Alternate Electoral Maps II

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Based off a Campaign Trail game I played as Truman. (https://www.americanhistoryusa.com/campaign-trail/game/400023)

In this election, Truman beats Dewey down to third place in the electoral vote count.

Truman - 463
Thurmond - 38
Dewey - 30

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Honestly, I wonder what the ramifications politically would be, if Truman scored such a high victory in the Electoral College.
 
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Using the numbers from 1968, here is what a narrow wallace win would look like.
Governor George Wallace/Curtis Lemay: 46.7%, 297
Vice President Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie: 26.8% ,128
Former Vice President Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew: 26.4% , 113.
I can also give county results for the two counties in Vermont that Tex marked as Wallace.
Essex was
43.41% Nixon, 40.96% Humphrey, 15.6% Wallace.

Grand Isle was
39.64% Nixon, 38.33% Humphrey, 22.01% Wallace
 
That is simply fantastic!!!
In what other states do the Populists compete in that you haven't already shown?
If you would kindly allow me to request the next map again, then could you please do Mississippi, (I really do love agrarian parties, I don't know why, I just do!)

Check out the entry for Lincoln, which is Mississippi in @MoralisticCommunist's universe after undergoing a name change
 
View attachment 357133
Using the numbers from 1968, here is what a narrow wallace win would look like.
Governor George Wallace/Curtis Lemay: 46.7%, 297
Vice President Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie: 26.8% ,128
Former Vice President Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew: 26.4% , 113.
I can also give county results for the two counties in Vermont that Tex marked as Wallace.
Essex was
43.41% Nixon, 40.96% Humphrey, 15.6% Wallace.

Grand Isle was
39.64% Nixon, 38.33% Humphrey, 22.01% Wallace
He would have to win the popular vote by 19.9% just to get 297 Electoral Votes? That's insane.
This makes me pretty confident that he would've won at least Grand Isle county in Vermont as well and probably Essex too.
 
View attachment 357133
Using the numbers from 1968, here is what a narrow wallace win would look like.
Governor George Wallace/Curtis Lemay: 46.7%, 297
Vice President Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie: 26.8% ,128
Former Vice President Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew: 26.4% , 113.
I can also give county results for the two counties in Vermont that Tex marked as Wallace.
Essex was
43.41% Nixon, 40.96% Humphrey, 15.6% Wallace.

Grand Isle was
39.64% Nixon, 38.33% Humphrey, 22.01% Wallace
Also, in light of this, I'm thinking Wallace would have won every county in the South that gave Nixon or Humphrey less than 60% IOTL, as he's getting >60% in Virginia and >50% in Kentucky and Texas here.
 
The Seventh Party System: Part XXXIV
Map of the United States
Part I - Metropotamia
Part II - Alta California
Part III - North Carolina
Part IV - New Jersey
Part V - Adams
Part VI - Alabama
Part VII - Rhode Island
Part VIII - Sequoyah
Part IX - Assenisipia
Part X - East Florida
Part XI - Tennessee
Part XII - Kansas
Part XIII - Dakota
Part XIV - Arizona
Part XV - Delaware
Part XVI - Oregon
Part XVII - Ozark
Part XVIII - New Hampshire
Part XIX - Western Connecticut
Part XX - New York
Part XXI - Santo Domingo
Part XXII - South Carolina
Part XXIII - Baja California
Part XXIV - Chersonesus
Part XXV - Canal Zone Territory
Part XXVI - West Florida
Part XXVII - Missouri
Part XXVIII - Colorado
Part XXIX - Trinidad and Tobago
Part XXX - Pennsylvania
Part XXXI - Wisconsin
Part XXXII - Lincoln
Part XXXIII - Deseret


Platte has always been a battleground state, caught between the Populists and the Libertarians, the Republicans and Labor, and in terms of excitement this year's election did not disappoint.

Before the last election during 2016, the Populist-Labor coalition held only a tenuous grip on the state of Platte with a meager 5 seat margin in the House and 2 seats in the Senate. However with the rise of the populist right and the Platte Republican party having recently gone through a crisis as party leader Eric Sasse outed several Republicans for their far right views, the Republican party failed to capitalize on any possible gains and instead fell from 25 seats to a pitiful 19, setting a record for the lowest percentage of seats the GOP had gotten in the state since the 1800s. In the GOP's place the right had become filled with not only Libertarians and Constitutionists, but also two new right wing parties, German Heritage and Agrarian Justice.

German Heritage is a fascist party created to "protect the German heritage of Plattians" as well as "offer a third position between Labor and the Republicans." Having won a total of 9 seats in the 2016 election many national pundits began to fear that the fascist fervor of Kansas might have been passed on to its northern neighbor. Agrarian Justice, on the other hand, was a non-nationalistic party which offered a simple solution to the ongoing Second Great Depression, Georgism. Proposing the abolition of all income taxes and corporate taxes and instead instituting a land value tax to pay for corporate welfare to stimulate the economy they managed to capture a significant proportion of the vote share among white collar urbanites, winning a total of 5 seats.

As a result of these two new parties the Populist-Labor coalition was spared from total loss of government, however they were forced to make supply and confidence agreements with both the Black Panthers and the First People's Party to prop their government up, leading to two more years that were even more unstable than the last as the Black Panthers frequently threatened calling a vote of no-confidence unless their radical socialist legislation got passed. As such, the 2018 election became a matter of not whether the right or left would win, but rather who on the right would win.

This kick-started a race to the right among both the Libertarians and the Republicans, with the Libertarians announcing their support of companies "to exercise their religious freedom to refuse jobs to whatever sexual orientations they so please" and the Republicans ditching Eric Sasse in favor of Varadaraj Pai who vowed to deregulate and sell off the state's telecommunications system, power grid, and water supply to encourage a "free and open marketplace." For their part German Heritage announced their plans to replace all public schools in favor of low cost "youth camps" and Agrarian Justice announced a pledge to donate 10% of the government's tax revenue to churches.

In the end the Republicans turned out to be the biggest winner of 2018, skyrocketing up from 19 seats to 40 as both Labor and the Populists took heavy losses. And while the Republicans were still forced to make a coalition with the Libertarians and Constitutionists in order to form a majority, the three parties shared dedication to trickle down economics and privatization made coalition negotiations a walk in the park.

Government:
Republicans - The party of fiscal conservatives and social moderates, they are more right wing on both the social and economic axes in comparison to their New England counterparts, as is typical for Western Republican parties. However under the leadership of Varadaraj Pai the party has become near identical to that of the Libertarians economically with even the water supply being privatized and sold off to Sinclair Industries, a company co-founded by Mr. Pai himself.
Libertarians - A party for increased freedom in both social and business matters, they have derided by many as misogynistic due to their fervent opposition to abortion and women's healthcare. As a result the majority of their support remains based in Platte's Panhandle whose residents resent paying taxes to bureaucrats in Lincoln. However with Platte's recent shift to the right after Labor failed to end the Second Great Depression the party has begun to spread eastwards and their ideas have heavily influenced the state's Republican party.
Constitution - The party for replacing the rule of law with the rule of religion they are also well known for having economic views which are nearly as right wing as that of the Libertarians. In this light, it was not surprising that the party signed on so quickly to the Republican coalition, nor was it so surprising when a new committee for "Religious Harmony" was created with undisclosed powers.

Opposition:
Labor - The main social democratic party of Platte, they are dedicated to helping the urban workers of the state. Being part of a near eternal alliance with the Populists they ruled the state's government from 2010 to 2018 as a result of the Second Great Depression. However as their efforts have provided unsuccessful in solving the crisis they were resounding defeated at the polls as voters decided to give the Republicans another chance.
Populists - The other social democratic party of Platte, they represent the interests of rural farmers and are more socially conservative than Labor. Unlike in other states such as Mississippi or Wisconsin where Labor and the Populists have a non-competition pact in the House the nature of the state's lower legislative chamber makes it possible for the two parties to run in the same electoral district without fear of vote splitting. Instead it is the upper chamber where the two parties have a non-competition agreement in order to maximize their seats under a FPTP system.
German Heritage - A fascist party claiming to protect the "German Heritage" of Plattians the party fell from 9 seats to 4 seats in this election as most of its moderate supporters jumped ship to the Republicans. However the fact that it still drew four seats leaves many worried about the possibility of a fascist resurgence in the future.
Agrarian Justice - Ironically against the interests of agricultural corporations and small farmers, they instead preach a severe perversion of Paine's pamphlet on "Agrarian Justice" which seeks to exploit the state's farming sector for the benefit of urban businesses. As such they have gained a cult following among urban white collar employees who resent paying Platte's over bloated farm bill.
Black Panther party - Lead by the state's longest serving senator, Ernst Williams, the party has continued to dominate among Omaha's small black population which remains firmly opposed to the social conservatism of both left and the right. Famously filing several suits against God, and calling for the institution of a statewide basic income the BPP has remained a thorn in the side of most Plattians.
First People's Party - A party for Native American interests, their support in the state remains based around the Winnebago and Omaha reservations of Platte's northeastern corner.

platte_by_moralisticcommunist-dbuv6a3.png


Credit for the basemap goes to Chicxulub.

Looking back at Sequoyah and Kansas, I wonder what horrors await West Virginia, Texas, Louisiana, Alaska, and Seward.
 
He would have to win the popular vote by 19.9% just to get 297 Electoral Votes? That's insane.
This makes me pretty confident that he would've won at least Grand Isle county in Vermont as well and probably Essex too.
Wallace had a very concentrated base in the south, and is running in a three way race.
 
Wallace had a very concentrated base in the south, and is running in a three way race.
So the percentage that he needs to get all of Dixie is relatively low, it is getting to 270 with non-Dixie states that is difficult. The question is what percentage does Wallace need to throw the election to the HoR?
 
So the percentage that he needs to get all of Dixie is relatively low, it is getting to 270 with non-Dixie states that is difficult. The question is what percentage does Wallace need to throw the election to the HoR?
Depends on how much Nixon and Humphrey get. If they don't change, 18.24%, roughly.
 
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