal)
1992: Ed Broadbent (CCF), Gary Doer (Union)
1997-2007: Bob Rae (CCF)
1997: Jean Chretien (Liberal), Gary Doer (Union)
2001: Ralph Goodale (Liberal), Peter Stoffer (Union)
2005: Shiela Copps (Liberal), Peter Stoffer (Union)

2007-2010: Tom Mulcair (CCF)
2010-2016: John Manley (Liberal)

2010 (In coalition government with Union): Tom Mulcair (CCF), Jim Prentice (Union)
2015: Fin Donnelly (CCF), Francois Legault (Union Nationale), Jim Prentice (Union)

2016-Present: Shelly Glover (Liberal)
2017: Howard Hampton (CCF), Francois Legault (Union Nationale), Jim Flaherty (Union)

Just as before, any feedback/criticism/suggestions will be highly appreciated.
 
35 John Fitzgerald Kennedy (D-Massachusetts)/ Lyndon Baines Johnson (D-Texas) 1/20/1961-10/31/1962
Def Richard Milhous Nixon (R-California)/ Henry Cabot Lodge (R-Massachusetts)
[President Kennedy was killed together with Vice-President Johnson, all his Cabinet and all the Congress and the Supreme Court during the Hallowen Bombing that started World War Three or Cuban War]

No one 31/10/1962-12/21/1962
Acting President Dwight David Einsenhower 12/21/1962-3/28/1965
[Former President Einsenhower was found as highest military survived, taken from his Pennsylvania farmer where had retired and proclaimed Acting President in a Provisional Emergency Goverment. Same moths later a new Congress ratified the choice and confirmed all his acts]
Acting President Matthew Bunker Ridgway 3/28/1965-1/20/1969
[After the death of Eisenhower at the end of Second Civil War, General Ridgway was sworn to complete the transition towards a new Democracy]

36 Nelson Aldrich Rockfeller(RL-New York)/ William Childs Westmoreland (V-South Carolina) 1/20/1969-1/20/1973

Def
Nelson Aldrich Rockfeller (RL-New York)/ George Wilcken Romney (RL-Michigan) Richard Milhous Nixon (V-California)/ William Childs Westmoreland (V-South Carolina) Albert Benjamin Chandler (D-Kentucky)/ James Terry Sanford (D-South Carolina) George Stanley McGovern (P-South Dakota)/ Chester Bliss Bowles (P-Connecticut)
[First free election was not a good sign as a divided country caused a deadlocked Electoral College: the Congress elected then Rockfeller, winner of popular vote, and General Westmoreland in a national unity ticket]

Nelson Aldrich Rockfeller (RL-New York)/ Harold Everett Hughes (RL-Iowa) 1/20/1973-9/5/1975

Def Richard Milhous Nixon (V-California)/ John Richard Rarick (V-Louisiana) George Stanley McGovern (P-South Dakota)/ Fred Roy Harris (P-Oklahoma) James Terry Sanford (D-South Carolina)/ Lloyd Millard Bentsen Jr (D-Texas)
[The Constitutional Reform of 1971 abolished officially Electoral College to avoid any future controversy. Rockfeller was reelected in a landslide as country was improving under the Great Recostruction but he was called a traitor by right-wings extremists that opposed his disarmament pacts with new Soviet leadership under young General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachov: President Rockfeller was finally killed in the "Nixon Coup" in September 1975 by the hands of brutal Charles Manson's Militia]

37 Harold Everett Hughes (RL-Iowa)/Vacant 9/5/1975-1/20/1977
[One of the most popular President of American History, he saved American Democracy during the darkest hour of "Nixon Coup", leading to arresting Nixon, Mason and their accomplices. After this Victory Party was banned and disbanded and militaries lost gradually their strong influence in politics. President Hughes declined a second term and retired to spend his life in charities for poors and sick people]

38 George Wilcken Romney (RL-Michigan)/ Roger Lea MacBride (RL-Vermont) 1/20/1977-1/20/1981
[Romney was elected due Hughes's popularity but his gaffes and the gradual end of 1970s Boom caused his defeat]

Def Lloyd Millard Bentsen Jr (D-Texas)/ Ernest Frederick Hollings (D-South Carolina) Fred Roy Harris (P-Oklahoma)/ Milton Jerrold Shapp (P-Pennsylvania)

39 James Earl Carter (D-Georgia)/ Patrick Joseph Lucey (D-Wisconsin) 1/20/1981-1/20/1989

Def 1980 George Wilcken Romney (RL-Michigan)/ Roger Lea MacBride (RL-Vermont) Walter Frederick Mondale (P-Minnesota) James John Conyers Jr (P-Michigan)
1984 Roger Lea MacBride (RL-Vermont)/ Philip Miller Crane (RL-Illinois) George Stanley McGovern (P-South Dakota)/ Chevebe Bowers King (P-Georgia)
[President Carter was an average President but the 1987 Crash caused a major defeat for Democrats]

40 Lido Anthony Iacocca (RL-Michigan)/ Robert Joseph Dole (RL-Kansas) 1/20/1989-1/20/1997

Def 1988 Patrick Joseph Lucey (D-Wisconsin)/ William Jefferson Clinton (D-Arkansas) Jesse Jackson (P-South Carolina)/ Edmund Gerald Brown Jr (P-California)
1992 Paul Efhtemios Tsongas (D-Massachusetts)/ Lee Hamilton (D-Indiana) Edmund Gerald Brown Jr (P-California)/ Jesse Jackson (P-South Carolina)
[Lee Iacocca was a celebrity since he leaded the Department of Recostruction under Rockfeller and was elected in a landslide as the man who could end Recession. This proved right and Iacicca was reelected and today is considered as an idol in Republican Liberal Party]

41 Henry Ross Perot (D-Texas)/ Herbert Norman Schwarzkopf Jr (D-New Jersey) 1/20/1997-1/20/2005
[Many thought that Iacocca's popularity was sufficient to make 1996 a Republican Liberal Year but Dole, chosen to satisfy conservative Midwest, was old and uninspiring and was defeat by populist campaign of Governor of Texas Ross Perot]

Def 1996 Robert Joseph Dole (R-Kansas)/ Phil Gramm (R-Texas) Paul Wellstone (P-Minnesota)/ Malcolm Little (P-Nebraska)
2000 Malcolm Little (P-Nebraska)/ William Bradley (P-Missouri)

James Danforth Quayle (RL-Indiana)/ Alan Keyes (RL-Illinois)

42 Willard Mitt Romney (RL-Utah)/ George Felix Allen (RL-Virginia) 1/20/2005-1/20/2009

Def William Bradley (P-Missouri)/ John Forbes Kerry (P-Massachusetts) Frederick Phelps (D-Kansas)/Peter Navarro (D-California)
[The country paid the price if decades of unuseful Economic Liberalism when the Great Recession started in 2003. Romney, son of George, was elected President with the promise to save American Economy but all you know that between promises and facts there is an ocean, right?]

43 Russell Dana Feingold (P-Wisconsin)/ Patrick Leahy (P-Vermont) 1/20/2009-1/20/2017

Def 2008 Willard Mitt Romney (RL-Utah)/ George Felix Allen (RL-Virginia) Peter Navarro (D-California)/ Joseph Manchin (D-West Virginia)
2012 Joseph Robinette Biden (RL-New Jersey)/ Hillary Diane Rodham (RL-Illinois) Richard Perry (D-Texas)/ Sarah Palin (D-Idaho)
[Russ Feingold shocked world when he won the election saying that "American Economy have not a problem, American Economy is the problem". FeingoldCare was popular and so were the new Markerts Regulations provided by Warren Act]

44 James Henry Webb (D-West Virginia)/ Thomas Tancredo (D-Colorado) 1/20/2017-1/20/2021

Def Elizabeth Ann Warren (P-Oklahoma)/ Sherrod Campbell Brown (P-Ohio) John Richard Kasich (RL-Ohio)/ Susan Margaret Collins (RL-Maine)
[If you hurts with populism, you will die by populism. Webb made a strong rural populist campaign against "Pocahontas" Warren and "KaShit Johnny" and won surprisingly mainly thanks preeminence of rural areas after the World War Three. However his Presidency was hit by scandals and popularity sank when was clear all his electoral promises were not worth the paper they were written on]

45 Sherrod Campbell Brown (P-Ohio)/ Barack Hussein Obama (P-Illinois) 1/20/2021-...
Def 2020 Marco Rubio (RL-Florida)/ Christopher Sununu (RL-New Hampshire) James Henry Webb (D-West Virginia)/ Thomas Tancredo (D-Colorado)
2024 Christopher Sununu (RL-New Hampshire)/ Douglas Jones (RL-Alabama) Ronald De Santis (D-Florida)/ Michaek Richard Pence (D-Indiana)
[President Brown was elected to save American Workers by Webb's disasters and he made pretty well, enough to be reelected confortably. His vice-president, former Ambassador turned Governor, Barack Obama is the frontrunner in incoming 2028 election]
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top