List of Alternate Presidents and PMs II

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Oppo - [ I have no idea how to classify this ]
1969-1972: Vacant/Hubert Humphrey (Democrat) [1]
1968: Ronald Reagan/Jim Rhodes (Republican), Lyndon B. Johnson/Hubert Humphrey (Democrat), George Wallace/Happy Chandler (American Independent), Wayne Morse/Don Edwards (Peace-Statehood)
1972: Vacant/Carl Albert (Democrat) [2]
1972-1973: Vacant/James Eastland (Democrat) [3]
1973-1975: Vacant/John Rarick (Democrat) [4]
1972: Dewey Bartlet/Spiro Agnew (Republican), James Eastland/John Rarick (Democrat), Robert Kennedy/Wally Hickel (Solidarity), Ronald Reagan/Hail Lyons (American Independent), Wayne Morse/Don Edwards (Peace-Statehood)
1975-1977: James Eastland/John Rarick (Democrat) [5]
1977-1978: Spiro Agnew/John Rarick (Republican/Democrat) [6]
1976: James Eastland/John Rarick (Democrat), Spiro Agnew/Robert Ray (Republican), Ronald Reagan/George P. Mahoney (American Independent), Robert Kennedy/Jesse Unruh (Solidarity), Lyndon LaRouche/Mike Gravel (Peace-Statehood), Eugene McCarthy/Roger MacBride (Libertarian) [7]
1978-1981: John Rarick/Vacant (Democrat)
1981: John Rarick/Phyllis Schlafly (Democrat/Republican) [8]
1980: John Rarick/Sam Yorty (Democrat), William Brock/Phyllis Schlafly (Republican), Lyndon LaRouche/Frank Rizzo (American Independent-Peace), Robert Kennedy/Gary Hart (Solidarity), Joe Edwards/Mike Gravel (Freak Power)
1981-1983: Phyllis Schlafly/Vacant (Republican) [9]
1983-1997: Lyndon LaRouche/Robert Casey (United Alternative) [10]
1982: Phyllis Schlafly/Avi Nelson (Republican), Joe Edwards/Gore Vidal (Freak Power), Sam Yorty/Edwin Edwards (Democrat), Lee Iaccoca/Charles Percy (Independent), Jesse Jackson/Albert Gore Jr. (Solidarity), Joe Walsh/Timothy Leary (Free Gas For Everyone) [11]
1984: Gore Vidal/Hunter S. Thompson (Freak Power), Phyllis Schlafly/Fred Phelps (Republican), Joe Walsh/Pat Robertson (Free Gas For Everyone)
1988: Martin Luther King/Robert Kennedy (Freak Power), Joe Walsh/Rick Perry (Free Gas-Republican)

1992: Robert Kennedy/Gene Bergland (Freak Power), Joe Walsh/Ed Clark (Free Gas-Republican), Bronson LaFolette/Bernard Sanders (New Bull Moose), Hillary Rodham/Bo Gritz (National Christian Democratic Workers' Front), Gus Hall/Angela Davis (Communist), Charles Percy/Jeane Kirkpatrick (Independent), Roseanne Barr/Warren Beatty (Modern Suprise)
1997-2003: Robert Kennedy/Jello Biafra (Freak Power) [12]
1996: Lyndon LaRouche/Robert Casey (United Alternative), Pierre DuPont IV/Dean Barkley (Free Gas-Republican), David Duke/Richard Gephardt (National Christian Democratic Workers' Front), Ellen DeGeneres/Morgan Freeman (Modern Suprise), Tom Harkin/Tom Hayden (United Radical Left)
2000: Lyndon LaRocuhe/Richard Meyers (United Alternative), Tom Harkin/Tom Hayden (United Radical Left), Phyllis Schlafly/Wesley Clark (NCDWF-Free Gas)


OFFICE ABOLISHED, REPLACED WITH SUPREME LEADER OF THE UNITED WORKERS' REPUBLIC OF AMERICA

2003-2036: Tom Harkin (American Workers' Party) [13]
2003: Unopposed
2013: Unopposed
2023: Unopposed
2033: Unopposed

2036-2134: Gavin Newsom (American Workers' Party) [14]
2043: Unopposed
2053: Unopposed
2063: Unopposed
2073: Unopposed
2083: Unopposed
2093: Unopposed
2103: Unopposed
2113: Unopposed
2123: Unopposed
2133: Unopposed

[1]
ITS BEEN THREE YEARS: MAKE UP YOUR MIND!
[2] "Mr. Bremer's actions are indefensible."
[3] "I will be the best President God ever created!"
[4] CONGRESS: VOTE BARTLET! DON'T REPEAT '68!
[5] SEND EASTLAND BACK! VOTE DEMOCRATIC!
[6] "Why does this keep happening?"
[7] "The silent majority will prevail over the tyrant in the White House!"
[8] REPEAL THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE: DON'T REPEAT 1968, 1972, 1976
[9] PRESIDENTIAL RECALL AMENDMENT RATIFIED
[10] US LOWERED TO 'SOMEWHAT FREE' BY FREEDOMHOUSE
[11] "We will take down Füher Schlafly's agenda. I alone will save America."
[12] "Tear down D.C., especially the statues of LaRouche. Burn them to the ground!"
[13] "This is your new leader Tom Harkin. I am in control now. You must obey the workers' republic commands, or great punishment will be given. Chose wisely my citizens."
[14] OUR GREAT REPUBLIC: 100 YEARS OF WORLD SUPERIORITY
 
kyc0705 - Dewey Defeats Truman, 1948
I came up with this in a moment of extreme boredom today. I might flesh this out later, or not, depending on how it goes.

I don't make any claims for the plausibility of this. It started out as me wondering what would happen if Dewey won in '48 and then my fingers flew over the keyboard, and then I had...

35. Thomas E. Dewey (R-NY); January 20, 1949 - January 20, 1957 (termed out)
36. John F. Kennedy (D-MA); January 20, 1957 - January 20, 1961 (lost)
37. Richard M. Nixon (R-CA); January 20, 1961 - January 20, 1969 (termed out)
38. Hubert Humphrey (D-MN); January 20, 1969 - January 20, 1973 (lost)
39. Ronald Reagan (R-CA); January 20, 1973 - January 20, 1977 (lost)
40. Frank Church (D-ID); January 20, 1977 - January 31, 1984 (resigned for health reasons)
41. Gary Hart (D-CO); January 31, 1984 - January 20, 1989 (lost)
42. Bob Dole (R-KS); January 20, 1989 - January 20, 1993 (lost)
43. Jerry Brown (D-CA); January 20, 1993 - January 20, 1997 (lost)
44. Jack Kemp (R-NY); January 20, 1997 - January 20, 2005 (termed out)
45. Mitt Romney (R-MA); January 20, 2005 - January 20, 2009 (lost)
46. Tim Kaine (D-VA); January 20, 2009 - January 20, 2017 (termed out)

47. John Kasich (R-OH); January 20, 2017 - present
 
I came up with this in a moment of extreme boredom today. I might flesh this out later, or not, depending on how it goes.

I don't make any claims for the plausibility of this. It started out as me wondering what would happen if Dewey won in '48 and then my fingers flew over the keyboard, and then I had...

35. Thomas E. Dewey (R-NY); January 20, 1949 - January 20, 1957 (termed out)
36. John F. Kennedy (D-MA); January 20, 1957 - January 20, 1961 (lost)
37. Richard M. Nixon (R-CA); January 20, 1961 - January 20, 1969 (termed out)
38. Hubert Humphrey (D-MN); January 20, 1969 - January 20, 1973 (lost)
39. Ronald Reagan (R-CA); January 20, 1973 - January 20, 1977 (lost)
40. Frank Church (D-ID); January 20, 1977 - January 31, 1984 (resigned for health reasons)
41. Gary Hart (D-CO); January 31, 1984 - January 20, 1989 (lost)
42. Bob Dole (R-KS); January 20, 1989 - January 20, 1993 (lost)
43. Jerry Brown (D-CA); January 20, 1993 - January 20, 1997 (lost)
44. Jack Kemp (R-NY); January 20, 1997 - January 20, 2005 (termed out)
45. Mitt Romney (R-MA); January 20, 2005 - January 20, 2009 (lost)
46. Tim Kaine (D-VA); January 20, 2009 - January 20, 2017 (termed out)

47. John Kasich (R-OH); January 20, 2017 - present

No offense, but these are unoriginal. You can find more original politicians by going on Governor lists, Senator lists and/or Representative lists on wikipedia.
 
No offense, but these are unoriginal. You can find more original politicians by going on Governor lists, Senator lists and/or Representative lists on wikipedia.

Boredom breeds boredom, I suppose. I did notice that it eventually reverts to agreeable moderateland by the '90s. To spice things up, we'll just say that President Kasich is overthrown in a coup and a totalitarian military dictatorship is imposed.
 
Alaskan Governor Jay Hammond for one. If you want green conservatism to be big, he's a great choice.
Or fellow Alaskan Wally Hickel, who also had a strong mavericky tendency. Warren Knowles would also be interesting - as Wisconsin Governor, he led anti-pollution efforts, but also called up the National Guard against student protesters.
 
Gonzo - List of Prime Ministers of Northern Ireland
Here's my list of NI Prime Ministers from 'Where the World Will Lead':

List of Prime Ministers of Northern Ireland

1921-1940: James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon (Ulster Unionist)

1921: Eamon de Valera (Sinn Fein), Joe Devlin (Nationalist)
1925: Joe Devlin (Nationalist), N/A (Independent Unionist), N/A (Labour), Eamon de Valera (Sinn Fein)
1929: Joe Devlin (Nationalist), Sam Kyle (Labour)
1933: Joe Devlin (Nationalist), Jack Beattie (Labour), Seán Lemass (Fianna Fáil)
1938: Thomas J. Campbell (Nationalist), Harry Midgley (Labour), William McConnell Wilton (Ind. Unionist Association), William Stewart (Progressive Unionist)
1940-1943: J. M. Andrews (Ulster Unionist)
1943-1952: Harry Midgley (Ulster Unionist) [1]
1945: Thomas J. Campbell (Nationalist), Paddy Agnew (Labour), Harry Diamond (Socialist Republican) [2]
1949: James McSparran (Nationalist), William James Smyth (Labour), Harry Diamond (Socialist Republican) [3]
1952: None (Labour), James McSparran (Nationalist), Harry Diamond (Sinn Fein) [4]
1952-1960: W. F. McCoy (Ulster Unionist) [5]
1955: Jack Beattie (Labour), James McSparran (Nationalist), Albert McElroy (Ulster Liberal), Harry Diamond (Sinn Fein) [6]
1958: Joe Stewart (Nationalist)
, Jack Beattie (Labour), Albert McElroy (Ulster Liberal), Harry Diamond (Sinn Fein) [7]

1960-1965: Norman Stronge (Ulster Unionist) [8]
1963: Tom Boyd (Labour), Joe Stewart (Nationalist), Sheelagh Murnaghan (Ulster Liberal) [8]
1965-1975: Maynard Sinclair (Ulster Unionist) [9]
1967: Eddie McAteer (Nationalist), Tom Boyd (Labour), Sheelagh Murnaghan (Ulster Liberal), Bernadette Devlin (People's Unity) [9]
1971:
Eddie McAteer (Nationalist), David Bleakley (Labour), John McQuade (Anti-Sinclarite 'McCoyite' Ulster First Unionist), Bernadette McAliskey (People's Unity) [10]
1975 (Minority): Eddie McAteer (Nationalist), John McQuade (Anti-Sinclarite 'McCoyite' Ulster First Unionist), David Bleakley (Labour), Bernadette McAliskey (People's Unity) [11]

1975-????: John Brooke (Ulster Unionist) [12]

[1]: After backbench dissent forced Prime Minister J. M. Andrews from office in 1943; the Ulster Unionist Council selected former Labour Party leader and now Government Minister, Harry Midgley (his case was argued by Council member, Westminster MP and personal friend, James Moynihan) as the new Prime Minister of Northern Ireland (Andrews would remain Unionist Party leader until 1947, however.) Midgley was the first Ulster Unionist leader not to come from either a landed gentry, aristocracy or the middle class business background; rather he came from a career in the textile industry and was later in the Royal Engineers during the First Great War.
[2]: The 1945 General Election was as ever a foregone conclusion with the Ulster Unionists getting over half of the votes and well above the number of seats required for an overall majority. Labour lost all but one of it's seats due to it's former leader cutting into the labour working class Loyalist vote that they relied upon. The Nationalists kept their second place in number of seats, despite Labour gaining over twice the amount of votes that they won. The Socialist Republican Party, led by Harry Diamond won a seat in West Belfast and began to worryingly cut into the Nationalist vote within the capital city.
[3]: Midgley's pro-reformist policies and rather close relations with Stafford Cripps led to some unease within the party. He however led the party to another, greater, landslide victory taking nearly 63% of the vote and forty seats. His former party, Labour, were wiped out from parliament; while the Nationalists consolidated their position on five seats; despite Labour gaining marginally more votes than them. The Socialist Republican leader, Harry Diamond won his West Belfast seat over the Nationalists by a landslide.
[4]: The 1952 General Election finally saw the Nationalist Party decline in numbers of seats; Sinn Fein (an amalgamation of northern Fianna Fail, the old Sinn Fein and the Socialist Republican parties) won a handful of seats along the borders; coupled with a Labour resurgence in Belfast; saw the party pipped by the leaderless Labour Party by two seats. Midgley, despite being the usual anti-Irish nationalist Unionist was considered a moderate on the issue - at least compared to hardliners such as Basil Brooke (Minister of Commerce and Production) and W. F. McCoy (Minister of Home Affairs.) His position became more unstable with a series of by-election losses to Independent Unionists and to Labour.
[5]: Midgley's position became untenable when W. F. McCoy resigned his position, in a clearly provocative move. Within the month Midgley was out and McCoy was the new party leader as backed by the UUC. McCoy was a hardline Unionist who had been attracted to the ideals of Ulster Nationalism (an ideal to make Northern Ireland an Imperial dominion similar to Canada or Australia) after the Maxton Premiership of the 1930's. He was however treated with suspicion by several within the party's traditionalist wing and on the liberal wing. The liberal wing had a handful of defections to the newly formed Ulster Liberal Party (no connection, like the Labour Party, to their namesakes on the mainland.)
[6] McCoy called a General Election in 1955 on the question of maintaining the "Protestant, Unionist, Loyalist system at Stormont." The result was however rather interesting. The Unionists held their majority, but it was cut from the supermajority before the election down to a more conventional majority. The party also dipped below 50% for the first time since 1933. The Labour Party recorded a vote of around 25% and gained seven seats. The Nationalists seemed to stem their decline in votes, but fell down a seat, lost to the Ulster Unionists in Southern Armagh. The Liberals held most of the defection gains, they further gained two of the four seats held by Queen's University Belfast. Sinn Fein won two seats, but their vote halved, owing to the swing towards Labour (led by pseudo-nationalist Jack Beattie) and the recovering Nationalist Party.
[7] McCoy would prove to be a liability over the course of the parliament, coming out with statements that would alienate many moderate unionists. This was reflected in the result of the 1958 general election when the Unionist vote decline once again, though it would lose no seats. The Nationalist Party flexed its 'muscles' and was able to reclaim the official opposition spot from the Labour Party, who saw their Unionist/Loyalist support whittle away due to the pseudo-nationalist Jack Beattie leading the party. Sinn Fein would be harmed by the reinvigorated NPNI, under its new leader Joe Stewart. Sinn Fein would see its number of seats halve down to 1, with Diamond holding on by the skin of his teeth against a Labour opponent.
[8] McCoy would alienate too many moderates in the party, and by 1960 they were baying for his blood. After a leadership review in front of the party's executive council - the UUC, McCoy was defeated and was sent to the backbenches, licking his wounds but vowing revenge. In his place would be appointed a supposed 'caretaker' in the form of the Speaker of the Parliament, Norman Stronge. Stronge was a conservative, yet rather timid old-school Unionist who was respected by the Nationalist opposition. It was understood that he would be a temporary holder of the post, though this would change with the perception that he would be a safe pair of hands. Stronge never really wanted the position, but opted to make the most of his time in the post, engaging in efforts to try and repair the party's relationship with moderate and moderate-liberal Unionists. In this regarded he did with his more conciliatory approach to office, compared to McCoy. This was reflected in the result of the 1963 general election when the party gained votes from the Ulster Liberal Party and from Labour. The decline in the NPNI's vote due to the lack of SF to use as a metaphoric punching bag, saw Labour regain the official opposition position. Stronge had succeeded in his task and would remain in office while ensuring that affairs were well sorted for his eventual successor.
[9] The successor would be moderate Unionist Maynard Sinclair, a party apparatchik since the early 1950s. Sinclair was usually the solitary moderate in McCoy's cabinet, and was seen as being instrumental in trying (usually unsuccessful) to convince McCoy to moderate his tone. He was one of the leading officials to back McCoy's ousting from office in 1960, and was seen as the power behind the throne as Stronge's Deputy Prime Minister, as well as the Minister for Home Affairs. He was of a different cloth and was far more moderate than any of his predecessors, bar perhaps Midgley (who was very much on the left of the party.) Sinclair would engage in reforms to housing and economics in an effort to ensure that Catholics would begin to see NI as a permanent entity and a home. In this regard he had some success. The result of the 1967 general election, despite some suggestions of a right wing revolt, was very successful for the Unionist Party, who returned their best result in decades. The advent of the left-wing student dominated People's Unity group, led by student Bernadette Devlin caused many Unionists who would nominally have stayed at home, to vote for the Unionist Party, out of fear of a radical leftist party gaining representation in some seats. The PUs would win representation in Queen's University - where Devlin would be victorious. On the other hand, the Liberals would placate this lose with a victory in North Down. The Labour Party would continue its rotation with the Nationalists, bequeathing the official opposition to the new NPNI leader, Eddie McAteer.
[10] Sinclair's liberalisation was not everyone's cup of tea - especially those adherents of McCoy's Ulster Nationalist beliefs. In early 1969 the Ulster First Unionist Party was launched by John McQuade, a Belfast Unionist MP - with the support of other hardline Unionists such as the Rev. Ian Paisley, William Beattie, and the young George Seawright. The party was seen as the embodiment of the former Premier's beliefs and values, arguing against rapprochement with Catholics and against the reforms of the Sinclair era. McCoy gave his blessing to the party, which began to gain the odd by-election from the Unionist Party. Sensing an opening, the Labour Party elected East Belfast MP David Bleakley as their leader, hoping to make the most of a Unionist split in the area. In the end the hype over a Unionist split was talked up. The OUP (Official Unionist Party) was returned with a slender majority, Labour were in third place behind a somewhat buoyed NPNI (who had gained some nominal Unionist seats due to a split in the Unionist vote. The UFUP gained seven seats, mainly due to defections of serving OUP MPs. The PU was suggested to be with a threat of losing votes due to its leader's unmarried pregnancy, she was reluctantly married to her boyfriend, thus saving the party's support among some Catholics after the child was born in early 1971. She would hold her seat, albeit by a smaller majority than before.
[11] Sinclair's luck seemed to run out around 1974, when the party was hit by a scandal over water treatment rights. The scandal saw the business of a leading cabinet member benefit due to supposed 'insider trading' Sinclair swore that he did not have any knowledge over the dealing (he didn't) and urged the minister to resign. The Minister claimed he had been singled out and proceeded to inform the Belfast Telegraph of a variety of dealings and underhanded proposals - he would then defect to the UFUP who met him with open arms. This set the scene for the 1975 general election. Sinclair, by now nearly 80 was exhausted, and was attacked from all angles. It was reflected in the result, where the party fell below the majority threshold by two seats. The UFUP leapfrogged the Labour Party into third place, while the Nationalists gained the odd seat due to a split Unionist vote. After several days of wrangling, Sinclair was returned to power with the support of several pro-Sinclair Independent Unionists.
[12] It didn't last, and the exhausted Sinclair would collapse one day. He was informed that for the good of his health he would need to stand down as soon as possible. He did so, and informed the UUC of the need for a leadership election. With most leading candidates seemingly tainting by the whiff of a scandal from the general election campaign, the UUC unanimously backed Fermanagh MP and Agriculture Minister John Brooke for the top job - something he would ultimately rise to not long after.
 

Deleted member 87099

I came up with this in a moment of extreme boredom today. I might flesh this out later, or not, depending on how it goes.

I don't make any claims for the plausibility of this. It started out as me wondering what would happen if Dewey won in '48 and then my fingers flew over the keyboard, and then I had...

35. Thomas E. Dewey (R-NY); January 20, 1949 - January 20, 1957 (termed out)
36. John F. Kennedy (D-MA); January 20, 1957 - January 20, 1961 (lost)
37. Richard M. Nixon (R-CA); January 20, 1961 - January 20, 1969 (termed out)
38. Hubert Humphrey (D-MN); January 20, 1969 - January 20, 1973 (lost)
39. Ronald Reagan (R-CA); January 20, 1973 - January 20, 1977 (lost)
40. Frank Church (D-ID); January 20, 1977 - January 31, 1984 (resigned for health reasons)
41. Gary Hart (D-CO); January 31, 1984 - January 20, 1989 (lost)
42. Bob Dole (R-KS); January 20, 1989 - January 20, 1993 (lost)
43. Jerry Brown (D-CA); January 20, 1993 - January 20, 1997 (lost)
44. Jack Kemp (R-NY); January 20, 1997 - January 20, 2005 (termed out)
45. Mitt Romney (R-MA); January 20, 2005 - January 20, 2009 (lost)
46. Tim Kaine (D-VA); January 20, 2009 - January 20, 2017 (termed out)

47. John Kasich (R-OH); January 20, 2017 - present

No offense, but these are unoriginal. You can find more original politicians by going on Governor lists, Senator lists and/or Representative lists on wikipedia.

My biggest qualm with it is the lack of losing tickets. I don't care much for hipster politicians.
 
My biggest qualm with it is the lack of losing tickets. I don't care much for hipster politicians.

I'd like to flesh out this list someday, perhaps take it over to the AH Wikibox thread where I can make up some infoboxes and possibly some election data as well.
 
1969-1972: Vacant/Hubert Humphrey (Democrat) [1]
1968: Ronald Reagan/Jim Rhodes (Republican), Lyndon B. Johnson/Hubert Humphrey (Democrat), George Wallace/Happy Chandler (American Independent), Wayne Morse/Don Edwards (Peace-Statehood)
1972: Vacant/Carl Albert (Democrat) [2]
1972-1973: Vacant/James Eastland (Democrat) [3]
1973-1975: Vacant/John Rarick (Democrat) [4]
1972: Dewey Bartlet/Spiro Agnew (Republican), James Eastland/John Rarick (Democrat), Robert Kennedy/Wally Hickel (Solidarity), Ronald Reagan/Hail Lyons (American Independent), Wayne Morse/Don Edwards (Peace-Statehood)
1975-1977: James Eastland/John Rarick (Democrat) [5]
1977-1978: Spiro Agnew/John Rarick (Republican/Democrat) [6]
1976: James Eastland/John Rarick (Democrat), Spiro Agnew/Robert Ray (Republican), Ronald Reagan/George P. Mahoney (American Independent), Robert Kennedy/Jesse Unruh (Solidarity), Lyndon LaRouche/Mike Gravel (Peace-Statehood), Eugene McCarthy/Roger MacBride (Libertarian) [7]
1978-1981: John Rarick/Vacant (Democrat)
1981: John Rarick/Phyllis Schlafly (Democrat/Republican) [8]
1980: John Rarick/Sam Yorty (Democrat), William Brock/Phyllis Schlafly (Republican), Lyndon LaRouche/Frank Rizzo (American Independent-Peace), Robert Kennedy/Gary Hart (Solidarity), Joe Edwards/Mike Gravel (Freak Power)
1981-1983: Phyllis Schlafly/Vacant (Republican) [9]
1983-1997: Lyndon LaRouche/Robert Casey (United Alternative) [10]
1982: Phyllis Schlafly/Avi Nelson (Republican), Joe Edwards/Gore Vidal (Freak Power), Sam Yorty/Edwin Edwards (Democrat), Lee Iaccoca/Charles Percy (Independent), Jesse Jackson/Albert Gore Jr. (Solidarity), Joe Walsh/Timothy Leary (Free Gas For Everyone) [11]
1984: Gore Vidal/Hunter S. Thompson (Freak Power), Phyllis Schlafly/Fred Phelps (Republican), Joe Walsh/Pat Robertson (Free Gas For Everyone)
1988: Martin Luther King/Robert Kennedy (Freak Power), Joe Walsh/Rick Perry (Free Gas-Republican)

1992: Robert Kennedy/Gene Bergland (Freak Power), Joe Walsh/Ed Clark (Free Gas-Republican), Bronson LaFolette/Bernard Sanders (New Bull Moose), Hillary Rodham/Bo Gritz (National Christian Democratic Workers' Front), Gus Hall/Angela Davis (Communist), Charles Percy/Jeane Kirkpatrick (Independent), Roseanne Barr/Warren Beatty (Modern Suprise)
1997-2003: Robert Kennedy/Jello Biafra (Freak Power) [12]
1996: Lyndon LaRouche/Robert Casey (United Alternative), Pierre DuPont IV/Dean Barkley (Free Gas-Republican), David Duke/Richard Gephardt (National Christian Democratic Workers' Front), Ellen DeGeneres/Morgan Freeman (Modern Suprise), Tom Harkin/Tom Hayden (United Radical Left)
2000: Lyndon LaRocuhe/Richard Meyers (United Alternative), Tom Harkin/Tom Hayden (United Radical Left), Phyllis Schlafly/Wesley Clark (NCDWF-Free Gas)


OFFICE ABOLISHED, REPLACED WITH SUPREME LEADER OF THE UNITED WORKERS' REPUBLIC OF AMERICA

2003-2036: Tom Harkin (American Workers' Party) [13]
2003: Unopposed
2013: Unopposed
2023: Unopposed
2033: Unopposed

2036-2134: Gavin Newsom (American Workers' Party) [14]
2043: Unopposed
2053: Unopposed
2063: Unopposed
2073: Unopposed
2083: Unopposed
2093: Unopposed
2103: Unopposed
2113: Unopposed
2123: Unopposed
2133: Unopposed

[1]
ITS BEEN THREE YEARS: MAKE UP YOUR MIND!
[2] "Mr. Bremer's actions are indefensible."
[3] "I will be the best President God ever created!"
[4] CONGRESS: VOTE BARTLET! DON'T REPEAT '68!
[5] SEND EASTLAND BACK! VOTE DEMOCRATIC!
[6] "Why does this keep happening?"
[7] "The silent majority will prevail over the tyrant in the White House!"
[8] REPEAL THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE: DON'T REPEAT 1968, 1972, 1976
[9] PRESIDENTIAL RECALL AMENDMENT RATIFIED
[10] US LOWERED TO 'SOMEWHAT FREE' BY FREEDOMHOUSE
[11] "We will take down Füher Schlafly's agenda. I alone will save America."
[12] "Tear down D.C., especially the statues of LaRouche. Burn them to the ground!"
[13] "This is your new leader Tom Harkin. I am in control now. You must obey the workers' republic commands, or great punishment will be given. Chose wisely my citizens."
[14] OUR GREAT REPUBLIC: 100 YEARS OF WORLD SUPERIORITY
I think you just won this thread.
 
Gonzo - List of Irish 'Presidents of the Executive Council' (until 1939) then Taoiseach
From the same universe as the NI PMs list:

List of Irish 'Presidents of the Executive Council' (until 1939) then Taoiseach

1922-1938: W. T. Cosgrave (Cumann na nGaedheal)
1923 (Minority; support from Labour & Businessman's): Eamon de Valera (Republican), Denis Gorey (Farmers'), Thomas Johnson (Labour), Michael Hennessy (Businessman's)
1927 (Minority): Eamon de Valera (Fianna Fáil), Thomas Johnson (Labour), Michael Heffernan (Farmers'), William Redmond (National League Party) [1]
1932: Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), vacant (Fianna Fáil), Thomas J. O'Connell (Labour), Michael Heffernan (Farmers') [2]
1936 (Minority; Confidence & Supply with NCLP & Labour): Seán Lemass (Fianna Fáil), Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), Thomas J. O'Connell (Labour) [3]
1938-1939: Eoin O'Duffy (Cumann na nGaedheal) [4]
1939-1946: Seán Lemass (Fianna Fáil)
1939: Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), Eoin O'Duffy (Cumann na nGaedheal), Thomas J. O'Connell (Labour) [5]
1942: Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), Eoin O'Duffy (Cumann na nGaedheal), Thomas J. O'Connell (Labour) [6]
1944 (Minority; support from Independent TDs): Richard Mulcahy (Cumann na nGaedheal), Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), William Norton (Labour) [7]
1945-1958: Richard Mulcahy (Cumann na nGaedheal)
1945 (Minority; Coalition with NCLP & Labour): Seán Lemass (Fianna Fáil), Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), Oliver J. Flanagan (Monetary Reform-O'Duffite), William Norton (Labour) [8]
1949 (Coalition with NCLP): Seán Lemass (Fianna Fáil), Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), Oliver J. Flanagan (Monetary Reform-O'Duffite), William Norton (Labour) [9]
1953 (Coalition with NCLP): Seán Lemass (Fianna Fáil), Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), Oliver J. Flanagan (Monetary Reform-O'Duffite), William Norton (Labour) [10]
1957 (Coalition with NCLP; Confidence & Supply with Labour): Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh (Fianna Fáil), Oliver J. Flanagan (Monetary Reform-O'Duffite), Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), William Norton (Labour) [11]
1958-1961: James Dillon (Cumann na nGaedheal) [12]
1961-1970: Oliver J. Flanagan (Fianna Fáil) [13]
1961: James Dillon (Cumann na nGaedheal), Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), Brendan Corish (Labour) [12]
1965: James Dillon (Cumann na nGaedheal), Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), Brendan Corish (Labour) [14]
1969 (Minority; support from Independent TDs): James Dillon (Cumann na nGaedheal), Frank MacDermot (National Centre League Party), Brendan Corish (Labour) [15]
1970-????: Liam Cosgrave (An Páirtí Náisiúnta) [16]
1970 (Minority; Coalition with Labour; support from Independent TDs): Oliver J. Flanagan (Fianna Fáil), Conor Cruise O'Brien (Labour), Tomás Mac Giolla (Republican Sinn Fein), Seán D. Christian Democrat Dublin Bay Rockall Loftus (Christian Democratic Movement) [16]

[1]: CnnG performs better than expected and manages to form a Government once again with Labour and National League support.
[2]: The quiet campaign of 1932 was thrown into disarray with the assassination of Eamon de Valera by a Blueshirt (the effective paramilitary wing of CnnG). As a result the now leaderless Fianna Fail fell into infighting among potential leadership contenders and saw any sort of sympathy vote evaporate. As a result the fiscally conservative and pro-British/ Unionist rapprochement National Centre League Party (A merger between the National League and National Centre Parties) came second to Cosgrave's CnnG.
[3]: Sean Lemass was elected Fianna Fail leader in late 1932 and set about restoring the party's electoral fortunes. He was less anti-British than his predecessor and tried to look cordial with Belfast (as a result Lord Craigavon, the Northern Irish Prime Minister called a snap election - which he once again won resoundingly; ) he however railed against Cosgrave's Government's seeming happiness to support Britain in the event of a war with Germany and his treaty with Britain - which solidified British control over Northern Ireland the Treaty Ports. As a result of this Lemass managed to weaken CnnG support and very nearly won a plurality of seats and votes over Cosgrave.
[4]: Cosgrave opted to retire in 1938 after nearly two decades in power and after suffering a mild stroke the year prior. He was replaced not by his preferred successor Richard Mulcahy - but by Blueshirt leader and Interior Minister Eoin O'Duffy. O'Duffy was famous - or rather infamous for the crack down on anti-Treaty forces during the Civil War and the subsequent years - there were also allegations that it was he who ordered de Valera's assassination. O'Duffy was staunchly anti-communist and also had shown his fascistic leanings with his trip to the German consulate when he became President of the Executive Council. This was very popular with the Blueshirts and parts of the CnnG grassroots - less so with everyone else.
[5]: O'Duffy subsequently lost the 1939 General Election in a landslide to Lemass and his rejuvenated Fianna Fail which argued for "a return to normalcy." The NCLP once again became the Official Opposition in the Dail.
[6]: The 1942 General Election was effectively called on a single issue - that of reform the constitution of Irish Free State in order to remove certain reference to the UK (the Privy Council for instance.) It was also called in order to see if there was support for Lemass' neutral position on the war (it was in reality far from neutral - British troops could freely move and use the Treaty Ports in the IFS.) In the end the Irish people seemed to endorse this giving Lemass a slightly reduced majority. CnnG, once again led by O'Duffy failed to perform better than 3 years before and were seen to be in danger of being permanent replaced by the NCLP.
[7]: In the end the referendum failed by a 55-45 margin and Lemass' Government were seen to be rather incompetent in standing up to the UK and Germany when they violated Irish territorial waters. There was also the issue with German spies being caught in the IFS - who turned out to have been based there for several years. The 'scandal' coupled with Mulcahy's removal of O'Duffy as the CnnG leader and O'Duffy's subsequent sulking off with several supporters to become Independents saw FF barely maintain power against the rejuvenated CnnG.
[8]: Lemass was forced back to the electorate in early 1945 due to his Govt. budget being voted down and thus the Dail losing confidence in his Government. Mulcahy rose to power with Labour and NCLP support. Meanwhile the O'Duffyites managed to take more than 10% of the vote with the new Monetary Reform Party - led by Oliver J. Flanagan, a noted anti-semite and popular TD from Laois-Offaly (O'Duffy was deemed too toxic to lead the party - but was seen as the 'puppet master' of the party leadership - reigning from his position as Party Chairman.)
[9]: Mulcahy, while not seen as a necessarily charismatic individual was seen as a competent operator with a militaristic eye for detail over his coalition government. By 1949 the country had seen a gradual increase in industrialisation in and around what was formerly the 'Pale' area around (and including) Dublin. Generous grants and aid for farmers saw many gain
new equipment which was up to scratch with the equipment and machinery used north of the border in Northern Ireland. By 1949 the government was generally popular and saw a moderate, though adequate swing in their favour which was enough to increase its numerical majority well above that of Fianna Fail and the O'Duffites. Mulcahy announced that he would be forming a coalition with the NCLP in effect ensuring that the two parties would continue to move closer together; talk of a merger began to be made in the press, though MacDermot was quick to shoot down such suggestions.
[10]: The government maintained its policies from the prior Dail sitting and began to impose more economically liberal reforms to the country's generally paternalistic economic system. Fianna Fail and the social credit orientated O'Duffites, led by the charismatic Oliver Flanagan, protested the removal of price and wage controls, in a move which was called "fiscal self masochism" by FF leader Sean Lemass. The Irish public didn't seem to agree and handed the government a slightly increased majority - in effect ensuring that Lemass after his fourth election defeat, would have to go.
[11]: Fianna Fail made a surprising choice with the selection of former Attorney General Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh (or Carroll O'Daly as he would refer to himself) as party leader. A generally moderate individual who was held in high esteem by members of all sides of the Dail, O Dalaigh was a highly effect speaker who had been considered for a top legal position within the nation. He was an able figure to criticise the government's economic policy, he was also able to answer the government's (usually rhetorical) questions of 'what would you do then?' He responded with a 'Contract for the Irish People,' released along with their hypothetical coalition partners the O'Duffites, which argued for a greater public works programme, various welfare programs, and lower taxes for middle-to-lower income individuals. These policies were popular outside of the NCLP's business supporters, and is seen to be a contributing factor in Fianna Fail's near victory in 1957 - which forced Mulcahy to, along with his NCLP coalition partner, gain the support of the Labour Party for day to day running of the country.
[12]: Mulcahy was well into his seventies when he decided to stand down as Taoiseach. He was replaced by External Affairs Minister James Dillon, who was the son of former IPP leader John Dillon, who had presided over the party's collapse at the 1918 general election. Dillon was a colourful contributor to Dáil proceedings and was noted for his high standard of oratory. Compared to Mulcahy's tenure as Taoiseach, Dillon was relative hands off, letting his ministers 'run free.' This saw attempts by the NCLP Finance Minister to try and get rid of the already rigid welfare system. This was unpopular and saw the government's popularity fall after the brief upswing when Dillon became Taoiseach. Nobody bar the strong CnnG supporters was shocked when a majority Fianna Fail government was formed in 1961.
[13]: They were shocked when Oliver Flanagan was the man to take the post of Taoiseach. Flanagan had overseen a merger between his party and Fianna Fail in 1959, under O Dalaigh's leadership. O Dalaigh's death in a car accident in 1960 paved the way for his surprise victory over Jack Lynch to become the leader of the new unified party. Flanagan had emerged on the political scene in 1942 when he became an Independent TD for Laois-Offaly. In his maiden speech he stated that the government should "rout the Jews out of this country." He was also a virulent social conservative, once famously proclaiming that "there was no sex in Ireland before television." Nonetheless his values, attention to listen to his constituents' concerns, charisma, and his ability to be one of the cutest of cute hoors in the Dail.
[14]: The implementation of the 'Contract for the Irish People' was immensely popular and made Flanagan's re-election a virtual certainty. This however did not highlight the fact that FF had little to no allies in the Dail, made even worse by the abrasiveness of Flanagan. The threat of a cross party anti-FF coalition was still prevalent. Though Fianna Fail was able to celebrate their second majority government in four years.
[15]: What a difference four years can make, the country's economy hit a road bump in 1967 and Flanagan's increasingly authoritarian and clerical-aligned government was starting to lose steam. The fact that it appeared to be running out of ideas for legislation by 1969 ensured that the government was called a 'zombie government.' While at the ballot box the government came only four seats short of a majority, the anti-FF parties hand nearly enough seats for a majority. Flanagan, proving his ability as a political Houdini managed to gain the support of a handful of Independent Dail TDs, ensruing his government would survive for the meantime. Though many thought that that the FF government wouldn't last in the long term.
[16]: These voices were ultimately proven right when Flanagan was forced to call another election after realising that his government was untenable in its current form. While Fianna Fail fell a mere 5 seats, the hypothetical coalition of the united party of CnnG and NCLP - The National Party (or An Páirtí Náisiúnta) now led by former CnnG External Affairs Minister Liam Cosgrave, who was the son of former President of the Executive Council, W. T. Cosgrave. Cosgrave was similar to Flanagan in his social conservatism (having been a strong opponent of liberalising contraception laws), but without the 'nasty bits.' Cosgrave however was seen as rather bombastic, at one stage attacking 'welfare blow ins' - something Flanagan capitalised upon. While Fianna Fail made some headway over the course of the election and would once again come tantalisingly close to majority (with their Independent allies forming a technical group called the Christian Democratic Movement.) The 'National Coalition' of APN and Labour would however scrape home with support from Independent TDs. The rise of the militant Republican Sinn Fein party, with links to the border campaign in the 1950s drew some concern on both sides of the border, but they were written off as a bunch of 'blow outs' (to quote Cosgrave out of context) or "bums" (to quote Flanagan, who would remain leader of FF.)
 
Accurateworldwar - WILLKIE '41
From my ongoing Willkie Wins wikibox series

33. Wendell Willkie/Charles McNary* (1941-1944)
Wendell Willkie*/none (1944)

34. Arthur Vandenberg/none (1944-1945)
Arthur Vandenberg/Harold Stassen (1945-1949)

35. Harold Stassen/Earl Warren (1949-1953)

36. Estes Kefauver**/Richard Russell Jr. (1953-1954)

37. Richard Russell Jr./none (1954-1957)

38. Richard Nixon/Philip Willkie (1957-1965)

*died in office
**assassinated
 
wolfram - Tenants of the Candy Desks
Tenants of the Candy Desks

Republican/Original:
  1. George Murphy (CA), 1965-1977 (lost re-election)
  2. George Bush (TX), 1977-1981 (appointed Secretary of State)
  3. Bill Cramer (FL), 1981-1983 (lost re-election)
  4. John Danforth (MO), 1983-1985
  5. Anne M. Gorsuch (CO), 1985-1987
  6. Dan Quayle (IN), 1987-1989
  7. H. John Heinz (PA), 1989-1990 (died)
  8. Orrin Hatch (UT), 1990-1993
  9. Michael Huffington (CA), 1993-1995
  10. Al D'Amato (NY), 1995-1997
  11. Bob Kustra (IL), 1997-1999
  12. Mike Huckabee (AR), 1999-2001
  13. John Boehner (OH), 2001-2003
  14. John Raese (WV), 2003-2005
  15. Piyush Jindal (LA), 2005-2007
  16. Mark Cuban (PA), 2007-2009
  17. Charlie Crist (FL), 2009-2011
  18. Alveda King (GA), 2011-2013
  19. Liz Cheney (WY), 2013-2015
  20. J.C. Watts (OK), 2015-2017
  21. William Howard Taft IV (OH), 2017-

Democratic:
  1. Jerry Brown (CA), 1983-1989
  2. Neil Goldschmidt (OR), 1989-1993 (resigned)
  3. Bella Abzug (NY), 1993-1995
  4. Henry Cisneros (TX), 1995-2001
  5. Edwin Edwards (LA), 2001-2007
  6. Stephen Colbert (IL), 2007-2013
  7. Nydia Velazquez (NY), 2013-

(I don't really have much of a story for this)
 
Youngmarshall - British PMs from 1770 to 1899
1770-1789: Frederick North, Lord North (Tory)
1789-1791: Henry Hawkins Tremayne (Tory)
1791-1793: William Pitt the Younger (Tory)

1793-1795: Henry Hawkins Tremayne (Whig)
1795-1799: William Roscoe (Radical)
1799-1801: John Philpot Curran (Radical)

1801-1807: Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville (Conservative)
1807-1811: Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson (Conservative)
1811-1814: George Canning (Conservative)
1814-1815: William Mellish (Conservative)
1815-1820: George Canning (Conservative)
1820-1821: Sir William Heygate, 1st Baronet (Conservative)
1821-1823: John Pratt, 1st Marquess Camden (Conservative)
1823-1825: George Canning (Conservative)

1825-1827: Sir William Heygate, 1st Baronet (Canningite Conservative)
1827-1834: Sir Edward Knatchbull, 9th Baronet (True Conservative)
1834-1835: Daniel O'Connell (Radical)
1835-1839: Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston (Canningite Conservative/Liberal)
1839-1841: Charles Wetherell (Conservative)
1841-1843: Charles Grant, 1st Baron Glenelg (Conservative)
1843-1845: Edward Littleton, 1st Baron Hatherton (Liberal)
1845-1847: John Lambton, 1st Earl of Durham (Liberal)

1847-1849: Lord George Bentinck (Conservative)
1849-1851: John Russell, 1st Earl Russell (Liberal)
1851-1855: Henry Labouchere, 1st Baron Taunton (Liberal)

1855-1857: Lothian Sheffield Dickson (Radical)
1857-1859: James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin (Liberal)
1860-1861: Richard Cobden (Radical)
1861-1863: Sir Wilfrid Lawson, 2nd Baronet, of Brayton (Radical)
1863-1869: William Ewart Gladstone (Radical)
1869-1875: John Bright (Radical)

1875-1876: Hugh Cairns, 1st Earl Cairns (Liberal)
1876-1881: Benjamin Disraeli (Liberal)

1881-1883: John Nicholson (Radical)
1883-1889: Edward Stanhope (Liberal)
1889-1891: John Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton (Radical)
1891-1895: Lord Randolph Churchill (Liberal)
1895-1899: John Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton (Radical)
 
ZachMettenbergerFan - List of Secretaries of Space Exploration, Research, and Advancement
List of Secretaries of Space Exploration, Research, and Advancement

1965 - 1967: First Secretary of SERA James E. Webb (D-NC) [1]
President(s): John F. Kennedy (D-MA)
1967-1971: Second Secretary of SERA Robert C. Seamans (D-MA) [2]
President(s): John F. Kennedy (D-MA)

1971-1979: Third Secretary of SERA Alan M. Lovelace (I-FL) [3]
President(s): John F. Kennedy (D-MA), Hubert H. Humphrey (D-MN), George Romney (R-MI)

1979-1985: Fourth Secretary of SERA William Robert Graham (R-TX) [4]
President(s): George Romney (R-MI)
1985-1989: Fifth Secretary of SERA John H. Glenn (D-OH) [5]
President(s): Michael Dukakis (D-MA)
1989-1994: Sixth Secretary of SERA Dale D. Myers (I-MO) [6]
President(s): Jack Kemp (R-NY), Jerry Brown (D-CA)

1994-1996: Seventh Secretary of SERA Carl Sagan (D-WA) [7]
President(s): Jerry Brown (D-CA)
1996-2001: Eighth Secretary of SERA Dale D. Myers (I-MO) [8]
President(s): Jerry Brown (D-CA)
2001-2005: Ninth Secretary of SERA Daniel R. Mulville (R-DC) [9]
President(s): John McCain (R-AZ)
2005-2011: Tenth Secretary of SERA Charles Bolden (D-SC) [10]
President(s): Howard Dean (D-VT)
2011-2013: Eleventh Secretary of SERA Frederick D. Gregory (I-DC) [11]

President(s): Howard Dean (D-VT)
2013-2015: Twelfth Secretary of SERA Michael D. Griffin (R-MD) [12]
President(s): Chris Christie (R-NJ)
2015-2017: Thirteenth Secretary of SERA Rob Strain (I-MD) [13]

President(s): Chris Christie (R-NJ)
2017-present: Fourteenth Secretary of SERA Tom Mueller (D-ID) [14]
President(s): Joe Biden (D-DE)


[1] "A centralized department dedicated to the exploration of our final frontier is a necessity to bring us into the next half of the century. This will lead us to victory in this space race. In one year, Apollo Nine will make a dedicated attempt to land on the moon, and we need a system to expand our horizons. In this decade, we must land on the Moon, and in this century, we must move forward exponentially to eventually land on other planets."
- President John F. Kennedy, on the Department of SERA, 1965

[2] "I promise to help further the space program in any way I can."
- Secretary Robert C. Seamans, speaking on the space program, 1967

[3] "We will lead our nation to the next step in American history, the step forward into the great black beyond, the space age. Tomorrow our children will marvel at how far we have advanced since that day. The Skylab will soon orbit the Earth."
- President Kennedy, in his farewell speech, 1971

[4] "Today, we go forward. We go forward to a place we will have never seen to this degree. Today, we study the effects of gravity upon the human body. Today, fifteen years since we first stepped upon the moon, we now live upon it. The Lunar Universal Native Atmosphere Base has been finished, and now we walk upon the moon once more."
- President George Romney, on the LUNA Base's opening, 1982

[5] "John Glenn is an, uh, exemplary choice for the Department of SERA. His experience in space and in government will lead this department into new heights."
- President Michael Dukakis, on the nomination of Senator John Glenn, 1985

[6] "Within the decade, we will walk on Mars."
- President Jack Kemp, at a rally for space exploration, 1989

[7] "Doctor Sagan will lead us to a new decade in space exploration. We will have a mission to Mars. We will build a solar array in space. We will move forward in our great universe."
- President Jerry Brown, in the nomination process for Carl Sagan, 1994

[8] "Forward."
- Astronaut Kevin Kregel, walking on Mars, 1997

[9] "Now that we have landed on Mars, we cannot rest on our laurels. Soon, we will land on other celestial objects, Deimos, Phobos, and soon even the asteroid belt and Venus."
- Secretary Daniel R. Mulville, on whether or not the Department of SERA should be made defunct, 2002

[10] "I select Mr. Bolden to lead us to a new century of the Department of SERA."
- President Howard Dean, on his nomination for the Department of SERA, 2005

[11] "Gregory has hands-on experience with space exploration, and following the unfortunate circumstances of Mister Bolden's resignation, Fred Gregory will serve admirably. The new budget will adequately keep the space program we now have in good repair."
- President Dean, on his new nomination for the Department of SERA, 2011

[12] "The Venus program will progress to a point we will barely comprehend. A floating station can be accomplished with the technology we currently have, we simply need the funding."
- Secretary Griffin, on the exploration of Venus, 2014

[13] "The Skylab B requires major repairs, and we require more funding to get that accomplished. A major budget overhaul is necessary."
- Secretary Strain, asking for more funding, 2016

[14] "We will fund Skylab B, we will fund the Venus program, and the Sagan Array will be put to its intended size. SERA is grossly underfunded, and we need to continue the great programs which put a person in orbit, a person on the moon, and a person on Mars."
- President Biden, pushing for more space funding, 2017

 
Oppo - Nixon/Morton '60
I once played some games of President Elect, where I gave any politician that could have been elected during that election a chance, and anyone considered for VP. The results were, interesting.....

1961-1969: Richard Nixon/Thruston Morton (Republican)
1960: Hubert Humphrey/Herschel Loveless (Democrat)
1964: Robert Byrd/Robert Kennedy (Democrat)
1969-1977: John Glenn/Fred Harris (Democrat)
1968: Paul Laxalt/Robert Finch (Republican), George Wallace/Ezra Taft Benson (American Independent)
1972: Howard Baker/George Bush (Republican), John G. Schmitz/Thomas J. Anderson (American Independent)
1977-1985: Dale Bumpers/Peter Rodino (Democrat)
1976: Gerald Ford/Bill Simon (Republican)
1980: Richard Nixon/Bill Simon (Republican), John B. Anderson/Edward Brooke (National Unity)*

1985-1989: Edmund Muskie/Bill Bradley (Democrat)
1984: Paul Laxalt/Lynn Morley Martin (Republican)
1989-Present: Richard Nixon/Paul Laxalt (Republican)
1988: Edmund Muskie/Bill Bradley (Democrat)

* 22nd Amendment repealed prior to election.
 
Inherit the Wind - Tippecanoe's Specter
Tippecanoe's Specter

1981: Ronald Reagan ✝ /George H.W. Bush [1]
1980: def. Jimmy Carter/Walter Mondale
1981: George H.W. Bush/VACANT
1981 - 1989: George H.W. Bush/Paul Laxalt [2]

1984: def. Gary Hart/Dale Bumpers
1989 - 1997: Joe Biden/Mickey Leland [3]
1988: def. Jim Thompson/Jack Kemp
1992: def. H. John Heinz III/Elizabeth Dole, Pat Buchanan/Larry McDonald

1997 - 2001: Mickey Leland/Tom Harkin [4]
1996: def. Pete Wilson/Bill Weld, Larry McDonald/Alan Keyes
2001 - 2003: Carroll Campbell ✝ /John Kasich [5]
2000: def. Mickey Leland/Tom Harkin
2003: John Kasich/VACANT
2003 - 2005: John Kasich/John Ashcroft [6]
2005 - 2013: Maria Cantwell/Vince Foster [7]

2004: def. John Kasich/John Ashcroft
2008: def. Mike Huckabee/Wayne Allard

2013 - 2021: Jon Huntsman/Mel Martinez [8]
2012: def. Evan Bayh/Claire McCaskill, Robert F. Kennedy Jr/Jim Hightower
2016: def. Russ Feingold/Mark Warner

2021 - 2024: Xavier Becerra ✝ /Martin O'Malley [9]
2020: def. Brian Sandoval/Pat Toomey
2024: Martin O’Malley/VACANT
2024 - XXXX: Martin O’Malley/Gwen Graham [10]


Footnotes will happen, I promise.
 
Youngmarshall - British PMs from 1899 to 2015 (Eternal Liberal-Radical Bipartisanism)
1875-1876: Hugh Cairns, 1st Earl Cairns (Liberal)
1876-1881: Benjamin Disraeli (Liberal)

1881-1883: John Nicholson (Radical)
1883-1889: Edward Stanhope (Liberal)
1889-1891: John Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton (Radical)
1891-1895: Lord Randolph Churchill (Liberal)
1895-1899: John Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton (Radical)

1899-1903: Gonville Bromhead (Radical)
1903-1911: Thomas Burt (Radical)

1911-1919: Austen Chamberlain (Liberal)
1919-1925: Richard Haldane, 1st Vicount Haldane (Radical)

1925-1931: Eric Campbell Geddes (Radical)
1931-1933: Winston Churchill (Liberal)
1933-1934: Ramsay MacDonald (Liberal)
1934-1936: Philip Snowden, 1st Viscount Snowden (Liberal)
1936-1940: George Lansbury (Liberal)
1940-1947: Clement Attlee (Liberal)
1947-1949: Rab Butler (Radical)

1949-1953: Clement Attlee (Liberal)
1953-1955: Rab Butler (Radical)

1955-1961: Clement Attlee (Liberal)
1961-1971: Hugh Gaitskell (Liberal)
1971-1977: Roy Jenkins (Liberal)
1977-1987: Dennis Heally (Liberal)
1987-1989: Jim Prior (Liberal)
1989-1995: Michael Heseltine (Liberal)
1995-1999: Alan Clark (Radical)

1999-2007: Peter Morrison (Radical)
2007-2011: Caroline Flint (Liberal)
2011-2015: George Osborne (Radical)

2015-: Jacob Rees-Mogg (Radical)
 
1899-1903: Gonville Bromhead (Radical)
1903-1911: Thomas Burt (Radical)

1911-1919: Austen Chamberlain (Liberal)
1919-1925: Richard Haldane, 1st Vicount Haldane (Radical)

1925-1931: Eric Campbell Geddes (Radical)
1931-1933: Winston Churchill (Liberal)
1933-1934: Ramsay MacDonald (Liberal)
1934-1936: Philip Snowden, 1st Viscount Snowden (Liberal)
1936-1940: George Lansbury (Liberal)
1940-1947: Clement Attlee (Liberal)
1947-1949: Rab Butler (Radical)

1949-1953: Clement Attlee (Liberal)
1953-1955: Rab Butler (Radical)

1955-1961: Clement Attlee (Liberal)
1961-1971: Hugh Gaitskell (Liberal)
1971-1977: Roy Jenkins (Liberal)
1977-1987: Dennis Heally (Liberal)
1987-1989: Jim Prior (Liberal)
1989-1995: Michael Heseltine (Liberal)
1995-1999: Alan Clark (Radical)

1999-2007: Peter Morrison (Radical)
2007-2011: Caroline Flint (Liberal)
2011-2015: George Osborne (Radical)

2015-: Jacob Rees-Mogg (Radical)
What is this?
 
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