Alternate Wikipedia Infoboxes V (Do Not Post Current Politics Here)

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Comrade TruthTeller

Gone Fishin'
I didn't forget about my Führerreich TL quite yet, here's a sequel to the last UK election I did for it

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Also, Keir Starmer is Arthur Hardie?
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2018 Superior Provincial Election

In the 2018 Superior General Election, incumbent Labor Premier Ken Summers, who replaced retiring Premier Ken Boshkoff earlier that year, managed to narrowly hold his party's absolute majority to keep Labor control over Superior provincial government. By winning Cochran West by 51 votes over the Progressives, Labor was able to prevent a minority government and possible coalition with the Progressives, who along with the DPP saw gains in the 2018 election.
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Saint Aleksander is a worshipped hero to the men and women of the Holy Republic of Gudsland. Worshipped in a way to make non-Gudslanders wonder if he was their God. Of course, he is not, but he is considered one "rank" under Jesus Christ by the Gudslander Nyverden Church. But by all other churches and sects of Christianity will arrest some citizens who even bring up the man, due to the fact that they think it is theocratic propaganda. You can see why if you hear the story of Aleksander Pedersen: born in Denmark. Soon he would be trained to become a sailor. His personal life is not well known due to lots of different stories. Anyways, eventually, he would be assigned to find the new world. Of course, everyone knows how his ship got blown of course. Still, they found the new world. There he would say his famous quote "Dette er Gud's land" or in English "This is God's country" (he was very, and I mean very, religious). So he went back to inform the king of Denmark that this new land is not just a rumor. When they got back they could not find the original landing site, but he considered it just as holy as the first landing site. A while later he founded the town of Gudsland. So eventually the town was a little overpopulated so he went south the found the town of Forjættedeland. This time he purged the surrounding Native American tribes. Also some crimes against humanity. This upsets the king and he orders the arrest of the crazy captain. So the captain ran with his Christian crew. Two years later he would return to the settlement with him leading a tribe. Then he was easily captured and put up to be executed. His last words before he was hung were the famous and haunting quote: "Jeg fortryder intet. Der er intet at fortryde. Jeg gjorde min pligt som kristen at holde savagerne i skak.". After that his head was cut off and tied to a horse and then paraded around the city as a warning to all who disobey the king (the reason the painting shows Aleksander carrying his own head is because of one of his original followers said that he had saw the headless body of Aleksander Pedersen grab his own rotting head and bring it to the ocean, and sent it off). After that he was seen as a martyr to keep the un-Christian "demons" at bay. Only 145 years after his death and the founding of the theocracy, Aleksander was made the first saint of the new church.
 
Shit's going down in my Führerreich TL

On 26 September 2019, a leadership spill motion was held against incumbent German Chancellor Mona Levisohn. The motion was requested by Education Minister Sven Krüger, who believed Levisohn was taking the SPD "too far to the hard left" and the party was becoming "too similar to the Greens and the Left Alternative" under her leadership. He cited the SPD's declining poll numbers as proof Levisohn was "alienating traditional SPD voters" with her "hard left rhetoric"

Krüger won the contest by a margin of a single vote. Following the spill, the Greens and the Left Alternative both refused to join Krüger's new cabinet, although they agreed to confidence and supply a minority government for the time being to prevent the Schwarz und Blau bloc or the DNP from forming a minority government. Experts predict a snap election to be held within the next year, but the Greens' leadership and Left Alternative's leadership both assure that this will not happen in the near future


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Based on this TL: https://www.alternatehistory.com/fo...ents-and-pms-ii.407398/page-422#post-19541338

The 1992-1997 Parliament had been chaotic for the Straw government. Initially, the 'grey man' was a Labour hero for pulling off an upset victory in the 1992 election, but soon the country found itself in a sterling crisis that damaged the government's credibility. Furthermore, various financial scandals were uncovered within the Parliamentary Labour Party, alienating both its core base and the nation at large. Having survived a leadership challenge in 1995, Straw managed to make it all the way to the 1997 election. However, with the Tories under the youthful and charismatic Michael Portillo enjoying a years-long lead in the polls, the result was probably inevitable.

The margin was not so inevitable.

In the biggest landslide in decades, a number of cabinet ministers were defeated, the most prominent being Chancellor Gordon Brown in his marginal Edinburgh South constituency and, more surprisingly, Health Secretary and rising star Alan Milburn in his seemingly safe (or perhaps not) constituency of Stockton North. The defeat of the latter has come to be known as the 'Milburn Moment' and many still ask "Were you up for Milburn?"; Milburn had long been a star of the party's more left-wing grassroots and this result was seen to symbolise the extent of Labour's defeat. Elsewhere, London was a particular success for the Tories. The incoming Prime Minister, Michael Portillo, saw his majority exceed 25,000 in Enfield Southgate, and Kate Hoey, a key figure on the Labour left, was defeated in Dulwich and West Norwood. The Liberal Democrats successfully captured anti-Labour tactical votes in a variety of constituencies to almost double their number of seats.


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Comrade TruthTeller

Gone Fishin'
Based on this TL: https://www.alternatehistory.com/fo...ents-and-pms-ii.407398/page-422#post-19541338

The 1992-1997 Parliament had been chaotic for the Straw government. Initially, the 'grey man' was a Labour hero for pulling off an upset victory in the 1992 election, but soon the country found itself in a sterling crisis that damaged the government's credibility. Furthermore, various financial scandals were uncovered within the Parliamentary Labour Party, alienating both its core base and the nation at large. Having survived a leadership challenge in 1995, Straw managed to make it all the way to the 1997 election. However, with the Tories under the youthful and charismatic Michael Portillo enjoying a years-long lead in the polls, the result was probably inevitable.

The margin was not so inevitable.

In the biggest landslide in decades, a number of cabinet ministers were defeated, the most prominent being Chancellor Gordon Brown in his marginal Edinburgh South constituency and, more surprisingly, Health Secretary and rising star Alan Milburn in his seemingly safe (or perhaps not) constituency of Stockton North. The defeat of the latter has come to be known as the 'Milburn Moment' and many still ask "Were you up for Milburn?"; Milburn had long been a star of the party's more left-wing grassroots and this result was seen to symbolise the extent of Labour's defeat. Elsewhere, London was a particular success for the Tories. The incoming Prime Minister, Michael Portillo, saw his majority exceed 25,000 in Enfield Southgate, and Kate Hoey, a key figure on the Labour left, was defeated in Dulwich and West Norwood. The Liberal Democrats successfully captured anti-Labour tactical votes in a variety of constituencies to almost double their number of seats.


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I hope we get Great British Railway Journeys hosted by Alan Milburn now...
 
Here's an infobox for the 33rd President of the United States, Henry A. Wallace, for an upcoming timeline! :)

A Wallace timeline where he's popular? What's next, a Wilson timeline where he's not a piece of shit?

No, Henry Wilson doesn't count, but that is something I'd like to see
 
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